Game 5, black
49...Kb4
Commentary for black move 49:
In this position, Re2 is also interesting. In this position Re2
-- this could get a little antsy. There are different
possibilities. This possibility loses the game. Kc2 Rc1 Kb2
c3+ Ka2 --
DB MOVE: 49...Kb4
MAURICE ASHLEY: If we're correct, this is going to end in a
draw. And this could be astonishing wizardry. And Kasparov
with his face is showing clearly that he sees it. Deep Blue
simply ignored the threat of the g-pawn. And Kasparov sees it
now, and he's -- I mean it is clear to him that he did not
consider this position. Imagine the decimation of his pawns on
the left side. He didn't want -- who would think of that? I
remember when I said to Roman taking on a2, and he said to
Roman, the pawn is irrelevant, why are you taking that pawn?
And truly I didn't see deep enough into the position to see the
moves. I mean Deep Blue has shown that it had mating --
mating?
MIKE VALVO: Maybe that's why it's got the nickname "deep"!
MAURICE ASHLEY: Well, I tell you, that was truly astonishing
what we've just seen and it just shows Deep Blue's true
strength. We had this all worked out, went right into the
variation. It didn't play so-called --
AUDIENCE MEMBER: RxN.
MAURICE ASHLEY: RxN? You don't want to play -- you don't want
to take this now. Then you're asking to lose. Then you want
to lose this game because after king takes that's a mate
threat. You have to respond to it and then sudden this this
rook comes back, stops your pawn from becoming a queen, and I
see girls, new girls coming. Maybe this one, too. If you're
not careful.
AUDIENCE MEMBER: What about Re3?
MIKE VALVO: What's happened here? The computer has a
resource
that we don't consider as humans. We think a pawn is going to
queen, we've got to stop that pawn, we've got to be within a
square, we just partition off that part of the board but the
computer considers the whole board and says, "There's
counterplay here," and this is introducing a new dimension to
flay that we haven't considered before.
MAURICE ASHLEY: That was indeed astonishing and it's
something
that we couldn't do as humans. We are following standard
patterns, try to use counterplay, trying to use restricted
play, trying to just defend against the setup, because the
unusual set up we saw on this side, on the left side is just
not typical, it's not typical. A knight on b3, it's supposed
to be on c3, we know the standard mate drawing procedure with
a
knight on c3 but not b3. And now we go back to that move, we
know that Kasparov entombed his king. Look at that king.
That's what's costing him. The king has nowhere to go. Maybe
way back when he could have move his king to D one so that
there was no mate, there was no problem with the mating idea.
Now, with his king on b1 he's suffering for it his king cannot
get out of this tomb, he's stuck and the one thing I think
Kasparov has got to be really concerned about, he better not
make the wrong drawing move, you know, thinking -- he won't,
he'll queen the pawn and accept the draw, but the other thing
he has to deal with is the disappointment of throwing away his
last white. He goes into tomorrow with a draw, it'll be the
difference between last year's match and this year's match.
Kasparov won game five, he was fortunate enough to win game
five after offering Deep Blue a draw.
GK MOVE: (Kasparov offers a draw, and it's accepted by the
Deep
Blue team.)
MAURICE ASHLEY: He's at a loss for words now. Deep Blue
pulled
this off. This was wizardry.
MIKE VALVO: As humans, we're limited by concepts. And this
computer has widened the dimension of what's going on in these
games, it's increased the possibility, just going to change the
game. They're going to show new ways of playing these complex
endgames.
MAURICE ASHLEY: That was stunning.
MIKE VALVO: This is phenomenal, this is fantastic.
MAURICE ASHLEY: Well, save your questions, folks. Kasparov
will
be down no doubt in about five or ten minutes. He usually
comes down quite quickly. We do have some questions for
audience members that we can field right now. On the match --
you should set the match situation, three draws in a ro -- and
he cannot be happy about this situation now against a force
that doesn't seem to get phased by anything at all. We do have
a question from the audience.
