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Subject: Re: CM6000 P200 - MCP6 P90 SSDF, draw, now 11.5-4.5

Author: José de Jesús García Ruvalcaba

Date: 10:30:30 05/23/99

Go up one level in this thread


On May 23, 1999 at 11:37:47, Tony Hedlund wrote:

>
>Caro-Kann(B15). An interesting middle- and endgame, but shouldn't MCP6
>have won this one?
>
>[Event "Tony Hedlund"]
>[Site "Lulea"]
>[Date "1999.05.23"]
>[Round "16"]
>[White "MCP6 P90"]
>[Black "CM6000 P200"]
>[Result "1/2-1/2"]
>[ECO "B15"]
>[WhiteElo "2416"]
>[BlackElo "2576"]
>[BlackClock "0"]
>[TimeControl "40/7200:40/7200:40/7200"]
>[WhiteClock "3563"]
>
>1. e4 c6 2. d4 d5 3. Nd2 dxe4 4. Nxe4 Nf6 5. Nxf6+ exf6 6. c3 Bf5 7. Ne2
>Bd6 8. Ng3 Bxg3 9. hxg3 O-O 10. Be3 Re8 11. Qb3 Qe7 12. O-O-O a5 13. Bd3
>Bxd3 14. Rxd3 a4 15. Qc2 a3 16. b3 Nd7 17. Bf4 Nf8 18. Re3 Qd7 19. Kb1
>Rxe3 20. Bxe3 Ng6 21. Bc1 Qd5 22. f3 Qa5 23. Re1 Qd5 24. g4 Qd6 25. Re4
>Qd7 26. Qe2 Kf8 27. g3 b6 28. Ka1 Ne7 29. Qe1 h6 30. c4 Ra7 31. Bd2 Qd8 32.
>Bc3 c5 33. d5 Qd7 34. Bd2 Ra8 35. Bc1 Ng6 36. Qe3 Kg8 37. Kb1 Ne5 38. Qe2
>Kf8 39. Re3 Ng6 40. f4 f5 41. g5 hxg5 42. fxg5 Ne7 43. Qf3 Ng6 44. Re1
>Ra7 45. Rf1 Kg8 46. Qxf5 Qe7 47. Rf3 Qc7 48. Re3 Ra8 49. Ka1 Qd6 50. Qf3
>Qd7 51. Qe2 Kh7 52. Kb1 Kg8 53. Re4 Kf8 54. Ka1 Qd8 55. Qe3 Qc7 56. Bxa3
>Qa7 57. b4 Ne7 58. bxc5 Qxa3 59. Qxa3 Rxa3 60. cxb6 Ra8 61. d6 Nc6 62.
>Rh4 Kg8 63. c5 Ra5 64. Rc4 Kf8 65. Re4 g6 66. Re3 Ra8 67. Re1 Re8 68. Rh1
>Kg7 69. a4 Re5 70. Rc1 Rxg5 71. Ka2 Rxg3 72. Rd1 Kf6 73. Kb2 Rg5 74. d7
>Ke7 75. b7 Kd8 76. Rd6 Nb8 77. c6 Rc5 78. a5 Rxc6 79. Rxc6 Nxc6 80. a6
>Kc7 81. Kc1 f5 82. Kd2 g5 83. Ke2 f4 84. Kf1 g4 85. Kg1 Kb8 86. Kf1 g3 87.
>Kg2 Nd8 88. Kf3 Kc7 89. Kg2 Ne6 90. Kf3 Kb8 91. Kg2 Ka7 92. Kf3 Nd8 93.
>Kg2 Nf7 94. Kf3 Kb8 95. Kg2 Kc7 96. Kf3 Nd8 97. Kg2 Nc6 98. Kf3 Kb8 99.
>Kg2 Ka7 100. Kf3 Nd8 101. Kg2 Nc6 102. Kf3 Nd8 103. Kg2 1/2-1/2
>
>Tony

	Yes, it seems that MCP had a won game when it was a pawn up, and also when it
got four connected passed pawns. But it is playing with a big hardware
disadvantage (I am not criticizing this, I think the match is fair), and to win
under those condtions (your opponent is out-calculating you at every move) you
need a plan, and current computers do not plan.
José.



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