Game 4, black
8...Be7
Commentary for black move 8:
YASSER SEIRAWAN: Well, I'd feel pretty good if I had
white. White has a space advantage because of the center
pawns, the d4 and e4 pawns, these are also slightly better
developed. From black's perspective, he's fairly soled.
(White played Bg5 not e5.) Although one of the problems with
black's position is that he's lost a tell me positive. What I
mean by that is he's played the move d7-d6 and the move d6-d5.
So black has taken two moves to bring this pawn into the center
of the board. Normally speaking this is a mistakes Baugh as we
know, as my teacher taught me when I was a beginner, don't
move
the same piece or pawn twice. Deep Blue's last move was the
move Bc1-g5, a very fine developing move, hitting the knight on
f6 and threatening to follow up e4-e5. I'm expecting Kasparov
to play Be7, just blocking the pin. And after a move like e4
life e5 Nf6-d7 dxe7 Qxe7 g2-g4 G H A-g6 -- I'm expecting all of
this, by the way -- castles long. White has a position where
he has a grip in the center, is slightly better developed, but
for Kasparov's part and the way Kasparov's approach to this
whole match has been is "I want closed positions." And he's
managed to achieve that even though he has a slight
disadvantage Kasparov has to be very careful. What did he in
game three is he played an English opening. It's certainly not
in his repertoire. It's not his favorite style of opening, and
I think he didn't understand a lot of the strategic concepts of
the opening that are peculiar to the English because he's just
not an experienced English player. Right
now what we have in the board on my analysis board, I should
say, is a variation, a variation of the French defense, an
opening that Garry doesn't play -- a defense, rather, that
Garry doesn't play as black. So he's got to be careful that he
don't out fox himself while trying to out fox Deep Blue.
MIKE VALVO: One thing I think we have to think about in this
match is Garry has altered his style of play, because he's
playing the computer. How has it affected his /PABLT to play,
his results, his comfort, his ability to win
games. He's not doing all that well score wise. I would have
considered him considering last year, his overall strength and
his experience with computers to be plus at this point, and he
is is not. And he wasn't last year, either, at this point. It
seems like every game is dominated by an attempt to figure out
what's going on with the computer, to confuse the computer, but
is the computer confused, or is Garry? (Audience laughter.)
YASSER SEIRAWAN: Good question.
GK MOVE: 8...Be7.
MAURICE ASHLEY: Kasparov has unpinned his knight on f6 and
now
he's gotten up and is strolling around the room a little bit,
seem comfortable, seeming quite content with what he's achieved
in this position and it seems the game could also very easily
turn into a blocked one which has been, as you put it, Yaz n
mythology, playing against a computer, going into those kinds
of situations that the computer is not really happy with, if we
may use that term and a blocked position has generally been the
case. That's what they've done. That's what has happened in
every game. Every game has been a blocked position.
YASSER SEIRAWAN: Well, certainly this is what Garry has been
trying to achieve, and the question that you've just raised by
the way, I'd like to address that, is Garry not playing very
well against the computer, what's his success and so forth and
so on.
Well, one thing I can tell you because we were all three -- Mike,
you were of course the arbiter there; Maurice and I were
commentateing in Philadelphia. These are the kind of questions
we asked ourselves early in the match because just as you said,
there was an exchange of victories in the first two games, then
came two draws, and the match was tied, two games to go, the
tension was heavy, Garry one the fifth game, after offering a
draw, and then came game 6, and like every single question we
had about the whole match was answered decisively in Garry
Kasparov's favor. I mean Garry played an awesome game, just
completely dominated the computer and we went "Wow! That is
exactly how you're supposed to beat Deep Blue."
Then when we started this match, it seemed to us that he just
picked up where he left off. Game one, bang, right out of the
box. A magnificent game. Even it seemed to me, out-calculated
Deep Blue in what was supposed to be one of Deep Blue's great
strengths, the calculating ability.
MAURICE ASHLEY: And that was his third win in a row against
Deep
Blue, two wins from the last match and he came back, and wham,
the third win. It looks like this would just be a roll.
MIKE VALVO: One other factor, it seemed like every game up to
that point Garry was in control. Yes, he lost game one, but
Garry lost game one rather than the computer beat him.
MAURICE ASHLEY: From the prior match?
MIKE VALVO: Right. Then game two.
Real-time text commentary is made possible by LiveNote, Inc. and
Vincent Varallo Associates