CCCC rounds 32,33,34,35 and 36. Leela with 5 draws and an "almost win" against mighty Komodo!

First round CCCC approaches to its end and situation is clear by now.
Houdini, Komodo and Stockfish will be in top 3 advancing to stage 2, with Stockfish and Komodo to fight for the 1st place in this 1st stage, thatdoesn’t mean much anyway, Fire and Leela would most probably advance to the next round also with some minor chances of not achieving it, and Shredder, Booot, Ethereal and Andscacs will fight for the other 3 places for stage 2.

Leela had 5 draws in these 5 rounds with 2 easy and 3 very hard opponents and she has 7 consecutive draws.

Simulations using Bayeselo give right now(after and the Andscacs-Inavhoe 1-0 game of round 37):
Probability to promote:
Stockfish 100 %
Komodo 100 %
Houdini 100 %
Fire 100 %
Lc0 99.67 %
Shredder 90.33 %
Booot 81.67 %
Andscacs 77.67 %
Ethereal 44.67 %

ROUND 32
Leela had an extra-disastrous opening with Senpai and never managed to recover so it ended in a draw. Against the very weak in this CCCC Senpai, Leela had to win but the selection of the opening moves was a nightmare and even with Senpai playing sub optimal moves, Leela never really managed to get an advantage so it was easy draw.

373 Nirvana vs Andscacs 0-1
374 Pedone vs Nemorino 1-0
375 Lc0 vs Senpai 1/2-1/2
376 Shredder vs Laser 1/2-1/2
377 Komodo vs Stockfish 1/2-1/2
378 Texel vs Ivanhoe 1-0
379 Houdini vs Vajolet 1-0
380 Wasp vs Gull 1/2-1/2
381 Fritz vs Xiphos 1/2-1/2
382 Arasan vs Fizbo 1-0
383 Fire vs Booot 1/2-1/2
384 Crafty vs Ethereal 0-1

[Event “CCCC 1: Rapid Rumble (15|5) Stage 1”] [Site “Chess.com”] [Date “2018.09.11”] [Round “?”] [White “Lc0 17.11089”] [Black “Senpai 2.0”] [Result “1/2-1/2”] [ECO “D32”] [WhiteElo “3300”] [BlackElo “3226”] [PlyCount “202”] [EventDate “2018.??.??”] [EventType “rapid”] 1. d4 d5 2. c4 e6 3. Nc3 c5 4. dxc5 Bxc5 5. cxd5 Nf6 6. dxe6 Qxd1+ 7. Nxd1 Bxe6 8. Nc3 $2 {Bad move. Gives to black…. everything.} (8. Nf3) 8… Nc6 9. Bd2 { [%csl Ra1,Yc3,Gc5,Gc6,Rd2,Re1,Ge6,Rf1,Gf6,Rg1,Rh1][%cal Ge8g8,Gh8f8,Ga8d8] How Leela played like that in the opening?? This opening is a disaster for white! Black with a cost of a Pawn had developed all his minor pieces into active positions, he is ready to castle wherever he wants and develop his Rooks and white has just developed one Knight and the dark Bishop in a that helpful square anyway. And black has the move also!! Black surely has a small advantage here.} Ne5 $6 (9… O-O {This was much better, developing the Rooks immediatelly and then trying to attack white’s turtle development.}) 10. e3 O-O 11. h4 $2 {White after black’s inaccuracy with 9…Ne5 returns the favor. He could even grab the advantage with Nf3 here developing a piece for free. White needs to develop his pieces not playing Pawn moves for now. This h4 does nothing but only creating problems for white.} (11. Nf3 {And black has to spend a move to deal with the Knight while white will get free development either way. If black captures one developed piece less for black.}) 11… h6 $6 {But Senpai is not that strong engine to take advantage of white’s mistakes.} ( 11… Rac8) 12. Nh3 Rfd8 13. Nf4 Bc4 {White was in such a mess position in the opening that nothing works for him. Whatever black does does is good and white can’t get the advantage.} 14. Rd1 Bb4 15. a3 Ba5 16. b4 Bc7 17. Nb5 Bxb5 18. Bxb5 Ne4 19. f3 a6 20. fxe4 axb5 21. Bc1 Rac8 22. Ke2 Nc4 23. Rxd8+ Bxd8 24. h5 Ne5 25. Bd2 Bg5 26. Rc1 Nc4 27. Nd5 Re8 28. Kd3 Nb2+ 29. Kd4 Nc4 30. Rc2 Rd8 31. Bc1 Bf6+ 32. Kd3 Kf8 {Such an ugly position for Leela. Bishop is burried. The Knight on c4 is huge, e4 is weak, the Rook does nothing but because of this extra Pawn that is up, she still can hope Senpai to make some mistakes and take the advantage.} 33. Bd2 Nxa3 34. Rc7 b6 35. Be1 Nc4 36. Bg3 Be5 37. Bxe5 Nxe5+ 38. Kc3 Nc4 39. Rb7 Kg8 40. Rc7 Kf8 41. Rb7 Kg8 42. Ra7 Kf8 43. Rc7 Re8 44. Kd3 Rb8 45. Kd4 Rd8 46. Kc3 Re8 47. Kd4 Rd8 48. Rb7 Ke8 49. Ra7 Kf8 50. Kc3 Re8 51. Kd4 Rd8 52. Rc7 Kg8 53. Re7 Kf8 54. Ra7 Kg8 55. Ra2 Kh7 56. Ra7 Kg8 57. Ra6 Kf8 58. Ra1 Kg8 59. Ra6 Kf8 60. Ra1 Kg8 61. Ra2 Kh7 62. g3 Kg8 63. Ra7 Kf8 64. Kc3 Nd6 65. Kd4 Nc4 66. Rc7 f6 67. Rc6 Kf7 68. Rc7+ Kf8 69. Rb7 Rd6 70. Ra7 Ne5 71. Rb7 Nc4 72. Rb8+ Kf7 73. Ra8 Rd7 74. Rb8 Rd6 75. Kd3 f5 76. Rb7+ Kf8 77. Rb8+ Kf7 78. Kd4 fxe4 79. Rb7+ Kf8 80. Rb8+ Kf7 81. Rb7+ Kf8 82. Kxe4 Nd2+ 83. Kd4 Nf3+ 84. Ke4 Nd2+ 85. Kd4 Nf3+ 86. Kd3 Rxd5+ 87. Ke4 Rxh5 88. Kxf3 Rf5+ 89. Ke4 Rf6 90. g4 Re6+ 91. Kf4 Rc6 92. e4 Rc4 93. Rb8+ Kf7 94. Rb7+ Kf8 95. Rb8+ Kf7 96. Kf5 Rxb4 97. Rb7+ Kf8 98. Rb8+ Ke7 99. Rb7+ Kf8 100. Rb8+ Kf7 101. Rb7+ Kf8 {What a badly game played by Leela. The opening was a disaster and couldn’t turn the tables from there. These are 3200+ Elo engines so it’s never easy to recover after such a bad opening choice.} 1/2-1/2

ROUND 33
Leela against another very weak in this CCCC engine, didn’t manage to win again, because her opening treatment was not perfect, against going for a very open center that does not suit her. She took a small advantage but it was not enough.
Stockfish won against Houdini in this round so Houdini now has 2 losses.

