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Very Hot Topic (More than 25 Replies) C37: Double Muzio/Muzio Polerio Gambit refuted ? (Read 61038 times)
Master Om
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Re: Double Muzio/Muzio Polerio Gambit refuted ?
Reply #21 - 06/06/10 at 16:12:32
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Stefan Buecker wrote on 06/06/10 at 13:33:55:
The move 13.Qe2 was invented by R. E. Lean from Brighton. So "Lean Attack" is correct, sorry. 

After 1.e4 e5 2.f4 exf4 3.Nf3 g5 4.Bc4 g4 5.0-0 gxf3 6.Qxf3 Qf6, in my opinion the Exchange Variation 7.d3 is White's best option. Kaissiber #33 (2009) had a reader's letter by Dr. Thomas Stock, who thought that 7...Nc6 8.Bxf4 d6 9.Nc3 Be6 10.Nd5 Qd8! was good for Black. Now Rybka finds 11.c3 Qd7 12.Bb5 h6 13.Be3 Rh7 14.d4 0-0-0, intending something like 15.Nb4 d5 16.exd5 Bxd5 17.Qxd5 Qxd5 18.Nxd5 Rxd5 19.Bc4 Rd6 20.Bxf7 Nf6 21.Bg6 Re7 22.Bf4 Rd8 23.Bxc7 Kxc7 24.Rxf6, unclear. Other moves (11.Qh5; 11.Kh1) offer also sufficient play. 

Hi Stefan How are you ?
waited for your reply. 
1.)After 7.e5 Qe5 8.Bf7 Kf7 9.d4 Qf5 10.Bf4 Nf6 what is the best move you think ? Qe2 or Qe3 or Be5( I found in my analysis as best to hold for some time.)
2.) One doubt 1.e4 e5 2.f4 exf4 3.Nf3 g5 4.Bc4 g4 5.0-0 gxf3 6.Qxf3 Qf6 7.d3 Nc6 8.Bxf4 d6 9.Nc3 Be6? . Why Be6 and Not 9.....Nge7!!
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Om
  

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Stefan Buecker
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Re: Double Muzio/Muzio Polerio Gambit refuted ?
Reply #20 - 06/06/10 at 13:33:55
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The move 13.Qe2 was invented by R. E. Lean from Brighton. So "Lean Attack" is correct, sorry. 

After 1.e4 e5 2.f4 exf4 3.Nf3 g5 4.Bc4 g4 5.0-0 gxf3 6.Qxf3 Qf6, in my opinion the Exchange Variation 7.d3 is White's best option. Kaissiber #33 (2009) had a reader's letter by Dr. Thomas Stock, who thought that 7...Nc6 8.Bxf4 d6 9.Nc3 Be6 10.Nd5 Qd8! was good for Black. Now Rybka finds 11.c3 Qd7 12.Bb5 h6 13.Be3 Rh7 14.d4 0-0-0, intending something like 15.Nb4 d5 16.exd5 Bxd5 17.Qxd5 Qxd5 18.Nxd5 Rxd5 19.Bc4 Rd6 20.Bxf7 Nf6 21.Bg6 Re7 22.Bf4 Rd8 23.Bxc7 Kxc7 24.Rxf6, unclear. Other moves (11.Qh5; 11.Kh1) offer also sufficient play. 
  
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MNb
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Re: Double Muzio/Muzio Polerio Gambit refuted ?
Reply #19 - 06/06/10 at 11:57:44
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Hadron wrote on 06/05/10 at 22:18:27:
Who the hell cares?

All those who react, including you. As for the reason why - but only if you care, which I doubt given once again your poor reading - I recommend rereading all the posts which include the name McDonald in this thread.

Hadron wrote on 06/05/10 at 23:04:25:
Horses for courses I guess.....4...g4 is such a rare vistor to the board simply becase 4....d6 & 4....h6 offer so much the better chances.

As I agree with you that the lines discussed here are pretty irrelevant I haven't contributed analysis. I cannot help wondering why you got involved with lengty posts. A preference for the irrelevant perhaps?

