Game 1, white
12.a3
Commentary for white move 12:
Mr. SEIRAWAN: I was going to say that Garry does appear to
have
a great deal of nervous tension, especially in this early first
game. Normally speaking, he would like to take this
opportunity, much like Deep Blue, to think on his opponent's
time. You can be sure that Garry, while not at the board, is
thinking about the position. That is to say that the position
is etched in his mind in a blindfold type of way where he's
thinking about the game. Let me just comment on the move Qa5.
Qa5 it develops the queen and also the queen covers a great
number of conveyors. B 1910, C 1920, D 1940, A 1910, A 1920,
a2. So the computer says, "Look I brought my convene out to
this wonderfully active square. Aren't I marvelous?"
Mr. ASHLEY: Might I also ask with the rooks, it connects his
rooks, like I tell my students, so that's a basic strategy in
this case.
Mr. SEIRAWAN: Is that where that comes from? I was wondering
about that. Indeed, connecting the rooks, a very simple but
important strategion, bringing the pieces out. Now, the
question is, would a human player have played that move? And
my answer is, some would, but most would not. The queen -- a
human player, such as myself, would have probably ferred Qc7
or Qe7, ferring to back up the bishop. Garry's move, a3, by
the way, is a very nice move, because what he's doing with the
move a2-a3 is he's paring to play the move b2-B4 quicking
the convene back or following with the move c2-c4 gaining more
space.
Mr. ASHLEY: I'm sorry to interrupt, but the last move, talk
about unusual, the computer has played bishop from d6 to c7.
And Yaz, the bishop and queen are pointed in a direction that's
off the chessboard, that's the wrong way! (Laughter) usually
you get the bishop and queen pointing towards the king. Here
the bishop and queen are pointing to nothing! And not only
that, the black queen looks at such a strange square, I would
think if you saw a human play this move you'd think he was off
his rocker?
Mr. SEIRAWAN: I would scold him. I would scold him.
Mr. ASHLEY: What an unusual move. And now maybe we see
some
method to Kasparov's strategy, which is let a closed position
occur, and then let the computer make mistakes, as opposed to
going for it right away where he could -- it's such a great
counter attacker, because this is really a strange move, Mike.
What could possibly cipitate this kind of response?
Mr. ASHLEY: And Garry is just -- Garry himself is running wild.
His head is shaking. He's probably thinking "How dare you play
like this against me!" I really can't even figure out the
reason for the move, the bishop back to c7. What a strange
move.
Mr. VALVO: Well, obviously the computer thinks the bishop is not
doing very well at d6. It's hitting against granite there on
g3 and maybe it's better off on b6, but the combination of the
two ideas of putting the queen on a5, where it would have made
more sense to put the pawn on a5, you know, that makes more
sense and then put the bishop on c7 makes you think that maybe
/T*PBGZ it can play pawn to c5 and gain a tempo, but it's
circular reasoning, kind of. I don't know what it's doing.
Mr. VALVO: And one of the things that we all noticed last year
is that Garry found that a secret to beating the computer in
the sixth game was to give it nothing to do, and this is an
example of what happens when it has nothing to do. It's not
quite too sure of what strategy to follow.
Mr. ASHLEY: That's a strange point, consideration that it could
be aggressive, so aggressive with a move like e6-e5 and control
the center. It seems like -- or even bring a rook to the
center of the board. Seems like there were very normal things
to do in this position, as opposed to something as /TKRA*S
ing -- drastic, maybe not so drastic, but unusual as Bc6-c7.
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