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Deep Blue game 6: May 11 @ 3:00PM EDT | 19:00PM GMT        kasparov 2.5 deep blue 3.5


White: Deep Blue
Black: Kasparov
1. e4
c6
2. d4
d5
3. Nc3
dxe4
4. Nxe4
Nd7
5. Ng5
Ngf6
6. Bd3
e6
7. N1f3
h6
8. Nxe6
Qe7
9. O-O
fxe6
10. Bg6+
Kd8
11. Bf4
b5
12. a4
Bb7
13. Re1
Nd5
14. Bg3
Kc8
15. axb5
cxb5
16. Qd3
Bc6
17. Bf5
exf5
18. Rxe7
Bxe7
19. c4
Resign!



Game 6, white
17.Bf5

Commentary for white move 17:

And also I want to say that for the defender, the defender has to look at so many threats that it's much easier when you're playing against the computer to be on the attack than you are when you're on the defense, because on the defense, you have to keep Des Moines mind -- keep in mind everything that's possible. Pieces swinging over, pieces coming up and down the board.

DB MOVE: 17 Bf5

MAURICE ASHLEY: I suggested this possibility earlier but for me I see it as a surprising move. And Yaz, you can help me here. First of all, Deep Blue is down a piece for one pawn. It wants to attack, more so than anything else. Recapturing the material especially the e6 pawn is not in the program, at least should not be in the program.

YASSER SEIRAWAN: Unless it's done under favorable circumstances.

MAURICE ASHLEY: Unless it's done under fantastic circumstances. Here, though, it comes as a big surprise to me. Because here the possibility is capturing the bishop and after Rxqueen, maybe even just bishop takes, maybe. The reason being that now, Kasparov has gotten a knight -- in this case you have to give up the f5 pawn, but he's gotten a knight, rook, and bishop, which is numerically 11 points. A rook is five points, a bishop is three and a knight is three. That's 11 points. And what he's giving up is a queen and two pawns. That's also 11 points. The queen is nine and the two pawns, right, is 11.

Real-time text commentary is made possible by LiveNote, Inc. and Vincent Varallo Associates




  


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