Bücker attributes 13.Qe2 to MacLean. As B. is known for his meticulous research on subjects like these I rather rely on him than on someone who always finishes his posts with
Angry
and has problems with reading.
  

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Hadron
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Re: Double Muzio/Muzio Polerio Gambit refuted ?
Reply #18 - 06/05/10 at 23:04:25
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and speaking of which:
MNb wrote on 06/05/10 at 20:27:04:
Regarding the MacLean Attack it should be noted that Black can force a draw in yet another way: 7.e5 Qxe5 8.d3 Bh6 9.Nc3 Ne7 10.Bd2 c6 (iso Nbc6) 11.Rae1 Qc5+ 12.Kh1 d5 13.Qh5 Qd6 14.Bxd5 0-0! 15.Rxe7 cxd5 16.Nxd5 Nc6 17.Bxf4 Bxf4 18.Rxf4 (up to here everything to be found back in the Bilguer according to Bücker, 1986) Qg6 19.Nf6+ Kg7 20.Ne8+ Kg8 ½-½, Edöcs-Glauser,1983.

The 1925 edition of MC0 (specifically number 4), the 1910 edition of Freeborough and Ranken, Estrin & Glaskov and Myers Opening Bullentin (Vol 3 No 12) all give it as the Lean Attack and that after.....
7.e5 Qxe5 8.d3 Bh6 9.Nc3 Ne7 10.Bd2 Nbc6 11.Rae1 Qf5 12.Nd5 Kd8...13.Qe2 is the Lean Attack.
Mind you if even all of this and the phantom MacLean Attack given above can be avoided with the Bello Gambit 1.e4 e5 2.f4 exf4 3.Nf3 g5 4.Bc4 g4 5.0-0 gxf3 6.Qxf3 Qf6 7.Nc3 and specifically 7...Qd4+ 8.Kh1 Qxc4 9.b3 The Stock variation, which I personally beleive is more practical than the Double Muzio 8.Bxf7+ in that it tries to over come Black more positionally (such as the modern Cochrane Gambit)than just trying to pry the Black king open by force.
Horses for courses I guess.....4...g4 is such a rare vistor to the board simply becase 4....d6 & 4....h6 offer so much the better chances.
HTH  Angry
  

I'm reminded again of something Short wrote recently, approximately "The biggest fallacy in chess is the quasi-religious belief in the primacy of the opening."
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Re: Double Muzio/Muzio Polerio Gambit refuted ?
Reply #17 - 06/05/10 at 22:18:27
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MNb wrote on 06/05/10 at 15:28:25:
Hadron wrote on 06/05/10 at 12:49:32:
>Incidentally, McDonald in his KG-book, claimed ...Qf5 as his own 'invention'<
>McDonald's swashbuckling book suffered from quite a few flaws, but this is not one them. Page 62: <
I do have said book and page 62 says nothing of the sort apart from appending 9…Qf5 with the ! it deserves.


If you had cared to read a little closer you might have concluded that I own the book as well. You see, I quoted it and especially for you I repeat it:

Quote:
Here 9...Qf5! is a major alternative and may be the only playable move! A critical position is reached after 10.g4 Qg6 11.Bxf4 Nf6 12.Be5 and now:
a) 12...Be7?! was analysed by Sapi and Schneider in the BCM, September 1988.


The bold part proves that McDonald does not claim 9...Qf5 as his own, which the vast majority of the readers will have understood indeed, including Micawber himself.

If the bold type proves that McDonald did not claim to invent 9...Qf5 then why in the blue buggery bollicks would you affirm as such? Who the hell cares?
HTH
Angry
  

I'm reminded again of something Short wrote recently, approximately "The biggest fallacy in chess is the quasi-religious belief in the primacy of the opening."
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Re: Double Muzio/Muzio Polerio Gambit refuted ?
Reply #16 - 06/05/10 at 20:27:04
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Regarding the MacLean Attack it should be noted that Black can force a draw in yet another way: 7.e5 Qxe5 8.d3 Bh6 9.Nc3 Ne7 10.Bd2 c6 (iso Nbc6) 11.Rae1 Qc5+ 12.Kh1 d5 13.Qh5 Qd6 14.Bxd5 0-0! 15.Rxe7 cxd5 16.Nxd5 Nc6 17.Bxf4 Bxf4 18.Rxf4 (up to here everything to be found back in the Bilguer according to Bücker, 1986) Qg6 19.Nf6+ Kg7 20.Ne8+ Kg8 ½-½, Edöcs-Glauser,1983.
  

