Game 4, white
12.Bxg6
Commentary for white move 12:
YASSER SEIRAWAN: Well, on that note a recall a comment of
Grandmaster Robert Byrne, who is a columnist, chess columnist
for the New York Times. He recalls one of America's great
players Sammy Reshevsky --
DB MOVE: 12 Bxg6
MAURICE ASHLEY: Well, Deep Blue has varied from your
suggestion,
Yaz, and notice, by the way, this last move, if you look at the
bishop on the g6 square, it is standings right on the g6 square
is a bit off center. We spoke clearly yesterday about how as a
nonchess player the operator makes these moves, and the pieces
end up off the squares from time to time, and that irritates
the heck out of chess players. (Audience laughter.)
MIKE VALVO: In fact, last year as arbiter I had to walk over to
the arbiter and say "put the piece on the center of the
square." But it wasn't as bad as this one, it was half over
the next square.
MAURICE ASHLEY: This is what the Husseinlers in Washington
square park will do to you and suddenly the bishop changes
color, it slowly goes off -- "Hey, what happened?"
YASSER SEIRAWAN: I thought we were playing bishops of
opposite
color!
MAURICE ASHLEY: Suddenly the right color.
MIKE VALVO: The pieces off the board suddenly come on the
board.
MAURICE ASHLEY: Well, this bishop on g6 will be removed
immediately, so we won't have to worry about it being so ugly
at the moment.
YASSER SEIRAWAN: Just to continue the story. So what happens
is
Robert Byrne would like to analyze the position with
Grandmaster Reshevsky, and he would say, "What do you think
of
this position? And Reshevsky would say to Robert "What side am
I playing on? What side is mine?" And he said I just want to
get an idea.
He said, "Am I white? Then I like white. --
(Kasparov adjusts the bishop on g6.)
MAURICE ASHLEY: Did you see that?
MAURICE ASHLEY: Well, even if he had planned to play the next
move instantly, he couldn't help putt-putt that bishop back
into the middle of the square.
MIKE VALVO: And if they say touch move he doesn't care, he's
going to take it anyway.
YASSER SEIRAWAN: Let me just talk a moment about the position
because actually it's an intriguing decision, and it's
conceivable that Garry may spend some time making it. It's an
absolutely standard and let us even use the word "automatic" to
recapture towards the center. This is like the overwhelming
general principle that beginners get hammered with, "Capture
towards the center."
However, in this particular position, there are reasons for
playing f7xg6, which is a move actually a computer would
consider much more deeply than most humans. The reason why
you
could consider the move f7xg6 is the advance of the g4 pawn has
weakened the knight on f3 so that after f7xg6 black could swing
a rook to the f8 square and get counter play on the f-file.
I don't know if Garry will make this antipositional move f7xg6,
but it deserves some consideration.
MIKE VALVO: He may think a while on this one.
YASSER SEIRAWAN: I suspect he will.
MIKE VALVO: A crucial decision for the game.
YASSER SEIRAWAN: It will have a long-term effect.
MAURICE ASHLEY: Yeah, he's certainly studying the position
better than -- he better than any of us knows the concept of
capturing toward the center and its effect, but now we have
to -- he has to wonder to he wants to create this somewhat
double-edged position creating the weakened pawn on e6 but
giving his pieces the f-file to operate on.
YASSER SEIRAWAN: He's almost weighing the decision in his
mind.
Real-time text commentary is made possible by LiveNote, Inc. and
Vincent Varallo Associates