well, seemingly on Qc5, white will be gradually avoiding checks and after f3-f4-f5 is pushed, going to win.zullil wrote:I don't know either.Lyudmil Tsvetkov wrote:I don't know.zullil wrote:[d] 8/1p3Qpk/pq5p/4K2P/6P1/5P2/P1P5/8 b - - 12 48Lyudmil Tsvetkov wrote:
Qc5 and Qe3 lose too, and there are no other moves.
check better with your fish.
Perhaps there was confusion. In the position above, which I think appeared in both games you posted, Black played Qb2+, which seems to lose (evaluation for White goes above +5).
What's wrong with Qb4, as suggested by asmFish? Or Qc5+ ? Qe3+ is certainly no good.
I am inputting those lines to SF and Komodo, especially Komodo seems to handle this better, and score only rises constantly after a while.
Komodo seems to like Qc5 less than Qb2, I have not checked Qb4.
really, I am very busy right now, have to finish one project of mine, when possible, will post some short input.It is too easy to forget just how complex these positions are.
Even the high evaluation for White that I see after Qb2+ might just be an illusion. For example, in its line following Qb2+, asmFish has this position:
[d] 8/1K4pk/2P1q2p/8/1Q6/8/8/8 b - - 11 93
Searching this position to depth 93, asmFish shows 6.29 but no further progress. If this position is actually 0.00, then even Qb2+ might be OK to hold a draw for Black.
Maybe someone with access to 7-man tables can help here, at least with this one position!
for example, from a position like this:
[d]8/6pk/7p/1p3P1P/3Q2P1/2PK4/8/2q5 b - - 0 35
I suggested to SF pushing f3-f4-f5, it does not see it, but then agrees.
PS. Warning: this 3-minute quick analysis is done with sleepy me and buggy SF...