Ethereal lost to Arasan with white and that was a big surprise but the way it lost is very odd and must be due to hardware problems. Ethereal played 59.Nxd5?? an incredible blunder that only considers at depth 1. Afterwards examination of the logs showed it has spent 6 seconds at depth a that is a factor of 1000 more than what normally does so there had to be a problem with Ethereal’s usage of hardware. CCCC should probably examine if they have to replay the game preferably from the position before Nxd5.

385 Andscacs vs Nemorino 1-0
386 Nirvana vs Lc0 1/2-1/2
387 Laser vs Pedone 0-1
388 Senpai vs Komodo 0-1
389 Ivanhoe vs Shredder 0-1
390 Stockfish vs Houdini 1-0
391 Gull vs Texel 1/2-1/2
392 Vajolet vs Fritz 1/2-1/2
393 Fizbo vs Wasp 1/2-1/2
394 Xiphos vs Fire 0-1
395 Ethereal vs Arasan 0-1
396 Booot vs Crafty 1-0

[Event “CCCC 1: Rapid Rumble (15|5) Stage 1”] [Site “Chess.com”] [Date “2018.09.11”] [Round “?”] [White “Nirvana 2.4”] [Black “Lc0 17.11089”] [Result “1/2-1/2”] [ECO “D47”] [WhiteElo “3186”] [BlackElo “3090”] [PlyCount “491”] [EventDate “2018.??.??”] [EventType “rapid”] 1. d4 Nf6 2. c4 e6 3. Nf3 d5 4. Nc3 c6 5. e3 Nbd7 6. Bd3 dxc4 7. Bxc4 b5 8. Be2 Bb7 9. O-O Be7 10. e4 b4 11. e5 bxc3 12. exf6 Bxf6 13. bxc3 c5 14. dxc5 O-O 15. Ba3 Be7 16. Qd4 Qc7 17. Rab1 Rfe8 18. Qe3 Nxc5 19. Nd4 Rac8 20. Nb5 Qb8 { Another not that succesful opening for Leela with black. She got equality but an open center also and this is always bad for Leela since she can’t take advantage of her superior from all engines handling of Pawns and piece movement.} 21. Nd4 Qa8 22. f3 Bd8 23. Bb5 Rf8 24. Kh1 Bb6 25. c4 Rfd8 {Black seems to have a slight advantage but it’s not sufficient.} 26. Nb3 Nxb3 27. Qxb3 h6 28. Rbd1 Bc6 29. c5 Rxd1 30. Rxd1 Bd5 31. Rxd5 Qxd5 32. cxb6 axb6 33. Qxd5 exd5 $11 {[%csl Ra2] White has 2 Bishops that normally outpower a single Rook but here a-Pawn is lost so it’s equal.} 34. Kg1 (34. Ba4 $4 {[%cal Ga4b3] Trying to save the Pawn fall into Ra8.} Ra8 $19) 34… Rc2 35. Bd6 Rxa2 36. Kf1 d4 37. Bc4 Rb2 38. Be5 b5 39. Bd5 b4 40. f4 b3 41. Ke1 Rb1+ 42. Kd2 d3 43. Kxd3 b2 44. Kc2 Rd1 45. Ba2 Rg1 46. g3 Rg2+ 47. Kc3 Rxh2 48. f5 Re2 49. Bf4 Rf2 50. Bb1 h5 51. Be5 Re2 52. Bf4 Rf2 53. Be5 Kh7 54. Bc2 Re2 55. Bc7 g5 56. fxg6+ fxg6 57. Kxb2 Re7 58. Bd6 Re8 59. Bb1 Rc8 60. Bf4 Kg7 61. Bd3 Kf6 62. Bd2 Rc6 63. Ba5 Kg5 64. Be2 Rc8 65. Be1 Kh6 66. Ba5 g5 67. Bd2 Rc5 68. Bd1 Rc8 69. Bc2 Rf8 70. Be4 Re8 71. Bb1 Rf8 72. Be4 Rc8 73. Bb1 Rc7 74. Bc2 Rf7 75. Be4 Re7 76. Bb1 Rf7 77. Be4 Rc7 78. Bb1 Rc4 79. Bf5 Rc5 80. Bb1 Kg7 81. Be1 Rc7 82. Bc2 Re7 83. Bc3+ Kf7 84. Bb3+ Kg6 85. Bc2+ Kh6 86. Bd2 Ra7 87. Bb1 Ra4 88. Bf5 Rc4 89. Kb3 Rc7 90. Bb4 Kg7 91. Bc3+ Kh6 92. Bb4 Rb7 93. Kc3 Rf7 94. g4 hxg4 95. Bxg4 Rf4 96. Bd1 g4 97. Bd6 Rf6 98. Be5 Rf5 99. Bg3 Kg5 100. Be2 Rd5 101. Bd3 Rd7 102. Be2 Kh5 103. Bd3 Rf7 104. Be2 Rd7 105. Bd3 Rf7 106. Be2 Ra7 107. Bd3 Ra2 108. Kd4 Rg2 109. Bc7 Rf2 110. Bg3 Rf3 111. Be1 Kg5 112. Ke4 Rf7 113. Bg3 Rf3 114. Be1 Rf8 115. Bg3 Rf7 116. Bb5 Rf3 117. Be1 Rf8 118. Bg3 Rf3 119. Be1 Ra3 120. Bd3 Ra1 121. Bf2 Ra8 122. Bg3 Ra2 123. Bb5 Rg2 124. Bd6 Rb2 125. Be7+ Kh6 126. Ba6 Rb6 127. Bc4 Rb7 128. Bd6 Kg5 129. Bd5 Ra7 130. Bc5 Rh7 131. Bd6 Kh4 132. Be6 Ra7 133. Ke3 Ra4 134. Bc5 Ra1 135. Be7+ Kh3 136. Kf4 Ra4+ 137. Ke3 Ra7 138. Bb4 Ra1 139. Bf5 Rd1 140. Ba3 Kg3 141. Bb4 Rf1 142. Bd6+ Kh4 143. Bd3 Rf7 144. Bc4 Rd7 145. Bb8 g3 146. Kf3 Rg7 147. Kg2 Rg6 148. Ba7 Rd6 149. Be3 Rc6 150. Bf1 Rc2+ 151. Kf3 Rc3 152. Bg2 Rd3 153. Bf1 Rb3 154. Bc4 Rc3 155. Bf1 Ra3 156. Bg2 Rd3 157. Bf1 Rb3 158. Bc4 Ra3 159. Bf1 Rc3 160. Bg2 Rb3 161. Bf1 Ra3 162. Bg2 Ra5 163. Bc1 Rd5 164. Be3 Rf5+ 165. Bf4 Rf7 166. Bf1 Rf8 167. Bg2 Rf5 168. Bf1 Rf6 169. Bg2 Rf8 170. Bf1 Rf7 171. Bg2 Rf6 172. Bf1 Rf8 173. Bg2 Rf5 174. Bf1 Rf6 175. Bg2 Rf8 176. Bf1 Rf7 177. Bg2 Rf6 178. Bf1 Rf5 179. Bg2 Rf7 180. Bf1 Rg7 181. Bg2 Rg4 182. Bb8 Rg5 183. Bc7 Rg7 184. Bb8 Rg4 185. Ba7 Rc4 186. Bb6 Rc8 187. Be3 Rd8 188. Bc1 Rd3+ 189. Kf4 Rd7 190. Ba3 Rf7+ 191. Ke3 Kg4 192. Bc5 Rc7 193. Bd4 Re7+ 194. Kd3 Rd7 195. Ke3 Rxd4 196. Kxd4 Kf4 197. Ba8 Kg4 198. Bb7 Kh3 199. Ba8 Kh2 200. Bb7 Kh3 201. Ba8 Kh2 202. Bb7 Kg1 203. Ba6 Kg2 204. Bb5 Kf3 205. Bc6+ Kg4 206. Ba8 Kh3 207. Bb7 Kh2 208. Ba8 Kh3 209. Bb7 Kh2 210. Ba8 Kg1 211. Bb7 Kf2 212. Ba8 Ke2 213. Bb7 Kf2 214. Ba8 Kf1 215. Bb7 Ke2 216. Ba6+ Kf2 217. Bb7 Kf1 218. Ba6+ Ke1 219. Bb7 Kd2 220. Ba8 Ke2 221. Bb7 Kd2 222. Ba8 Ke1 223. Bb7 Ke2 224. Ba6+ Kf3 225. Bb7+ Kf4 226. Ba8 Kg5 227. Bb7 Kh4 228. Ba8 Kh5 229. Bb7 Kg4 230. Ba8 Kf4 231. Bb7 Kg5 232. Ba8 Kf4 233. Bb7 Kg5 234. Ba8 Kg4 235. Bb7 Kh5 236. Ba8 Kg5 237. Bb7 Kh6 238. Ba8 Kg6 239. Bb7 Kg7 240. Ba8 Kh6 241. Bb7 Kh7 242. Ba8 Kg7 243. Bb7 Kh8 244. Ba8 Kh7 245. Bb7 g2 246. Bxg2 1/2-1/2

