Natalia Pogonina beats the World at Chess.com |
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Sunday, 28 March 2010 | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
After scoring an impressive strategic win in 55 moves, Natalia Pogonina was kind enough to share her impressions of the game. On the concept of vote chess Vote chess seems to be an excellent opportunity for people to learn more about chess and decision-making. Team work is also an important part of it. Many chess players are individualists; they prefer working on their own. Meanwhile, this format allows them to feel themselves part of the team.
On correspondence chess, killer instinct and match expectancies Correspondence chess is something totally new to me. I have never played it before, especially against consultants. My primary goal was to make the game instructive and memorable for all the participants, as well as enjoy it myself. Of course, I didnt feel like losing, but there was no killer instinct or must win frenzy involved. The level of play from both sides is more important than the outcome. Before the game some well-wishers tried to talk me out of playing by either telling me that the World will be playing very badly and quickly lose or you will be dealing with professional correspondence players and their chess engine labs. I waved these scary stories off being optimistic helps a lot. In reality, neither of these scenarios came to life.
On opening choice The Opocensky variation of the Najdorf (1.e4 c5 2.Nf3 d6 3.d4 cd 4.Nd4 Nf6 5.Nc3 a6 6.Be2) is a nice choice when you aim at outmaneuvering your opponents, playing a quiet positional game and accumulating small advantages one after one, trying to make use of even the slightest inaccuracies. There are always a few people willing to share computer lines with everyone else, no matter whether they want it or not. For this reason I didnt want to get involved into sharp double-edged positions where precise calculation is required. On time spent per move Sometimes I was ready to reply in blitz mode; sometimes a more detailed analysis was required. Generally, it took me about half an hour a day. On receiving advice and feeling that a win is coming To keep the game fair, my chess friends did not offer me any advice. They just joked about the challenge trying to cheer me up, and sometimes made general statements like Youre much better here, keep it up!. My husband and baby (Nikolai is just 4 months old) were the ones who supported me the most. When Peter Zhdanov, who has been following the game quite closely, suggested a plan starting with 31.Rd3 and exploiting the weakness of the f7-square while marching with pawns on the queenside, I liked it. I knew that my position was better, but at this point it became clear that White will probably win this game unless something unexpected occurs. It was funny to learn after the game that leading chess engines dont see this idea at all!
On the level of opposition My opponents have put up a tough resistance. In my opinion, Black has performed quite well, especially given the average rating of the team members. A strong GM could have played like that OTB. This statement is confirmed by the fact that two grandmasters (GM Julio Becerra and GM Nigel Davies) have previously tried to defeat Chess.com with no luck (both games were drawn). On dealing with the public The game was quite enjoyable in terms of communicating with the other players. They contacted me on Twitter, at my website, at the public comments section at Chess.com everywhere! Some of them were there to ask for advice (what did we do wrong?), some wanted to teach me how to play (why did you blunder on move X?), others made jokes about my baby playing for me in the match, etc. The atmosphere around the match has been nice and friendly from the beginning to the end. Future of vote chess People seem to have enjoyed this game a lot. Some of them even asked for a rematch. I will do my best to offer them a chance to play against of the worlds best players by talking one of my super GM friends into participating in the next vote chess game. Final position of Pogonina vs the World (55.Rg3) WGM Natalia Pogonina (2501) the World [B92] 1.e4 c5 2.Nf3 d6 3.d4 cxd4 4.Nxd4 Nf6 5.Nc3 a6 6.Be2 e5 7.Nb3 Be7 8.O-O O-O 9.Re1 Be6 10.Bf3 Nbd7 11.a4 Qc7 12.Nd2 Rac8 13.Nf1 Nb6 14.Ne3 Nc4 15.Ned5 Nxd5 16.Nxd5 Bxd5 17.Qxd5 Nb6 18.Qb3 Nd7 19.Be3 Qc6 20.Red1 Rc7 21.c3 Nc5 22.Qc2 Ne6 23.a5 Ng5 24.Bxg5 Bxg5 25.Ra4 Qd7 26.Qb3 Rb8 27.Be2 Rc6 28.Rb4 Bd8 29.Qa4 Rbc8 30.h3 Qe7 31.Rd3 Qc7 32.Rf3 Bf6 33.Qb3 Rb8 34.Bc4 h6 35.g4 b5 36.axb6 Rcxb6 37.Rxb6 Rxb6 38.Qa2 Qb7 39.b4 Qa7 40.Kg2 Rb7 41.Qa4 Kf8 42.Qc6 Rd7 43.Bxa6 Qc7 44.Qd5 Bg5 45.Bb5 Rd8 46.Bc6 Bf4 47.c4 Bd2 48.b5 Ba5 49.Qe6 Kg8 50.Qf5 Bb6 51.Bd5 Rf8 52.g5 hxg5 53.Qxg5 Qd8 54.Qg6 51% percent of the players voted resign, but the rules required 60% or more, thus Qe7 (32%) was chosen. White announced mate in 4 with 55.Rg3 1-0 Natalia and Peter: winning is easy
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Last Updated ( Sunday, 28 March 2010 ) |
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