AUDIENCE MEMBER: What do you do after RxN king takes and
Ne3?
Nd3.
MAURICE ASHLEY: In the variation after Kb4, you mean?
MIKE VALVO: We just went through this.
AUDIENCE MEMBER: Ne2.
MAURICE ASHLEY: Ne2 I, -- I take the knight.
All right, let's take a look at some moves just to confirm that
Kasparov indeed had to follow this variation.
MIKE VALVO: It's no perfect --
MAURICE ASHLEY: Ne2 doesn't stop the perpet, that's the point.
MAURICE ASHLEY: What do you do about something like --
MIKE VALVO: Notice Garry is still sitting at the board.
MAURICE ASHLEY: Well, what have we seen here? Kasparov is
totally in shock. He's finding it hard even to leave the
room. Ir -- he can't believe it. I'm sure he doesn't want to
come down here and have to talk to us.
MIKE VALVO: I think he wants the Deep Blue operator to play a
few moves with him.
MAURICE ASHLEY: He might want to analyze the position a little
bit, he's really stunned.
MAURICE ASHLEY: He's not just a little stunned, he seems like
he's making a big point, and he's not happy at all. I don't
know what could be bothering him. The result of the game we
can't hear him, but he's very animated right now making points
regarding something that happened. This is an angry Kasparov,
and I really don't know why. We can only hope that we will
hear the news and it will filter down to us. Oh, he ain't
happy.
MIKE VALVO: Can anybody read Russian lips?
AUDIENCE MEMBER: It's not Russian, it's English.
MAURICE ASHLEY: Look at this. Kasparov very angry. To say the
least, we talked about this match, the concept of being
rough -- and look how many people are in the room now. It's
rust a -- like a whole host of people coming over to the board
. Something has occurred that we're not privy to as yet --
MIKE VALVO: It looks like the seeds of a protest, to me.
Because Ken Thompson is there.
YASSER SEIRAWAN: Ken Thompson is part of the protest
committee.
MIKE VALVO: And Yuri Dokhoian. And perhaps is listening to her
quite intently. She'll give the final word, and he's still
looking at her, listeningtory logic, shrugging his shoulders,
so Carol is the voice of authority in that room at the moment.
Frederic Friedel is next to him, at our left. And so we are
still trying to ascertain what is going on. A very upset
Kasparov. This was such a fantastic chance for him, a third
chance in a row. And he has blown the win against great
tenacity by Deep Blue. We are hoping that he will arrive
soon.
MIKE VALVO: Now C. J. Tan is there.
MAURICE ASHLEY: C. J. Tan the head of the Deep Blue team has
shown up.
AUDIENCE MEMBER: What could he be protesting?
MAURICE ASHLEY: Let's get this mike here. We have a comment
from an audience member.
MIKE VALVO: Do we know in fact that he's coming?
MAURICE ASHLEY: Now I don't know. I figured he would, but
what's going on now, we're not sure.
AUDIENCE MEMBER: Could it be some form of distraction,
perhaps?
MAURICE ASHLEY: Your guess is as good as ours. We have
absolutely no idea. It seemed pretty standard, it seemed like
just a draw. Maybe he's protesting to how the operator
behaved.
MIKE VALVO: A comment has been made that the operator went
off
stage --
MAURICE ASHLEY: On Deep Blue's move, the comment was made
the
operator left the room in Deep Blue's move, which is legal,
absolutely legal, and maybe Kasparov felt that he was
distracted by that, but what move did that occur on, did you
see?
AUDIENCE MEMBER: About move number 39 or so.
MAURICE ASHLEY: 39. That's quite a ways back and may have
distracted Kasparov, but that's a weak -- a weak claim.
MIKE VALVO: But Ken Thompson is there and he's only there for
technical reasons, not for bathroom reasons.
AUDIENCE MEMBER: I agree with you, I don't think it's ground
for --
MAURICE ASHLEY: We're not sure. I believe now we have left the
room. If we may get a shot once more of the playing area, I
think they've left. Kasparov has indeed left and we will
anticipate his arriving here shortly, unless for some reason
he's decide to do leave the building. Well, this match has it
all!