ROUND 34
Leela at last, had this time a normal opening and tried against Andscacs to gain some decisive advantage but Andscacs played very well and some times it’s not easy to win.
Ethereal drew Wasp and Shredder didn’t manage to win against Gull with white so they lost some ground for the top 8 battle, since Booot won against Arasan with black.

397 Lc0 vs Andscacs 1/2-1/2
398 Nemorino vs Laser 0-1
399 Komodo vs Nirvana 1-0
400 Pedone vs Ivanhoe 1/2-1/2
401 Houdini vs Senpai 1/2-1/2
402 Shredder vs Gull 1/2-1/2
403 Fritz vs Stockfish 1/2-1/2
404 Texel vs Fizbo 1/2-1/2
405 Fire vs Vajolet 1-0
406 Wasp vs Ethereal 1/2-1/2
407 Crafty vs Xiphos 0-1
408 Arasan vs Booot 0-1

[Event “CCCC 1: Rapid Rumble (15|5) Stage 1”] [Site “Chess.com”] [Date “2018.09.12”] [Round “?”] [White “Lc0 17.11089”] [Black “Andscacs 0.94”] [Result “1/2-1/2”] [ECO “E11”] [WhiteElo “3300”] [BlackElo “3226”] [PlyCount “238”] [EventDate “2018.??.??”] [EventType “rapid”] 1. d4 Nf6 2. c4 e6 3. Nf3 Bb4+ 4. Nbd2 b6 5. a3 Bxd2+ 6. Bxd2 Bb7 7. e3 d6 8. b4 O-O 9. Bc3 Nbd7 10. Be2 Ne4 11. Bb2 f5 12. d5 e5 {This seems a suitable position for Leela at last. Not open center, many pieces left on the board so LEela can create. But here black stands also good with many nice advantages like the 2 advanced e-f Pawns and the good Knight on e4 and Andscacs is not a pushover.} 13. O-O Rf6 14. Nh4 $6 {Probably better tries would be Nd2 or Bd3.} (14. Nd2) (14. Bd3 Rh6 15. g3) 14… Rf8 15. Nf3 Rf6 16. Nh4 Rf8 17. g3 g6 18. f4 c6 {Trying to unbury the b7 Bishop.} (18… Qe7) 19. Nf3 cxd5 20. Rc1 $1 exf4 21. exf4 Ndf6 {[%csl Re4] The e4 Knight is becoming a monster at the expense of white starting to be more active in the center too.} 22. Qd4 Rc8 23. cxd5 Bxd5 24. Ng5 $6 {Next 4 moves of white are forced and lead to equality.} ( 24. Nh4 {Probably a better try.}) 24… Rxc1 25. Rxc1 Qe7 26. Bc4 Bxc4 27. Qxc4+ d5 28. Qd4 Re8 29. Nf3 Qb7 30. Ng5 Qe7 31. a4 h6 32. Nxe4 Qxe4 33. a5 Qe6 34. Qe5 bxa5 35. bxa5 Qxe5 36. Bxe5 Kf7 37. a6 Re7 38. Bd4 Ne4 39. Rc6 h5 40. Kf1 Nd2+ 41. Kf2 Ne4+ 42. Ke3 Nxg3+ 43. Kd3 Ne4 44. h4 Rd7 45. Kc2 Re7 46. Kc1 Rd7 47. Kc2 Re7 48. Kc1 Rd7 49. Kd1 Re7 50. Kc2 Rd7 51. Kd3 Re7 52. Be5 Rd7 53. Bd4 Re7 $1 54. Rc8 Nd6 55. Rd8 Ke6 56. Bc5 Rd7 57. Rg8 Kf7 58. Ra8 Nb5 59. Rb8 Nd6 60. Bxd6 Rxd6 61. Rb7+ Ke6 62. Rg7 g5 63. Rxg5 Kf7 64. Rxf5+ Kg6 65. Rg5+ Kh6 66. Kd4 Rxa6 67. Kxd5 Ra4 68. Ke5 Rb4 69. Rg8 Rb5+ 70. Kf6 Rb6+ 71. Kf7 Rb7+ 72. Ke6 Rb6+ 73. Kf5 Rb5+ 74. Ke4 Rb4+ 75. Kf5 Rb5+ 76. Kf6 Rb6+ 77. Ke7 Rb7+ 78. Kd6 Rb6+ 79. Ke7 Rb7+ 80. Kd6 Rb6+ 81. Ke5 Rb5+ 82. Ke6 Rb6+ 83. Kd5 Rb5+ 84. Kd4 Rb4+ 85. Ke3 Rb3+ 86. Kd4 Rb4+ 87. Ke3 Rb3+ 88. Ke4 Rb4+ 89. Kf3 a5 90. Ra8 a4 91. Ra6+ Kg7 92. Ke3 Kf7 93. Kf3 Kg7 94. Ra5 Kg6 95. Rg5+ Kh6 96. Rc5 Kg6 97. Ra5 Rc4 98. Rg5+ Kh6 99. Rb5 Kg6 100. Rg5+ Kh6 101. Ra5 Kg6 102. Ke3 Rb4 103. Rg5+ Kh6 104. Ra5 Kg6 105. Rg5+ Kh6 106. Rc5 Kg6 107. Ra5 Rc4 108. Rg5+ Kh6 109. Rg8 Rb4 110. Ra8 Kg6 111. Ra5 Rc4 112. Kf3 Rb4 113. Rc5 Rb8 114. Rc6+ Kf5 115. Rc5+ Kg6 116. Rg5+ Kf6 117. Ra5 Rb3+ 118. Ke4 Rb4+ 119. Kf3 Kg6 1/2-1/2

