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| Tags: bishop, dropped, fischer |
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#1
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Can anyone explain how/why Fischer lost is bishop in the first game of his
match against Spassky in 1972? The fact that a bishop capturing the h2 or a2 pawn and getting trapped after g3 or b3 is trivial. Everyone knows that. Did he really think he had chances after sacrificing the bishop for two (or three?) pawns? |
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#2
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Or was it just a mistake ?
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#3
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On Mar 27, 11:50*am, (SAT W-7) wrote:
Or was it just a mistake ? Once I played a game with Beginner Level. In 4 moves my Bishop was gone. After that in next 2 Moves Beginner took my King. And I lost the game to Beginner in just 6 Moves. Beginner never does mistake. But it always plays with same intelligence. Thats the advantage of Computers then never get tired and they can play continiously. Only Strong players like Help Bot and Skoop are able to beat the Beginner Level as they play nice strategies to win the games. Bye Sanny GetClub Site Link Removed (As some people do not like that.) |
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#4
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On Mar 27, 2:47*am, "Freelancer71" wrote:
Can anyone explain how/why Fischer lost is bishop in the first game of his match against Spassky in 1972? The fact that a bishop capturing the h2 or a2 pawn and getting trapped after g3 or b3 is trivial. Everyone knows that. Did he really think he had chances after sacrificing the bishop for two (or three?) pawns? The Soviet GM Igor Bondarevsky said: "I think there are three reasons: "1. The american doesn't like to play positions without counter- chances, aiming only for a draw. He always tries to change the course of events, to obtain play of his own. "2. Fischer's intuitive grasp of position is not without flaws. On this occation it failed to indicate to him that taking the pawn gives White enormous winning chances ... "3. Fischer apparently miscalculated in the variation with the final move 35.Bd2!, and yet the calculation was fairly simple. Here is a vivid example to smash the myth of him being a computer." I'm not sure how valid Bondarevsky's comments are, but thought they were worth presenting. |
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#5
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On Mar 27, 9:36 am, Sanny wrote:
Only Strong players like Help Bot and Skoop are able to beat the Beginner Level as they play nice strategies to win the games. Anyone rated above 1100 can beat the pants off Beginner level again and again and again! |
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#6
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On Mar 27, 2:47 am, "Freelancer71" wrote:
Can anyone explain how/why Fischer lost is bishop in the first game of his match against Spassky in 1972? The fact that a bishop capturing the h2 or a2 pawn and getting trapped after g3 or b3 is trivial. Everyone knows that. Did he really think he had chances after sacrificing the bishop for two (or three?) pawns? In that particular position, it was far from "trivial". First of all, Black could advance his h-pawn and exchange it (or possibly even promote it) in an effort to free the Bishop. Secondly, in order to finish the job, White had to not only combat the h-pawn's advance, but also he had to see that in all lines his King and Bishop would work together to cover all the various escape-routes. Generally, speaking, Boris Spassky's move (K-d3) is the sort of move which separates the world champions from the also-rans. You can find very similar things in the play of all the world champions at their respective peaks. In fact, the victim in this game, GM Fischer, wrote about one in his MSMG book; he noted that in some boring position, Tigran Petrosian -- then world champion -- played N(f3)-d1, heading for d3; the d3 square was (just barely) closer to the center of the board than f3, hence, a minute improvement in the Knight's position was effected. Most players would not even consider trying to "improve" the positioning of such a piece, which looked pretty darn good sitting on f3. In addition to the two pawns, Black also gained several(?) tempos with which to centralize his King-- which was well back. The error seems to have been a simple miscalculation-- missing White's Bishop retreat at the very end-- B-d2. This reminds me of so many comments regarding world champion Alekhine; it was noted that many of his combinations had a "killer move" at the tail end, which is ever so easy to overlook. Instead of playing routinely as in a famous Larry Evans quote ("Here, nine out of ten grandmasters would have..."), the world champion actually calculated what would happen if Black were to grab to h- pawn, and correctly concluded it would give Black indigestion. -- help bot |
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#7
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On Mar 27, 10:36 am, Sanny wrote:
Once I played a game with Beginner Level. In 4 moves my Bishop was gone. After that in next 2 Moves Beginner took my King. And I lost the game to Beginner in just 6 Moves. Since capturing the King is not legal in chess, you really lost in just five moves-- the point where your King was *about* to be captured on the next move. That is, unless you could have escaped. -- help bot |
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#8
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On Mar 27, 5:27 pm, SBD wrote:
On Mar 27, 9:36 am, Sanny wrote: Only Strong players like Help Bot and Skoop are able to beat the Beginner Level as they play nice strategies to win the games. Anyone rated above 1100 can beat the pants off Beginner level again and again and again! That claim is ridiculous. The program plays reasonably well in the middle game, and only *if* such a player somehow survived to the endgame would he find himself at a significant advantage. Personally, I think I could beat a roomful of USCF 1100 players in a simultaneous, while taking the GetClub program too lightly has sometimes resulted in draws or even a rare loss, now and then. Although I would prefer to have real players with real ratings to go by, if I had to guess I would put the Beginner level at somewhere nearer USCF 1500 than USCF 1100-- maybe even higher, since the glaring weakness in the endgame is quite irrelevant unless a player is strong enough to successfully exploit it. Now here is the problem: there is no set time limit on the human opponent at Get Club, so a weak player can think as long as he likes, and that means the program is getting short shrift. I expect that if we could equalize the thinking times, even GetClub's Beginner level would rise to a level closer to 2000 USCF, merely by being a Pentium-class computer and not a human. -- help bot |
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#9
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On Mar 27, 3:19 pm, wrote:
On Mar 27, 2:47 am, "Freelancer71" wrote: Can anyone explain how/why Fischer lost is bishop in the first game of his match against Spassky in 1972? The fact that a bishop capturing the h2 or a2 pawn and getting trapped after g3 or b3 is trivial. Everyone knows that. Did he really think he had chances after sacrificing the bishop for two (or three?) pawns? The Soviet GM Igor Bondarevsky said: "I think there are three reasons: "1. The american doesn't like to play positions without counter- chances, aiming only for a draw. He always tries to change the course of events, to obtain play of his own. "2. Fischer's intuitive grasp of position is not without flaws. On this occation it failed to indicate to him that taking the pawn gives White enormous winning chances ... "3. Fischer apparently miscalculated in the variation with the final move 35.Bd2!, and yet the calculation was fairly simple. Here is a vivid example to smash the myth of him being a computer." I'm not sure how valid Bondarevsky's comments are, but thought they were worth presenting. There is also the problem that Fischer had caused all these problems - postponements, the room, Kissinger, Slater - and the first game was really really dull up to move 28. When he saw that there was ½ a chance to make the game interesting he took it. |
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#10
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On Mar 27, 6:47 am, "Freelancer71" wrote:
Can anyone explain how/why Fischer lost is bishop in the first game of his match against Spassky in 1972? The fact that a bishop capturing the h2 or a2 pawn and getting trapped after g3 or b3 is trivial. Everyone knows that. Did he really think he had chances after sacrificing the bishop for two (or three?) pawns? Spassky may have made a mistake himself with 36.a4, and Fischer may have been able to draw with 37...a6. Earlier, for white to win after 32...g5 33.Kg2 g4 34.Kxh2 h3 is not easy. |
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