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Re: Double Muzio/Muzio Polerio Gambit refuted ?
Reply #15 - 06/05/10 at 15:56:59
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@MNb:
I apologize for misquoting MacDonnald. 
I clearly misunderstood.

@HTH
Something about the percentages.
On the basis of correspondence games:
After 11.Qe2 
White scored 40% after 11.Qe2 (70 games)
Which is pretty close to your own observation on TGT-tournaments

70% against   11....Bg7?! (10 games)
66% against   11....Qe6?! (19 games; most frequent answer)
12% against   11....Qg4 (13 games)
18% against   11....d6  (11 games)
30% against   11....Qg6 (10 games)
So the 40-50% seems largely due from 2 not very convincing replies.
'---------------------------------------------------------
@THT thx for posting Leisebein's analysis!:

Quote:
20.Qb5 Nd7 21.Qxb7 Rab8 22.Qe4+ Kd8 23.b3 Nf6 24.Qf5 Rf8 25.g4 h6 26.h3 a6 27.c4 Ke7 28.Qa5 Rb6 29.Qf5 d5 30.Qf4 dxc4 31.Qxc7+ Nd7 32.Qxc4 Rf4 33.Qd3 Rbf6 unclear



The game I referred to in an earlier post is not Leisebein-Gysi,1998 but on Blankenberg-Lagemann, 2001, corr. which followed Leisebein's analysis until the 24th move where 24.Qf4 iso Leisebein's stronger 24.Qf5 was played.

When playing over Leisebein's line I think that even in the final position after 33.....Rf6 Black still is better.

However several improvements come to mind. All having in common that Black is prepared to shed another pawn to coordinate his pieces (especially to connect his rooks) and take over the initiative. Two examples
a) 26....Ke7  (iso 26....a6) b) 30...Kd8! 31.Qxh6?!, Re8!

@HTH
Regarding the Lean-Attack
Quote:
The Lean attack is only a possible draw if Black ops for the possibility of Alapin’s 13…b5 or 13…Nxd5. On 13.Qe2 Qe6 Whites position is on a down turn and if you are going to quote 14.Nxe7 Qxe7 15.Bc3 Rg8 16.Qh5 Qg5 17.Rf2 as being equal….don’t because 17…Rf8 rather bollicks that notion

The above variation is right on the money!, 
Hebels-Trapeaux, corr. 1999 is practical evidence....

For the owners of somewhat older opening books, it is probable usefull to now that the drawing line given by Euwe/Estrin/Keres namely
14.Qf3,Qe6 15.Qe2 with a repetition of moves, was proven wrong as well:
Since 1998 Black started to play 14...Qg6 in corr.games and - sorry about statistics again - scored a convincing 8/8 in correspondence games. Although I think that Bücker allready pointed out 14...Qg6 in the mid eighties.
  
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Re: Double Muzio/Muzio Polerio Gambit refuted ?
Reply #14 - 06/05/10 at 15:28:25
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Hadron wrote on 06/05/10 at 12:49:32:
>Incidentally, McDonald in his KG-book, claimed ...Qf5 as his own 'invention'<
>McDonald's swashbuckling book suffered from quite a few flaws, but this is not one them. Page 62: <
I do have said book and page 62 says nothing of the sort apart from appending 9…Qf5 with the ! it deserves.


If you had cared to read a little closer you might have concluded that I own the book as well. You see, I quoted it and especially for you I repeat it:

Quote:
Here 9...Qf5! is a major alternative and may be the only playable move! A critical position is reached after 10.g4 Qg6 11.Bxf4 Nf6 12.Be5 and now:
a) 12...Be7?! was analysed by Sapi and Schneider in the BCM, September 1988.