ROUND 35
Leela with white pieces faced the CCCC till that time leader Komodo and after a rather dubious opening choice she quickly managed to gain a small advantage. This advantage grew stronger as she was constantly outplaying Komodo and soon they reached a won position for Leela. Leela didn’t choose the best moves to end this quickly but still maintained the winning advantage. They got to an endgame that should be won for white and they finally reached a position that endgame tablebases show it’s winning for white. Komodo showed it on its PV also but Leela didn’t manage to find the winning moves. She had 4 chances to win in this endgame and along with the other 2 chances to win easily in late middlegame earlier, she lost 6 times the move to offer the finishing blow.
She(the test 10 nets generally, as also one of them 11089 that is being used in CCCC) obviously lacks specific endgame knowledge for some endings especially with opposite color Bishops endings but a new test 20 is being run and hopefully will provide better endgame, even though other training methods for endgames are examined also.

Boot won again and since Ethereal and Andscacs drew and Shredder lost to Fizbo(!), its 2nd loss in CCCC, it got a step closer to next stage.

409 Andscacs vs Laser 1/2-1/2
410 Lc0 vs Komodo 1/2-1/2
411 Ivanhoe vs Nemorino 0-1
412 Nirvana vs Houdini 0-1
413 Gull vs Pedone 1/2-1/2
414 Senpai vs Fritz 1/2-1/2
415 Fizbo vs Shredder 1-0
416 Stockfish vs Fire 1-0
417 Ethereal vs Texel 1/2-1/2
418 Vajolet vs Crafty 1-0
419 Booot vs Wasp 1-0
420 Xiphos vs Arasan 1/2-1/2