I mean everything you can imagine. Game one --
MIKE VALVO: It ain't over net tonight.
MAURICE ASHLEY: No, it's not. Game 6, you can have more hype
and more craziness than this. Game one, Kasparov wins, after
Deep Blue came up with wild tactical ideas. Kasparov managed
to quell the fire and win the game.
Game two, the computer plays like a human. Kasparov resigns in a
drawn position. What's going on?
In game three, another edge for Kasparov. Kasparov doesn't
manage to win.
Game four, again a big edge for Kasparov, at least a
significant-looking edge, and somehow he just frittered away
the position and managed to draw and came on stage looking
very, very upset. His mind still it seemed on game two. And
now game five, and again we thought that Kasparov was going to
win, needing to win this game, because tomorrow the computer
has white, and somehow, miraculously Deep Blue figures out a
very -- certainly not a standard way of defending the
position.
MIKE VALVO: We can't categorize it.
MAURICE ASHLEY: You can't categorize anything. He's trying to
put his finger on Deep Blue and it just keeps wiggling and
wiggling and he has no idea what's happening now and I must
say
he must be at least a very confused world champion, and a big
game tomorrow where he has to defend the black pieces. We're
hoping he will be on the stage shortly, we're checking to see.
But this match, I don't remember as hot a match as this one in
recent memory.
MIKE VALVO: And, you know, tomorrow's game, $300,000 was --
rides on that game.
MAURICE ASHLEY: Forget the $300,000. The fate of humanity is
on
the line! (Audience laughter.) At least in Garry Kasparov's
head. I mean that's -- Whoo. Man, why did he set himself up
like that? ! And he's got to play the black pieces tomorrow,
too.
MAURICE ASHLEY: Garry Kasparov has gotten out of a lot of
holes. There was a match he played against Karpov, a world
championship match where he had to win the last game in order
to keep his title, he had to win, and everybody thought he'd
come out flying, sparks, shooting, all systems go, and he
played it very cautiously and managed to grind Karpov down and
win the match and retain his title. He's been in a lot of
holes in his life. This is a deep, deep hole to be in, with
the black pieces, against an opponent that is confusing, that
is resourceful, that is tenacious, with his frame of mind as it
is now, so many chances just slipping away at his fingertips.
This stage is set for some kind of amaze be --
MIKE VALVO: Just keep talking. I'm going to find out if he's
coming. If you have any questions, we still have ushers, we'll
take questions. But be ready to ask Kasparov some questions.
I'm not sure we will be able to, though, because the last time
I asked him questions Kasparov was very upset, was out of it,
you could tell and this may be the case still.
We do have a question in the back.
MIKE VALVO: He's still on the 35th floor at the moment.
MAURICE ASHLEY: That's very surprising.
AUDIENCE MEMBER: We're very shocked and surprised at what's
taken place right now of C on c7 /TWOEPBT c6 and b5 and got
a -- pulled off a draw. My only question is can someone go to
the area and find out what took place right there? We're all
surprised. Garry is surprised. Is it possible someone can
inform us what's just taken place in the game room?
MAURICE ASHLEY: I'm sorry, I don't quite understand.
AUDIENCE MEMBER: Find out what happened.
AUDIENCE MEMBER: He was arguing --
MIKE VALVO: We're trying to find out right now.
AUDIENCE MEMBER: We were all shocked, we're all surprised.
He's
still there, he may want to look at the game, or -- can someone
go there and find out exactly --
MIKE VALVO: Frederic is here, find out what was going on at the
time.
FREDERICK FRIEDEL: Ask Garry.
MAURICE ASHLEY: Kasparov will be arriving shortly.
MAURICE ASHLEY: Frideric, the game was a draw, yes?
MIKE VALVO: And we have world champion Garry Kasparov!
(Long, long standing ovation and wild cheering.)
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