The bold part proves that McDonald does not claim 9...Qf5 as his own, which the vast majority of the readers will have understood indeed, including Micawber himself.
  

The book had the effect good books usually have: it made the stupids more stupid, the intelligent more intelligent and the other thousands of readers remained unchanged.
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Re: Double Muzio/Muzio Polerio Gambit refuted ?
Reply #13 - 06/05/10 at 12:49:32
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Normally I don’t get involved in Markovich controlled boards but if I may:
>The diagrammed position, which arises after 1.e4 e5 2.f4 exf3 3.Nf3 g5 4.Bc4 g4 5.0-0 gxf3 6.Qxf3 Qf6 7.e5 Qxe5 8.Bxf7+ has been known as lost for White since at least 1986, when Bücker published his book on the KG.<
Most of the games that Thomas Stock had on his Muzio Polerio website started in 1998 and if you consult Kaissiber 13 (March 2000) Thomas Stock wrote an article in which he thinks 8.Bxf7 is better for black after 9...Qf5! suggesting that 9....Qf5! 10.Bxf4 Nf6 11.Qe2 is the best of the bunch. A move which Leisebein credits to Jack Yoos in a Chessbase magazine (64) 

>And still people kept playing it. And some of them put their money on 10.Qe2 (iso 10.g4). As far as I know this move did not score well in Thomas Stock' thematic tournaments. See Kaissiber for the details<
Of the 10 files I have from the Thomas Stock website, there 38 10.Qe2 games of which 
+14 =9 -15. That is 50/50 if you discount draws.


>Your analysis makes 3 claims:<
>11...Qg4+ is better than 11...Qg6+<
>11...Qg6+ is doubtful
>a) 11..Qg4
>11...Qg4 is actually a good move<
>Though your line 12.Qxg4,Nxg4 13.Be5+,Kg8 <
>14.Bxh8 the move 14....Nc6 never has been tried.<

My question is you have sac-ed two pieces for the attack why on earth would you consider exchanging queens for sod all compensation? I think the alternative of 12.Qc4+ is usually dismissed on the strength of  Sakellarakis v Schuller 1999 TGT1.17 but Thomas Stock points out that after 12…Kg7 Better is 13.Be5 rather than Nc3?! that was played.

micawber wrote on 06/03/10 at 21:40:13:

11...Qg6+ is doubtful
I advice you to take a good human look at the endgame at the end of your variation with 17.Rxf5 iso 17.Qh5. This position actually has been played
and the endgame is less pleasant for white than you probably think now. In the game Black showed good technique and won.
I will also add that black can reach this position by a slightly different move-order that takes away whites possible 17.Qh5.

This is dismissed on the strength of Leisebein,Peter - Gysi,A  corr 1998  but Peter Leisebein suggests 16.Nxf6! Kxf6 17.Rxf5+ Qxf5 18.Rf1 Qxf1+ 19.Qxf1+ Ke7 (19...Ke6 20.Qf3 a5 21.Qg4+ Kf7 22.Qf5+ Ke7 23.Qg5+ Ke8 24.Qg7 Rf8 25.Qxc7 Nd7 26.Qxb7 Rb8 27.Qe4+ Kd8=) 20.Qb5 Nd7 21.Qxb7 Rab8 22.Qe4+ Kd8 23.b3 Nf6 24.Qf5 Rf8 25.g4 h6 26.h3 a6 27.c4 Ke7 28.Qa5 Rb6 29.Qf5 d5 30.Qf4 dxc4 31.Qxc7+ Nd7 32.Qxc4 Rf4 33.Qd3 Rbf6 unclear; 16.Rxf5 Qxf5 17.Nxf6 Qe6 18.Qh5+ Ke7 19.Qh4 Qxf6 20.Re1+ Kf7–+] Chessbase Magazine 64

>Incidentally, McDonald in his KG-book, claimed ...Qf5 as his own 'invention'<
>McDonald's swashbuckling book suffered from quite a few flaws, but this is not one them. Page 62: <
I do have said book and page 62 says nothing of the sort a part from appending 9…Qf5 with the ! it deserves. As for McDonald inventing it, both the Thomas Stock files and Kaissiber 13 credit the move to Steintz.