[Event “CCCC 1: Rapid Rumble (15|5) Stage 1”] [Site “Chess.com”] [Date “2018.09.12”] [Round “?”] [White “Lc0 17.11089”] [Black “Komodo 2118.00”] [Result “1/2-1/2”] [ECO “D32”] [WhiteElo “3300”] [BlackElo “3099”] [Annotator “??”] [PlyCount “600”] [EventDate “2018.??.??”] [EventType “rapid”] 1. d4 d5 2. c4 e6 3. Nc3 c5 4. dxc5 $6 {Leela plays this move all the time with this net as with the game against Senpai. I wonder what she believes is wrong with normal cxd5.} (4. cxd5) 4… d4 5. Na4 {Ne4 seems more logical but this maybe be sensible choice also.} e5 {Complicating things. Black had an easy way to equialize with Bd7 but prefers to keep it complex.} (5… Bd7 $5 6. b4 Bxa4 7. Qxa4+ Nd7 8. Nf3 a5 9. Nxd4 axb4 10. Qxb4 (10. Qc2 Nxc5 11. e3 Qa5 12. Bd2 Nf6 {Balanced game.}) 10… Bxc5 11. Qb2 Ngf6 12. e3 Ba3 13. Qb5 Bxc1 14. Rxc1 Qa5+ 15. Qxa5 Rxa5 16. Be2 (16. Rc2 Ke7 $11 {[%cal Gh8a8]}) 16… Rxa2 {And white gets nothing.}) 6. e3 Bf5 7. b4 Nc6 8. a3 Qe7 9. b5 Nd8 10. Nf3 Ne6 11. c6 Rd8 12. Qb3 Nf6 {Crazy complicated position out of the opening!} 13. Be2 (13. Nxe5 {Accepting a second Pawn probably would be dangerous for white in this position.} Qc7 14. Nf3 bxc6 {2 options for white exd4 or Nxd4, both very complicated with both Kings that still haven’t castled.}) 13… Qc7 14. cxb7 $1 {Allowing a huge Pawn on d3 but Leela correctly estimates this would not be a problem and the super strong Queenside for white would compensate fully for this.} d3 15. Bd1 Nd7 16. Bd2 Nec5 17. Qb2 Bd6 18. Nxc5 Nxc5 19. Bc3 f6 20. a4 Be4 21. O-O Qxb7 22. Bb4 O-O 23. a5 {Leela starts to slowly outplay Komodo in this very difficult position.} Rc8 24. Qa3 Rfd8 25. a6 Qe7 26. Nd2 Bg6 27. Nb3 $1 {Leela leaves her Kingside totally unguarded for taking full control on the Queenside and with these 3 versus 1 Pawns and with so advanced development in Queenside also, black has to be careful since its position can collapse very quickly.} Bf5 28. Rb1 g6 { Komodo in this labyrinthine sea of variations does not really know what to do but it should play better. Now Leela starts taking control.} 29. g4 $5 { Leela fearless as always opens her King position while the play is on the Queenside. Later on this proves to be very smart as she step by step creates play on Kingside also. Meanwhile black does nothing to at least resolve the pin of the Knight.} (29. Na5 {Perhaps even better.}) 29… Be6 30. Na5 Rd7 31. Nb7 f5 (31… Bxc4 32. Rc1 $1 $16 Nxb7 33. axb7 {Too many overloaded pieces.} Rxb7 34. Bxd6) 32. f3 Kg7 $2 {Komodo lost track of the game completely. It can’t be on its right mind to lose a move in such position. He either had to try for an attack on the lonely white King or do something to reinforce the Queenside that is falling.} (32… e4 {A risky try to take advantage of the somewhat defenseless white King.}) (32… h6 {Stockfish for some reason likes this perhaps to prevent a possible g5 by white and then h4 closing the position in Kingside so then white can work in the Queenside undisturbed.}) 33. Nxd6 Qxd6 34. Qc3 Kg8 {Komodo accepts its Kg7 was a failure.} 35. g5 $1 { Locks the Kingside.} Bf7 36. h4 Qe6 {[%csl Rc4]} 37. Rf2 $1 {Rook can now defende the King and h4 Pawn if needed as also enter Queenside.} Rdd8 38. Ba5 Re8 39. b6 {The final blow! Leela slowly outplayed Komodo and now she is ready to enjoy the fruits of her labor. Or not! Since Leela is the best at handling Chess positions and reaching promising positions, but has a problem of converting many of these. In endgames mostly. She needs improvement in this and she will probably improve. Endgame tablebases that supports them but no uses them in CCCC is an obvious way that she improves but this is not the whole story since tablebases does not solve the whole problem. More training will surely help and better training procedures are to be examined that will fix these problems, since it’s a pity to outplay opponents and not take what she deserved because of not being able to convert. A sure thing is that Leela with all these issues still is a top engines so fixing these makes her potential unknown. The sky? :)} f4 (39… axb6 40. Rxb6 $16) 40. e4 axb6 41. Bxb6 Nxa6 42. c5 Rf8 43. Ba4 Qh3 44. Rbf1 Qe6 45. Rb2 Qc4 46. Qxc4 Bxc4 47. c6 (47. Rc1 $1 {This would be even better. White has an easy win now.