The Fritz team was more than a little embarrassed when
their brainchild tossed the move 12
Bf8?? on the board, returning its bishop
to its original square! This bizarre move was something even the
lowliest human player would never consider. It made perfect sense to Fritz,
as it thought that the best move for Kramnik was to retreat his knight, in which
case Fritz would have repeated its move too, settling for a draw. Of course
Kramnik had no intention of repeating and Fritzs move was exposed for
the terrible blunder it was.
It wasn't completely one-sided. Fritz fought back and
shocked Kramnik with some typical computer tactics. In the press
conference he admitted that he never imagined 27…Bc4+! and the tactics that
followed. "Only a computer would find and play something like that," Kramnik
said, "I was completely shocked."
He
didn't lose his head, however, and after a long think he found his way through
the complications. Kramnik kept firm control of the position and
retained the structural and other positional advantages he earned after Fritz's
poor opening play. His active king and rook dominated the board and Fritz's
pieces were reduced to completely passive defense.
In the final position the king and pawn
endgame is hopeless for black. It's not easy to figure out, however, and GM
commentator Nigel Short was critical of the Fritz Team's decision to resign.
"At least for the thousands of chess fans out there who will see this game and
not understand why black resigned," he said. "There are several long variations
for white to calculate, many choices to make, it's not that simple. Black should
have played on for at least 10 more moves."
In game six Fritz will be back with the white pieces
and the boys from ChessBase are eager to strike back. It seems unlikely
that they will allow the Berlin Defense that Kramnik drew so easily with in
game one.
You can replay the annotated game here.