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The million dollar Brains in Bahrain match between Vladimir
Kramnik and Deep Fritz takes place 2nd-22nd October 2002 (Opening Ceremony 2nd
October. Playing days 4, 6, 8, 10, 13, 15, 17 & 19 October, 2002).
Report Nine: Game 5 Report by Ebrahim Al Mannai
Fritz Wins!! Sunday, 13 October
It was half past five when the Arabian sun was setting on
Muharraq island, and Kramnik and Fritz had been going at it for two and a half
hours upstairs. Everyone was expecting another long dreary game that would take
us up to eight or nine oclock.

Fritz team before the game:' What you've got to ask
yourself is...do you feel lucky?
Thats when I was gracefully swept away by the
wonderful Zena Howard (Einstein Chief of Communication, and my immediate
supervisor- incidentally). She wanted another chess lesson from her faithful
press officer. It was with utmost pleasure I dropped the ten thousand necessary
tasks I was performing in order to be seated across the chessboard from the
enchanting Ms. Howard.

Kramnik before his unlucky game 5
Of course, mine was not the only heart captured by this
fair lady (and, oh, so very fair boss). I felt a pair of envious eyes follow us
into the common hall, where we were to innocently play with our wooden pieces.
As we reviewed the rooks move, I sensed his presence lurking in the
shadows, waiting for the right moment to intrude and shatter our rapport. We
were examining the tricky knights move when he revealed himself.

Kramnik answering questions from children. Photo Mig
Greengard
Christopher Lutz, with his bright and friendly smile, sat
down to join us. He appeared quite fascinated in our chess-101 session. I was a
little on-edge to be conducting a chess lesson with Germanys number one
grandmaster sitting right next to me. He seemed very interested in our session.
Lutz, who happens to be Kramniks second for this match, listened intently
to my words. His eyes would hardly look away from the board on which my basic
illustrative positions were played. Hed briefly contribute occasionally
but, for the most part, he observed us with a silent, and modest, smile.
What is he doing? I asked myself, How
could he possibly be enjoying this?!

Frans Morsch and Vladimir Kramnik after Game 5
I figured he might have been in a reflective mood, where
hed observe the game from the eyes of a novice. He definitely wasnt
brushing up on the conditions of castling. It was most distracting.
He seemed even more engrossed when my precious Zena and I
decided to play an Italian game for practice, going over the general opening
principles. It actually got to be quite fun with the three of us- a novice, a
tournament player, and a grandmaster - discussing the logic and reasoning
behind the different moves. I was just beginning to reluctantly prepare a
fierce attack against my dear opponents weakened castled position when
Aziz, Kramniks kickboxing bodyguard approached us with the surprising
news:
"He just lost."
Lutz rushes away with Aziz. Zena and I abruptly end our
game to go tell the world media about todays extremely news-worthy
result.
After its first two games with white, it seems that
Fritz might have decided to send the 1.e4 file of its openings database to the
recycle bin. For the first time so far in the match, Fritz opened with the
queens pawn.
The computers choice of opening was a successful one.
This is not because Fritz eventually won the game (this was due to a two-move
blunder by Kramnik!), but because Fritz exhibited its best play so far in the
match, never quite letting go of the (mostly minute) pressure it exerted on
Blacks position.
Another first-time happening is that the queens managed to
survive the beginning of the game, and actually stayed on the board until the
end. This was the most favourable change Team Fritz could have hoped for.

Kramnik signing autographs. Photo Mig Greengard
Despite the result, Kramniks conduct of the opening
was that of a world champion. His handling of the black side of this QGD
resulted in no serious weakness and a practically equal position. At one point,
Kramnik decided not to enter a variation which forces the queen trade (move 12-
see game below), probably because hed assessed Whites resulting
position as being too advantageous. The champ opted for safe exchanges and
simplification, obviously aiming for a draw.

Fritz Team after Game 5. Photo Mig Greengard
It was only in the endgame when Kramnik was forced to lose
a pawn. He then had to reckon with the possibility of defending an
objectively-drawn but very difficult queen and pawn endgame; with 4 vs. 3 pawns
on the kingside. He later claimed that defending such an endgame would require
an adjournment- or perhaps a double adjournment- and much mental energy to play
(and for a draw, at that). It was perhaps the thought of this daunting scenario
which caused him to blunder away his knight, with 15 minutes left on his clock.

The losing move
At the following press conference, Vlad claimed to have had
seen that 34. ..Qc4 loses the knight to 35. Ne7+ and that he had moved on to
examine other candidate moves only to return to 34
Qc4, forgetting the
reason hed dismissed it. Personally, as a mortal chessplayer, I find this
somewhat encouraging. The fact that even a player the like of Kramnik would
fall into the I-saw-it-and-then-forgot" type of oversight. Of course,
after this fatal error, Kramnik resigned.
Deep Fritz - Kramnik, Vladimir [D57] Brains in
Bahrain (5), 13.10.2002
1.d4 Nf6 2.c4 e6 3.Nf3 d5 4.Nc3 Be7 5.Bg5 Having
faced accusations of playing too many Kasparov openings, Deep Fritz adopts a
Karpov favourite today. 5...h6 6.Bh4 0-0 7.e3 Ne4 The Lasker variation
8.Bxe7 Qxe7 9.cxd5 Nxc3 10.bxc3 exd5 11.Qb3 Rd8 probably better than
11...c6, which restricts both of Black's minor pieces. 12.c4 dxc4
Instead of this, the GM team of commentators were examining what looks like
a forced queen exchange: [ 12...Nc6 13.cxd5 Qb4+] 13.Bxc4 Nc6 14.Be2

This avoids the possibility of losing a tempo and the
capture of White's good bishop after 14...Na5. 14...b6 15.0-0 Bb7 16.Rfc1
Rac8
Preparing for an eventual ...c5 pawn break to butt heads
with White's rock-solid d-pawn. 17.Qa4 Na5 18.Rc3 c5 19.Rac1 cxd4 20.Nxd4
Rxc3 21.Rxc3 Rc8 22.Rxc8+ Bxc8

Entering this endgame, Black's ace-in-the-hole is his
queenside pawn majority. This could materialize into a dreaded distant passed
pawn, but only if Black trades off the pieces first! Currently, White's knight
is powerfully centralised while the poor Black winny on a5 might as well be off
the board. 23.h3 g6 [ 23...Bd7 24.Qc2 Qd6 enabling 25...Nc6 and
preventing 25. Qc7 25.Qe4 Nc6 26.Bd3 Nxd4?? 27.Qa8+! (Pein).] 24.Bf3 Bd7
25.Qc2 Qc5 26.Qe4 Qc1+ 27.Kh2 Qc7+

I suspect the purpose behind the queen checks was to help
reach the time control. 28.g3 Nc4 the knight finally joins the battle.
29.Be2! Excellent maneuvering by Fritz! It rightly anticipates the
advance of Black's queenside pawns, beginning with 29...b5 to support the
knight, but then 30. a4! a6 31. Qa8+ nails it. 29...Ne5

At this point, most humans- including the grandmasters here-
would probably kick the knight with 30. f4. According to Frans Morsch, this
move was what the machine was considering as its best option for a while, until
it happened upon 30.Bb5! Bxb5 31.Nxb5 Qc5 Black cannot hold on to his
a-pawn. 32.Nxa7 Qa5 33.Kg2 Qxa2 34.Nc8

In this position, Kramnik played the worst move of his world
championship career. 34...Qc4?? 35.Ne7+ 1-0 |