The game lasted for 39 moves and was drawn. In the third game Kasparov played the Sicilian Defence to which Deep Blue responded with the Alapin Variation. The game was played on February 11, 1996.
The game lasted for 73 moves but eventually Deep Blue’s operator had to resign the game for the computer in a position where both players had a bishop but Kasparov had three pawns against Deep Blue’s one. Kasparov played in what could be called a preemptive style blocking all Deep Blue’s development tries. The second game began with the Open Catalan Opening. The game was played on February 10, 1996. The first game of the 1996 match was the first game to be won by a chess-playing computer against a reigning world champion under normal chess tournament conditions, and in particular, classical time controls. Main article: Deep Blue versus Kasparov, 1996, Game 1 It was coproduced by Alliance Atlantisand the National Film Board of Canada. Game Over: Kasparov and the Machine is a 2003 documentary film by Vikram Jayanti about the match between Garry Kasparov, the highest rated chess player in history (at the time) and the World Champion for 15 years (1985–2000), and Deep Blue, a chess-playing computer created by IBM.
Kasparov won the match 4–2, losing one game, drawing in two and winning three.Ī rematch was played in 1997 – this time Deep Blue won 3½–2½. The first match was played in February 1996 in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania. The matches were played between the IBM supercomputer Deep Blue with a team of IBM programmers and chess experts who directed and reprogrammed the machine between games on the one side, and the World Chess Champion Garry Kasparov on the other side. In this format, on the machine side a team of chess experts and programmers manually alter engineering between the games. Deep Blue versus Garry Kasparov was a pair of famous six-game human–computer chess matches, in the format of machine and humans, versus a human.