Game 5, black
20...Kb8
Commentary for black move 20:
YASSER SEIRAWAN: Deep Blue may be only three or four years
old.
MIKE VALVO: Let's pause for a second. I think we have Maurice
Ashley coming back on the stage.
DB MOVE: 20...Kb8
MAURICE ASHLEY: We also want to that I Matt Thoennes for
coming
on, and Yasser Seirawan will take his break.
AUDIENCE MEMBER: We have a move.
MIKE VALVO: Another move?
AUDIENCE MEMBER: Kb8.
MAURICE ASHLEY: Yes, Deep Blue has played Kb8, /PHAO*UFB
his
king off the sensitive diagonal.
I was up in the press room, and a lot of announcements going
/OFPLT Grandmasters abounding. A couple of things I noticed.
The first thing I went up to Grandmasters Ilya Gurevich and
Patrick wolf and I said, "What's going on?" And they have some
pretty strong opinions the about -- about the position. First
of all they felt that Deep Blue was fine, that black was just
okay, that the biggest problem was that they felt Garry
Kasparov was a little inJudeitious in going too quick, pressing
ahead in the center with c3 and e5. We can go back in this
position, this moment, a move that we liked up here, this move
c3 if you'll remember back to move 13, c3, and the bishop
retreated to e7 and then this move, d4. They felt that after
knight back to g6 and h4, this move e5 came quickly, opening up
the center without Kasparov having castled his king. They felt
that this equal /AOEUSDZ the position. Their feeling was that
before this, Kasparov should have just waited, maybe could have
castled in this position. That way his king would have been
safe, and then later he could go to the c3 break. So they
really feel very comfortable with black here. In fact, I was
watching Ilya Gurevich, Grandmaster Ilya Gurevich, was a former
world junior champion, I was hearing him throw out moves almost
trying to say that black was better, that Deep Blue was better
in this position that we're playing now.
Patrick Wolff felt no, that was a bit too much and after a couple
of moves they were whipping back at each other. I just kind of
waited until they finished Grandmaster-speak. And after they
were done "Yeah, looks equal."
So that's they're feeling now that Deep Blue is not in any real
trouble in this position, and if that's the case, Mike, as I go
back to the position, Kasparov can't be too happy. This is
game five with white. Tomorrow he has to face the gun of the
white pieces that Deep Blue is going to have. So he can't be
too pleased right now.
YASSER SEIRAWAN: No, and a strong possibility of this match
being drawn, or he could even lose with the back pieces against
Deep Blue. Deep Blue has beaten him with the white pieces a
couple times now.
YASSER SEIRAWAN: What will humanity do in that case?
MIKE VALVO: Why, what is the problem? Based on that question,
I'd like to have a mike given to Jonathan Schaffer up there on
the right. I see him. Jonathan Schaffer is the programmer of
the machine that actually became the world checker champion
yon. The name of the machine is chinook, and he played a
fantastic player, Marion tinsly to beat this guy and become the
world champion. I just wondered, what happened in the world of
checkers after chinook became world champion? Tell us about
it.
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