>The Lean attack is a draw at best<
You what? The Lean attack is only a possible draw if Black ops for the possibility of Alapin’s 13…b5 or 13…Nxd5. On 13.Qe2 Qe6 Whites position is on a down turn and if you are going to quote 14.Nxe7 Qxe7 15.Bc3 Rg8 16.Qh5 Qg5 17.Rf2 as being equal….don’t because 17…Rf8 rather bollicks that notion
HTH Angry
  

I'm reminded again of something Short wrote recently, approximately "The biggest fallacy in chess is the quasi-religious belief in the primacy of the opening."
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Master Om
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Re: Double Muzio/Muzio Polerio Gambit refuted ?
Reply #12 - 06/05/10 at 01:45:29
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micawber wrote on 06/04/10 at 18:01:35:
Final Remarks for the benefit of Mr. OM

I am not going to invite tons of meaningless variations on the endgame resulting from ...Qg6. But I give you two items of good advice:
a) Consult Flear's "Practical Endgame Play" on 2R+p vs.Q+p.
b) Black is going to hide his K on the Queenside, and activate and coordinate his pieces at the cost of his a-pawn. White's only chance to make is draw, is to engage in further pawn-exchanges if that is possible at all and hope for an opportunity of a perpetual.
The point is, that he cant defend a single pawn that is attacked by any two Black pieces

In the Be5 variation your two candidate 16th moves for Black look a bit atrocious to my human eye.
Instead Thomas Stock's approach appeals to me:
to return material for a superior endgame:
16....Re8 17.Nxc7,b6! leaving an endgame of R vs. B+N on the board that is unpleasant for White. 16...Rhf8 is another human move that has scored well in practice.

1)Thanks for Advice. I will refer that book but not for this openening. Before going to conclusions i tend to analyse myself and my endgame knowledge is pretty decent. Too much of theory is sometimes a drawback. I go straight in my analysis.
2) Your argument reminds me of Tal's quote. " God made middlegame before endgame". I reffered Peter Milican's Analysis while doing it . I am not getting any idea of your b6? (which line?)
  

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Re: Double Muzio/Muzio Polerio Gambit refuted ?
Reply #11 - 06/04/10 at 23:10:38
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micawber wrote on 06/03/10 at 16:46:46:
@Dragonslayer

Regarding the variation 8.Bxf7, Kxf7 9.d4,Qf5!
Iso 10.Qe2 I think you mean 10.Bxf4,Nf6 11.Qe2 (because 10.Qe2,Bh6 looks -/+ to me).


You're right of course (as always  Smiley
I saw it after I posted it, but did not have time to put it right.
The double Muzio is busted and Blackdoes not need to enter the triple muzio.
Hence, the exchange variation and the Lean attack are the remaining tries. The Lean attack is a draw at best, while the original post gave a game (calling it Hamppe-Muzio, but Nc6 only happens at move 11) with the exchange variation, which even though White lost appears to be White's best try.
  
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Re: Double Muzio/Muzio Polerio Gambit refuted ?
Reply #10 - 06/04/10 at 18:01:35
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Final Remarks for the benefit of Mr. OM

I am not going to invite tons of meaningless variations on the endgame resulting from ...Qg6. But I give you two items of good advice:
a) Consult Flear's "Practical Endgame Play" on 2R+p vs.Q+p.
b) Black is going to hide his K on the Queenside, and activate and coordinate his pieces at the cost of his a-pawn. White's only chance to make is draw, is to engage in further pawn-exchanges if that is possible at all and hope for an opportunity of a perpetual.
The point is, that he cant defend a single pawn that is attacked by any two Black pieces

In the Be5 variation your two candidate 16th moves for Black look a bit atrocious to my human eye.
Instead Thomas Stock's approach appeals to me:
to return material for a superior endgame:
16....Re8 17.Nxc7,b6! leaving an endgame of R vs. B+N on the board that is unpleasant for White. 16...Rhf8 is another human move that has scored well in practice.
  