} Bf7 (47… Nxc5 48. Bxc5 Rxc5 49. Rb4 Rfc8 50. Rcxc4 Rxc4 51. Rxc4 Rb8 (51… Rxc4 52. Bb3) 52. Rc3 Rb1+ 53. Kg2 Rb2+ 54. Kh3 d2 55. Rd3 Kg7 56. Rd7+ Kg8 57. Bd1 $18) 48. Bb5 Nb8 49. c6 $18 {This is crushing!}) 47… Rb8 48. Rc1 Be6 49. c7 d2 50. Rcb1 Rbc8 51. Rc2 Rf7 52. Rxd2 Nxc7 53. Rc1 (53. Rd6 $1 {The exclamation point of Leela’s play would be this move to end the game! But Leela has chosen a more slowly move that still wins.} Re7 54. Rc1 Kf7 55. Rdc6 {[%csl Rc7]} Na8 56. Bc5 $1 Ree8 57. Bd6 Rxc6 58. Rxc6 Rc8 (58… Bd7 59. Bb3+ Be6 60. Bd5 $18) 59. Rxc8 Bxc8 60. Bxe5 Nb6 61. Bb5 Bd7 62. Bxd7 Nxd7 63. Bxf4 $18) 53… Ra8 54. Bxc7 (54. Bc6 $1 {Again this is better. Yet, the text move also wins.} Rb8 55. Ba5 Re7 56. Bc3 {[%csl Re5,Rf4] Black can’t save the Pawns.} Bf7 57. Rcd1 Rb3 (57… Be8 58. Rd8 Rb6 (58… Rxd8 59. Rxd8 Kf7 60. Bxe8+ Nxe8 61. Kg2 Re6 (61… Ng7 62. Rh8 {[%csl Rh7]} Ke6 63. Rxh7 Rd7 64. Rh6 Kf7 65. Bxe5 Rd2+ 66. Kg1 Rd1+ 67. Kf2 Nh5 68. Rh7+ Ke8 69. Rc7 Rd2+ 70. Ke1 Rh2 71. Kf1 Ra2 (71… Rxh4 72. Kg2 {[%csl Rh4]} Ng3 73. Rc6 {[%csl Rg6]}) 72. Rc6 Kf7 73. Bd4 $18) 62. Rd7+ Kf8 63. Rd5 Ng7 64. Bxe5 Nh5 65. Bd6+ Kf7 66. Kh3 Re8 67. Kg4 Ra8 68. Bxf4 $18) 59. Bxe8 Nxe8 60. R1d5 Rbe6 61. Bb4 Ra7 62. Bd6 Kf7 63. Bxe5 $18 {[%csl Rf4]}) 58. Rd8+ Ne8 59. Ba5 Rb2 60. R1d7 Kf8 61. Rxe7 Kxe7 62. Ra8 Rb1+ 63. Kf2 Rb2+ 64. Ke1 Ng7 (64… Rb1+ 65. Kd2 Rb2+ 66. Kc3 Rb1 67. Kc2 $18 {[%csl Rb2,Rb3,Rb4,Rb5,Rb6,Rb7,Rb8]} Rf1 68. Bb4+ Nd6 69. Ra7+ Kf8 70. Bxd6+ Kg7 71. Bd5 Rf2+ 72. Kd1 Rf1+ 73. Ke2 h6 74. Rxf7+ Kh8 75. Re7 Re1+ 76. Kxe1 hxg5 77. Bxe5#) 65. Ra7+ Kf8 66. Bc7 $18 {[%csl Re5,Rf4]}) 54… Rxa4 55. Bxe5 Ra8 {Here white is a little better as the f-Pawn is always weak but he should be careful to avoid exchanges that will lead to any dangerous opposite color Bishop ending that is usually draw.} 56. Rc6 Re8 57. Kg2 Bd7 58. Rc7 Be6 59. Rxf7 Kxf7 60. Bxf4 {White got his second Pawn and with a Rook also this should be won for Leela. Yet it’s not easy and requires specific technique and Leela had shown she doesn’t have the mastery to win this even though she had from now on 4 specific chances to a forced win. Generally test 10 nets of Leela, have problems with opposite color Bishop endings.} Ra8 61. Kg3 Ra7 62. Be5 Bb3 63. Kf4 Rb7 64. Rb2 Ke6 65. Rb1 Kd7 66. Bd4 Kd6 67. Bf6 Kc6 68. Ke3 Ba4 69. Ra1 Rb3+ 70. Kf2 Rb4 71. Bc3 Rc4 72. Bf6 Rb4 73. Bc3 Rc4 74. Be5 Kd7 75. Ke3 Rb4 76. Bc3 Rc4 77. Bf6 Rb4 78. Kf4 Ke6 79. Bc3 Rc4 80. Ra3 Bd7 81. Bb2 Ra4 82. Rb3 Bc6 83. Rb6 Kd6 84. Be5+ Kd7 85. Rb8 Ra8 86. Rb2 Ke6 87. Rb6 Kd7 88. Rb1 Ke6 89. Rb2 Ra7 90. Rb6 Kd7 91. Rb8 Ke6 92. Rb6 Kd7 93. Rb1 Ke6 94. Bf6 Rb7 95. Ra1 Rb3 96. Ra6 Kd6 97. Be5+ Kc5 98. Ra7 Rb7 99. Ra2 Rb3 100. Ra7 Bb7 101. Ra5+ Kb6 102. Ra2 Bc6 103. Bd4+ Kc7 104. Ra7+ Bb7 105. Ra5 Rd3 106. Bf6 Bc6 107. h5 gxh5 108. Ra7+ Bb7 109. Ra5 Bc6 110. Ra7+ Bb7 111. Ra2 Bc6 112. Rc2 Kb6 113. Rb2+ Kc5 114. Be7+ Kc4 115. Rb8 Rd7 116. Rc8 Kb5 117. Bf6 Kc5 118. Bh8 Rd3 119. Be5 Rd7 120. Bf6 Kb5 121. Kg3 Rd3 122. Kf4 Rd7 123. Rb8+ Kc4 124. Ke3 Ra7 125. Rc8 Kb5 126. Bd4 Ra3+ 127. Ke2 Ra8 128. Rc7 Rd8 129. Bf2 Rd7 130. Rxd7 Bxd7 {Finally. Is this won for white? It’s difficult to say for sure but with these 3 connected Pawns it must be.} 131. f4 Kc6 132. f5 {White has to put his Pawns on light squares of course} Kd6 { It’s all about white’s e-Pawn to get to e6. Then white would win. This can happen only with King’s support so the white King should reach e5. But this is not trivial of course.} 133. Bg3+ Kc5 134. Ke3 Be8 135. Kf4 {Leela is trying directly to go to e5.} (135. Bb8 $1 {Endgame tablebases say this is won.} h4 ( 135… Ba4 136. Kf4 {[%csl Ge5] White’s King will get access to the critical e5 so he will win.} h4 137. Ke5 h3 138. Ba7+ Kc6 139. Bg1 Kd7 140. Kf6 Bb5 141. e5 Kd8 142. e6 Ke8 143. g6 hxg6 144. Kxg6 Ke7 145. f6+ Kxe6 146. f7) (135… Kc4 136. Kf4 {[%csl Re5]} Kd4 137. Ba7+ Kc3 138. Ke5 Kd3 139. Bf2 Bf7 {[%csl Rd5][%cal Re5d5]} 140. Bh4 Bg8 141. f6 Ba2 142. Kf5 Kd4 143. e5 Bb1+ 144. Ke6 Ba2+ 145. Ke7 $18) 136. Bh2 $1 Ba4 137. Kf4 $3 {[%csl Re5]} (137. e5 $2 Bc2 $11 ) 137… Kd6 {[%csl Re5]} 138. Kg4+ Kd7 (138… Ke7 139. e5 Bc2 140. e6 { Same as in 138…Kd7 line}) 139. e5 Bc2 140. e6+ Ke7 141. Kf4 {[%csl Re5]} Kd6 142. g6 $1 hxg6 143. Kg5+ {[%cal Rh2d6]} Ke7 144. Kxg6 h3 145. Bg1 Bb1 146. Bc5+ Kd8 147. Bd6 Ke8 148. Kf6 Ba2 149. Bh2 Bb1 150. Ke5 Kf8 151. f6 Bg6 152. Bg1 Ke8 153. Kf4 Kf8 154. Kg5 $18) 135… Kd6 {[%csl Re5] Komodo denies it.