Game 5, white
7.e4
Commentary for white move 7:
MAURICE ASHLEY: What do you think about this position? It seems
a couple of moves so far -- e6 -- just as I speak --
GK MOVE: 7 e4
MAURICE ASHLEY: A very aggressive move by Kasparov, saying
he
wants a piece of the space, a piece of the center, and he has
even gotten up and left the stage to go his dressing room,
shows his confidence in the situation. What do you think?
YASSER SEIRAWAN: I share his confidence, let me tell you.
Actually I'm a little bit surprised by the early commitment of
e2-e4. Personally I, too, like the computer, have a prejudice
for bishops. Bishops work well in an open position after lots
of pawns have come off the board, so in a sense, in the early
part of the game, the knight, in a closed position is
oftentimes more valuable. But further you get into the endgame
after more and more pawns come off the board, the bishops get
better. So from a long-term perspective, I like white, or
Kasparov's, chances better, but in the short-term, what
Kasparov has to do is take a stand in the center and figure out
a way of opening up his diagonal. And the move e2-e4 to my
mind was a bit premature but not a bad move by any stretching
of the imagination, but a bit premature.
MIKE VALVO: There might be an advantage to this because
Kasparov
knows that the computer guesses his moves half of the time, 50
percent of the time. So he knows the computer is going to
expect him to castle by playing a different move. The computer
has to start from scratch rather than having a running start of
about three minutes.
MAURICE ASHLEY: And the computer thinks very, very quickly.
That I think is an understatement. 200 million positions per
second quickly. I had my students try to blink that first, and
you should have seen the kids going...
YASSER SEIRAWAN: A question, I think, in the audience, there is
a young -- one of the young --
MIKE VALVO: Is there a question over here?
YASSER SEIRAWAN: Yeah, I was sure there was one.
AUDIENCE MEMBER: P I think he was just waving.
YASSER SEIRAWAN: He got shy.
MIKE VALVO: Everybody is hiding their hands all of the sudden.
MAURICE ASHLEY: Well, Kasparov has returned to the board.
And,
Mike, the opening, again, we know in chess is so, so
important. It's where the whole groundwork is laid for what's
going to happen, the subsequent events in the middle game and
beyond. I know that Deep Blue has some really good analysis --
a really good analysis team, some really good helpers. Joel
Benjamin is one but the New York Times even reported that
Grandmaster Miguel Illescas from Spain is helping him.
MIKE VALVO: That seems to be the case. There are a lot of other
Grandmasters around, and I wonder if they're also part of the
team, too.
YASSER SEIRAWAN: Do you think Deep Blue has a lot of secret
helpers in the Grandmaster class?
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