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Re: Double Muzio/Muzio Polerio Gambit refuted ?
Reply #9 - 06/04/10 at 06:21:24
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micawber wrote on 06/03/10 at 21:40:13:
Master Om; Last post because arguing against 16 cores
is very tiring.

Your analysis makes 3 claims:
11...Qg4+ is better than 11...Qg6+
11...Qg6+ is doubtful
11.Be5 is the best move.

RE
a) 11..Qg4
11...Qg4 is actually a good move.
Though your line 12.Qxg4,Nxg4 13.Be5+,Kg8 
14.Bxh8 the move 14....Nc6 never has been tried.
14....Bh6 was the usual move, when white has showed compensation in fairly high level games after 15.Nc3!?.
Your innovation may be stronger, but a serious game with this move between strong players would be more convincing.

11...Qg6+ is doubtful
I advice you to take a good human look at the endgame at the end of your variation with 17.Rxf5 iso 17.Qh5. This position actually has been played
and the endgame is less pleasant for white than you probably think now. In the game Black showed good technique and won.
I will also add that black can reach this position by a slightly different move-order that takes away whites possible 17.Qh5.

11.Be5 is the best move.
Well now, you give a very long variation starting off with 
11...Qxf3 12.Rxf3,Be7 that continues another 6 or 7 moves. 
But I think that after the Queen have come off, 12...Bg7 [Leisebein[ is better than 12....Be7 (which seems your innovation and not necessary a strong one), and black still may claim a substantial advantage.
Anyway I found the game Mordoch-Hannisson, 2003 convincing enough:
12...Bg7 13.Nc3,d6! 14.Bxf6,Bxf6 15.Nd5,Bf5!
16.Rxf5,Ke6 -/+ (the point) 
White is not much better off than in other variations,
and is still fighting for a draw.
So one way or another, the double Muzio is not advisable, as DragonSlayer and NMB allready pointed out.

1.Accepeted 14...Nc6 good move with the idea Bd6!! with conjuction to Ne3
2.Please post your lines I  will analyse.
3.Well 12...Bg7 and 12...Be7 lead to same position after 14....Bxf6. So it means nothing if d6! played.
  

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Re: Double Muzio/Muzio Polerio Gambit refuted ?
Reply #8 - 06/04/10 at 05:41:40
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Master Om; Last post because arguing against 16 cores
is very tiring.


Are  you saying that  you  were using 16 cores?.Then let me tell you i did this analysis on a 32 cores.  I ran it in IDeA in Aquarium on Network on 16 Dual cores computer ,each running single core Rybka 4 960 x 64 and Rybka 3 dynamic 1-cpu  which is 32 cores analysing on 32 different positions  of the game.including my manual input on the positions in my university for 4 days. I should have Told   that before posting it (but Markovich  may have problem  Wink). No offense to you .
By the way what my analysis say is that i didn't get a single draw .All lead to loss. Playing Be5 is the way to get the 2 rooks in 7th rank to draw the game which gives little chances of drawing still the position is tricky .After finding it i stopped my analysis.
  

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Re: Double Muzio/Muzio Polerio Gambit refuted ?
Reply #7 - 06/04/10 at 03:03:28
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micawber wrote on 06/03/10 at 16:46:46:
Incidentally, McDonald in his KG-book, claimed ...Qf5 as his own 'invention'.

McDonald's swashbuckling book suffered from quite a few flaws, but this is not one them. Page 62:

Quote:
Here 9...Qf5! is a major alternative and may be the only playable move! A critical position is reached after 10.g4 Qg6 11.Bxf4 Nf6 12.Be5 and now:
a) 12...Be7?! was analysed by Sapi and Schneider in the BCM, September 1988.

A more typical flaw is that McDonald repeats this analysis, concludes that it is equal but misses the improvement 14...Lxg4!
  

The book had the effect good books usually have: it made the stupids more stupid, the intelligent more intelligent and the other thousands of readers remained unchanged.
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