} 136. Kf3+ (136. Ke3+ {Would also win.} Kc5 137. Bb8 {Like before.}) 136… Kc5 137. Bf2+ (137. Bb8 $1 {Again wins.} Ba4 138. Kf4 {Same lines as before.}) 137… Kd6 138. Bg3+ Kc6 139. Kf2 $2 {Throws away the win. Now it’s a draw. 139.Ke3 or Kf7 or Bb8 would still win.} (139. Ke3 $18) (139. Kf4 $18) (139. Bb8 $18) 139… Bf7 $1 {[%csl Rb1] Now it’s too late for white. Black wins this critical tempo to go to b1 to threat e4} 140. Ke3 Ba2 141. Kd4 Bb1 142. Ke5 Kd7 143. Be1 Ke7 144. Bh4 Kd7 145. Bg3 Bc2 146. Be1 Ke8 147. Kf4 Kd7 148. Bg3 Kd6 149. Bf2 Bd3 150. Be1 Bc2 151. Bg3 Kc6 152. Ke5 Kd7 153. Bf2 Ke7 154. Bh4 Ke8 155. Kf4 Kd7 156. Bf2 Ba4 157. Bg3 Bd1 158. e5 Kc6 159. Ke4 Bc2+ 160. Kf4 Ba4 161. Bh4 Kd5 162. Bf2 Bc6 163. Bg3 Be8 164. Be1 Bb5 165. Bg3 Be2 166. Bh4 Bb5 167. Be1 Bd3 168. Bg3 Bb5 169. e6 Ba4 170. Bh4 Kd6 171. Be1 Kd5 172. Bg3 Bb5 173. Bh4 Bc6 174. Bf2 Ba4 175. Be1 Bb5 176. Bb4 Be8 177. Ba5 Bb5 178. Bc7 Bd3 179. Bb8 Bc4 180. Ke3 Bb5 181. Bc7 Bc6 182. Kf3 Ba4 183. Kf4 Bb5 184. Kg3 Bd3 185. Kf4 Bb5 186. Bb6 Be8 187. Bd4 Bc6 188. Kg3 Be8 189. Kh4 Kd6 190. Bh8 Kd5 191. Bg7 Kd6 192. Bb2 Kd5 193. Bc3 Kd6 194. Kg3 Kd5 195. Kf4 Bc6 196. Bd4 Be8 197. Bg7 Bb5 198. Bd4 Kd6 199. Ke4 Bc6+ 200. Kf4 Ba4 201. Bc3 Bb3 202. Be5+ Kd5 203. Bc3 Bc4 204. Bd2 Bb3 205. Be3 Ba4 206. Bd4 Bb5 207. Be5 Bc4 208. Bf6 Bb5 209. Bg7 Be8 210. Be5 Bb5 211. Bf6 Bc6 212. Bc3 Be8 213. Bb2 Bc6 214. Ba1 Bb5 215. Bc3 Bc6 216. Be5 Be8 217. Bb8 Bb5 218. e7 Be8 219. Be5 Bf7 220. Bc7 Be8 221. Bb8 Bd7 222. Kg3 Bc6 223. Kf3 Bb5 224. Kg3 Bc6 225. Kf3 Be8 226. Kf4 Kd4 227. Bd6 Kd5 228. Be5 Bd7 229. Bc3 Be8 230. Bb2 Kd6 231. Ba3+ Kd5 232. Bb4 Kd4 233. Ba5 Kd5 234. Bc7 Bc6 235. Ba5 Bb5 236. Bd2 Be8 237. Be1 Kd6 238. Bb4+ Kd5 239. Ba3 Bc6 240. Bc5 Ba4 241. Be3 Bc6 242. Bd2 Be8 243. Bb4 Ba4 244. Bc5 Be8 245. Ba3 Bb5 246. Bc5 Be8 247. Bf2 Kd6 248. f6 Ke6 249. Bd4 Bg6 250. Bc5 Bf7 251. Be3 Be8 252. Bd2 Kd6 253. Be1 Ke6 254. Bc3 Bf7 255. Ba5 Be8 256. Be1 Bg6 257. Bh4 Kf7 258. Ke5 Ke8 259. Bf2 Kf7 260. Be3 Bd3 261. Bg1 Bb5 262. Bf2 Be8 263. Bg3 Kg6 264. Ke6 Bb5 265. Bf2 Ba4 266. Bg3 Bb5 267. Bf4 Bc4+ 268. Ke5 Kf7 269. Ke4 Bb3 270. Bh2 Ba4 271. Bg3 Bc6+ 272. Ke5 Bd7 273. Be1 Bc6 274. Bd2 Bd7 275. Bf4 Bc6 276. Be3 Kg6 277. Ke6 Be8 278. Bd4 Bb5 279. Be3 Be8 280. Bd4 Bb5 281. Bg1 Ba4 282. Ba7 Be8 283. Be3 Bb5 284. Bd2 Bc4+ 285. Ke5 Bb5 286. Ke6 Bc4+ 287. Ke5 Bf7 288. Be3 Be8 289. Ke6 Ba4 290. Bd2 Bb3+ 291. Ke5 Ba4 292. Ke6 Bb3+ 293. Ke5 Bf7 294. Be3 Be8 295. Bf2 Bd7 296. Bh4 Kf7 297. g6+ hxg6 298. Kf4 g5+ 299. Kxg5 Be8 300. Kxh5 Bc6 301. Kg5 Bd5 302. Bg3 Ba2 303. Kh4 Bd5 304. Be5 Bh1 305. Kg3 Bc6 306. Kf2 Be4 307. Ke2 Bc6 308. Kd3 Bh1 309. Kd2 Bf3 310. Bb2 Bc6 311. Ba1 Bd5 312. Kc2 Ke8 313. Be5 Be6 314. Kd2 Kf7 315. Ke2 Bc8 316. Kd3 Bf5+ 317. Kc3 Bd7 318. Kc2 Bg4 319. Ba1 Bf3 320. Kd3 Bg4 321. Kd2 Bh3 322. Bd4 Bf1 323. Be5 Ke8 324. Ke3 Kf7 325. Kf2 Ba6 326. Kg3 Bb5 327. Kg2 Bc6+ 328. Kf1 Bb5+ 329. Ke1 Bd3 330. Kd1 Bf5 331. Ke2 Ke8 332. Kf3 Bd3 333. Kg4 Bc4 334. Kf4 Bb3 335. Kf3 Bc2 336. Kg4 Bb3 337. Bg3 Bc4 338. Bb8 Bb5 339. Kf3 Bd3 340. Bg3 Kf7 341. Be5 Ke8 342. Kg4 Bh7 343. Bg3 Kf7 344. Bb8 Be4 345. e8=R Kxe8 346. Be5 Kf7 347. Ba1 Bb1 348. Kg5 Bc2 349. Kf4 Ke6 350. Bb2 Kf7 351. Kg4 Be4 352. Kg5 Ke6 353. Kf4 Bc2 354. Ba1 Bb1 355. Kg5 Bc2 356. Bb2 Kf7 357. Ba1 Bb3 358. Kf5 Be6+ 359. Ke5 Bc4 360. Kd6 Kg6 361. Ke7 Kf5 362. Bd4 Bd5 363. Bc3 Kg6 364. Bd4 Bf7 365. Be5 Bg8 366. Ba1 Bd5 367. Bc3 Kf5 368. Bd4 Kg6 369. Bb6 Bf7 370. Bd4 Bc4 371. Bb6 Ba2 372. Bg1 Bc4 373. Bd4 Bb3 374. Ba1 Bd5 375. Kd6 Bf7 376. Kc5 Ba2 377. Kb5 Bd5 378. Ka5 Bb3 379. Kb4 Bf7 380. Kb5 Bd5 381. Ka5 Be4 382. Kb6 Kf7 383. Kb5 Bd3+ 384. Ka5 Bc2 385. Ka6 Be4 386. Kb6 Kg6 387. Ka5 Bb1 388. Kb5 Bd3+ 389. Kb4 Kf7 390. Ka5 Bb1 391. Ka6 Bc2 392. Kb7 Bb1 393. Kc6 Bc2 394. Kd5 Bb3+ 395. Kc5 Bd1 {The opening was a big fight a very complicated middlegame has arisen early, Leela outplayed Komodo and reached a won position, but missed the chance to give the final blow several times and it ended in this CCCC record of most moves with 395 moves and a draw!} 1/2-1/2

