Game 1, white
14.Nhf3
Commentary for white move 14:
Mr. FREIDEL: This is Garry "I have to make a edition" and he's
trying to make a decision, very important. He has two choices,
he has to make one.
Mr. ASHLEY: And indeed as the time ticks way, -- ticks away,
that is another factor, the computer doesn't get tired, doesn't
need to go to the bathroom, doesn't get nervous, it just goes
on and it might as well be move one or move 31, it really
doesn't make a difference. Kasparov, though, the tension level
is rising inside him as he realizes that he could make a
mistake here and spoil what's been a great position, and then
being down 1-0 with white. That would be awful for him. So
Kasparov has to make up his mind. That shaking of the head,
though, is not a confident Kasparov.
Mr. VALVO: His tie is loose, too.
Mr. SEIRAWAN: Now he's made a move --
Mr. ASHLEY: He made the move Kd1 h1 which is a cautious
move.
The question is will he get up from the board? I don't think
so /UFPLT.
Mr. VALVO: He expects bishop g5 right away, I'm sure.
Mr. ASHLEY: He's starting to shake a little bit. If you saw the
camera show that characteristic leg shake of chess players,
when your leg -- your leg starts going a mile a minute, and you
can see there that he is not a patient man.
Mr. VALVO: Have you been talking to the director?
Mr. ASHLEY: Look at Kasparov, he's shaking his head, he's not
happy at all, and this I've seen in a situation where -- oh,
Frideric is not feeling good right now. (Laughter.) You can
see it in Kasparov's face. Kasparov would be so bad at poker,
it's unbelievable. (Laughter.)
Mr. ASHLEY: And this could be a devastating situation if he
manages to lose this, but still it doesn't look so critical,
not at the moment, and Deep Blue certainly doesn't think that
it's just winning, or else it would have played a long time
ago, so one has to imagine, what is going on in these two
marvelous chess minds.
Mr. VALVO: If Deep Blue had only played right away, it guessed
what the move was. It didn't expect. It probably expected Re2
like you suggested.
AUDIENCE MEMBER: It might wait to sit on it. It's got plenty of
time.
Mr. ASHLEY: A comment was made in the audience that Deep
Blue
has plenty of time so it might as well sit on the position a
while. But that doesn't motivate Deep Blue at all. What
motivates Deep Blue is whether or not it sees a move that's
reasonable. Once it sees it it's not going to sit. I know
that is a technique that human players will use. I know that
if I get an opponent in time ssure I'll wait a little while
and let them suffer in that time ssure. But Deep Blue is
not thinking in those kind of psychological terms.
Mr. SEIRAWAN:
Mr. VALVO: I have a question for you, Frideric, how many
pounds
does Garry lose in a game?
Mr. FREIDEL: About two pounds.
Mr. VALVO: You were going to
say something? I'm sorry.
Mr. FREIDEL: Yeah. Deep Blue starts to think means that
Kasparov hasn't played the best move, according to Deep Blue.
If he played the best move, according to Deep Blue, it would
play very quick. So it means, you know -- it's bad.
(Laughter.) The problem is he gets time to think now on his
opponent's time.
Mr. ASHLEY: But you mean the best move in Deep Blue's
estimation?
Mr. FREIDEL: Yes, absolutely.
Mr. ASHLEY: So strategically it may have played a best move, but
if Deep Blue didn't feel -- if it's estimation of the best
move -- I'm sorry, it has played the move the bishop from e7 to
g5 setting up an annoying pin that Kasparov will not be able to
solve for a couple of moves. The alignment of the bishop on g5
attacking the knight on e3, protecting the queen from c1, an
alignment called a pin in chess, for those of us who don't know
that terminology, it's a pin. And Kasparov has now played
quickly the move I suggested earlier, Re2, and he wishes to
solve the problem of the pin by moving his queen at c1 along
the back rank maybe to e1 or maybe even to g1, it seems is
Kasparov's idea, setting up some other interesting tax ticks,
but he is not moving away from the board. He realizes that
this is a critical situation, and the jacket might come off
real soon.
Mr. VALVO: You know, I was thinking that he has to break the pin
real fast because black could play Nc5xd3, and the Rd3 could
win a pawn.
Mr. ASHLEY: There are threats in this position indeed. This
knight could get to c5 and then maybe a sacrifice to allow the
rook to penetrate into the d3 square to attack the knight. It
seems Kasparov is going to solve that problem --
Mr. VALVO: Get out of the way right now.
Mr. ASHLEY: Right, get out of the way right away. That is the
idea I'm sure in Kasparov's mind. And then Deep Blue will have
to look at some dynamic way to take advantage of just the
setting, but it seems as if Kasparov has everything under
control -- as I say that he's gotten up from the board.
Mr. VALVO: Maybe he does.
Mr. ASHLEY: He's gotten up from the board. So maybe he feels
that everything is okay and it's not as bad as he thought it
was.
Mr. FREIDEL: The head shaking was -- meant something different.
It meant I should have played something else, which was better
than what I did.
Mr. ASHLEY: Right. That's quite possible.
Mr. FREIDEL: It wasn't "Y this is a mistake," but "Oh, God, why
didn't I play that"?
Mr. VALVO: Is he pleased with his opinion right now?
Mr. FREIDEL: I don't think he's pleased.
Mr. ASHLEY: A very hard thing, what you're talking about, a very
hard thing for a chess player and particularly a purist,
someone who really wants to play excellent games, as Garry
Kasparov wants every single one of his games to be a work of
art, a real production, to play a move that's inferior to
something else he could have played and you're sitting there
thinking oh, dummy you should have played that, trying to get
that out of your mind, you have thoughts like "maybe I'll lose
now" or "what did I do" and usually mistakes come in twos in
chess. You don't just make one, once you've made one, you make
another. And in a situation like that it could be deadly.
Let's field some more questions from the audience, please. We
have one right here.
AUDIENCE MEMBER: Assuming that all the top grandmasters know
all
there is to know about chess, what is it that pushes like a
Kasparov or a Fischer over the edge and makes them the best?
Mr. ASHLEY: Well, that initial sentence was probably a little
off. Grandmasters don't know everything there is to know about
chess. There's so much to learn. Every single day is work,
work, work, to learn more and more. And Kasparov simply knows
more than everyone else.
Mr. VALVO: It's personality --
AUDIENCE MEMBER: So you think it's basically more knowledge
than
possibly intimidation, seeing him across the board, as --
Mr. VALVO: It's got more to do with personality. The worst to
ever play Garry is when he's lost a game in a vious round.
You don't want to play Garry then. He'll beat God!
Mr. FREIDEL: That's correct. Can I answer that, to a certain
degree? About ten years ago or 12 years ago Kasparov and
Karpov and a few others had a monopoly on chess knowledge.
They had their teams and they knew very much more -- we have
a
move, I think.
AUDIENCE MEMBER: a4.
Mr. FREIDEL: a4.
Mr. ASHLEY: A very interesting, seeming pawn sacrifice, but this
move is a very aggressive one, and what's interesting about the
move is that if Kasparov were to take this pawn -- several
weaknesses associates with this move. First of all his pawn is
on the -- pawns on the left side of the board would be weak as
ever.
Mr. VALVO: Right side is stronger.
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