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Loek van Wely vs Benjamin Bok
Dutch Championship (2015), Amsterdam NED, rd 6, Jul-11
Formation: King's Indian Attack (A07)  ·  1-0

8
7
6
5
4
3
2
a
1
b
c
d
e
f
g
h
White to move.
ANALYSIS [x]
1-0

rnbqkbnr/pppppppp/8/8/8/8/PPPPPPPP/RNBQKBNR w KQkq - 0 1
FEN COPIED

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Kibitzer's Corner
Jul-12-15  leow: I do not understand the endgame at all, Black seems to just hand in his pawns,e.g why not 36.. a6? to save the a pawn. Same with 39..f4 which after a few moves loses another pawn. Can anyone explain this? I guess black loses anyway but still?
Jul-13-15  TheFocus: "Hey, Luke, can I take that move Bok?"
Jul-13-15  Gryz: Moves between 35 and 40 are often tainted by time pressure. I would be surprised if that wasn't the case here as well.

My engine tells me that 36.. a6 is indeed better than the played 36.. Rc6. However, 39..f4 (3.72) is supposed to be the best move. (The evaluation keeps changing the deeper you go down the tree. But at depth 35 f4 is again the best). You'll see the evaluation changing so much, that indicates that it's not obvious what is the best move.

Sometimes, especially when you are losing, you try to play the move that is the least expected. Or that is complicating the situation the most. Because if you play the move that is objectively the best, gameplay will be straightforward, and you will lose in a straightforward way. By complicating the situation you might get lucky, and your opponent might make a mistake.

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