ROUND 36
Another round with a very tough opponent for Leela, one of the biggest tests for her as she faced with black Houdini. Yet, she very easily with some paradoxical middlegame play, seemingly not paying that much attention to the strong white forces that gathered in the Kingside and could threaten
the black King, it managed not only to equalize but to achieve and a minor edge! It was not enough though with the solid play by Houdin.

Shredder had a draw with Ethereal, Boot with Texel and Andscacs lost to Komodo so the battle for top 8 continues in a dramatic fashion since many critical games, like Booot-Shredder of next round are coming.

421 Komodo vs Andscacs 1-0
422 Laser vs Ivanhoe 1-0
423 Houdini vs Lc0 1/2-1/2
424 Nemorino vs Gull 1-0
425 Fritz vs Nirvana 1/2-1/2
426 Pedone vs Fizbo 1/2-1/2
427 Fire vs Senpai 1-0
428 Shredder vs Ethereal 1/2-1/2
429 Crafty vs Stockfish 0-1
430 Texel vs Booot 1/2-1/2
431 Arasan vs Vajolet 1/2-1/2
432 Wasp vs Xiphos 0-1

[Event “CCCC 1: Rapid Rumble (15|5) Stage 1”] [Site “Chess.com”] [Date “2018.09.13”] [Round “?”] [White “Houdini 6.03”] [Black “Lc0 17.11089”] [Result “1/2-1/2”] [ECO “D43”] [WhiteElo “3400”] [BlackElo “3184”] [PlyCount “152”] [EventDate “2018.??.??”] [EventType “rapid”] 1. d4 Nf6 2. Nf3 e6 3. c4 d5 4. Nc3 c6 5. cxd5 exd5 6. Bf4 Bf5 7. e3 Nbd7 8. a3 Nh5 9. Bg5 Nhf6 10. Bd3 Bxd3 11. Qxd3 Bd6 12. O-O O-O 13. e4 dxe4 14. Nxe4 Be7 15. Rfe1 h6 16. Bxf6 Nxf6 17. Ne5 Qd5 18. Nc3 Qb3 19. Re3 Rad8 20. Qe2 Bd6 21. Ne4 Qe6 22. Nxf6+ Qxf6 23. Nf3 c5 24. d5 c4 25. Rd1 Bc5 26. Re5 c3 27. bxc3 Bxa3 28. Qd3 Rc8 29. Re3 Bc5 30. Re2 Rfd8 31. Nd2 Bf8 32. Ne4 Qg6 33. Rb2 b6 34. c4 a5 35. Kh1 a4 36. g4 a3 (36… Qxg4 $2 37. Nf6+ {[%csl Rg4,Rg8]} gxf6 38. Rg1 Qxg1+ 39. Kxg1) 37. Ra2 h5 38. g5 Re8 39. f3 Rcd8 40. Qb1 Re5 {Leela manged to bring Houdini to a worse situation. White has some problems to solve now but Houdini belongs to the “big 3” engines, so it handled the position very solidly.} 41. d6 Rxe4 (41… Ra8 {Worth trying maybe but still equal.} 42. c5 $1 Qf5 (42… bxc5 43. Rxa3 $3 Rxa3 44. d7 Ra8 (44… Rxf3 45. d8=Q Qxe4 $1 46. Qxe4 Rxe4 $11) 45. d8=Q Rxd8 46. Rxd8 $11) 43. Kg2 bxc5 44. d7 Rd8 45. Rxa3 h4 46. Rb3 $11) 42. Qxe4 Rxd6 43. Rxd6 Qxd6 44. Kg2 g6 45. h4 Qd8 46. Re2 Qd1 47. Qe8 Qc1 48. Qb8 Qxc4 49. Re8 Qc2+ 50. Kg3 Qc5 51. Rc8 Qg1+ 52. Kh3 Qh1+ 53. Kg3 Qg1+ 54. Kh3 Qf1+ 55. Kg3 Qe1+ 56. Kg2 Qb4 57. Kh3 Qe7 58. Re8 Qc5 59. Rc8 Qe7 60. Re8 Qc5 61. Rc8 Qb4 62. Qe5 Kh7 63. Qe8 Kg7 64. Qe5+ Kh7 65. Rc7 Qb3 66. Qf6 Kg8 67. Rc8 Qe3 68. Ra8 Qd3 69. Kg3 Qd5 70. Rc8 Qd7 71. Rxf8+ Kxf8 72. Qh8+ Ke7 73. Qf6+ Ke8 74. Qh8+ Ke7 75. Qf6+ Ke8 76. Qh8+ Ke7 {With this draw, Leela has now managed not to lose none of the 6 games with the big 3 engines as she drew both with black and white rather very comfortably(and she could have won her white game with Komodo actually) Stockfish, Komodo and Houdini.} 1/2-1/2

Standings after round 36 of 46. First 8 go to next stage.

| Player | Score | (SB) | Ko | St | Ho | Fi | Lc | Sh | An | Bo | Et | Te |

FrPeXiArVaLaGuFiWaNeIvSeNiCr+/-/=
1:Komodo 2118.0030.0 / 37496.75XX====1.==1.=1
1==11.=.1.=1=.111==1111.1.111111
1.(+23 -0 =14)
2:Stockfish 22081829.5 / 36500.25==XX=1=1===.=1
1=111.1=1.=1=.11=.1.1.1.1.1.11
1111(+23 -0 =13)
3:Houdini 6.0329.0 / 37466.75===0XX1.===.1.
=1=01.1.1.111.=11=1111=.11111=11
1.(+23 -2 =12)
4:Fire 7.125.0 / 36384.500.=00.XX=.0==.==
1=1.1.1==11.=11=11=1=.11=1111.1.
(+18 -4 =14)
5:Lc0 17.1108924.5 / 36425.50=======.XX=.==
=1101.1.=.111.1=1.1==1=.=.11==
1==.(+14 -1 =21)
6:Shredder 1323.0 / 36366.750.=.=.1==.XX1==.
==1==.===.1==.==1==0==1=111.1.
11(+12 -2 =22)
7:Andscacs 0.9423.0 / 37341.00=0=00.=.==0=XX
=.0.=10.=10=1.111=1.=.1=11=11111
1.(+16 -7 =14)
8:Booot 6.3.122.5 / 36339.000=0==0===0=.=.XX
=.1====.=.=1==1.=.=.111.1.1111
11(+13 -4 =19)
9:Ethereal 10.8821.5 / 36338.75=000=10=01==1.
=.XX0====.1.10=.1.1.=.==1.1.=111
11(+14 -7 =15)
10:Texel 1.0720.5 / 36289.750.0.0.0.0.0==00=
1=XX1.=1=.=1=.=1=====111=11.1.
11(+13 -8 =15)
11:Fritz 16.1019.0 / 36293.25=.0=0.0.0.=.1.
====0.XX1====.1====1==1.======1=
1.(+7 -5 =24)
12:Pedone 1.818.0 / 36258.750.0.0.0==.===0=.
=.=00=XX=.===.=1==1====1==1.1.
11(+7 -7 =22)
13:Xiphos 0.3.1717.5 / 36257.00=0=000=000=.1=
=.0.=.===.XX==01=.=.=.=11.0.1=11
11(+9 -10 =17)
14:Arasan CCCC-201817.0 / 36260.00=.=.0.0.0.0=
0.=001=0=.====XX======111=0101=.
1.1.(+8 -10 =18)
15:Vajolet 2.616.0 / 36224.750000=0=00==.00
===.=.0==.10==XX1.=.=.=.0.=.1111
11(+8 -12 =16)
16:Laser 1.615.5 / 36242.500==.0=0=0.==0=0.
0.=0===0=.==0.XX=.=.=111011.1.
10(+7 -12 =17)
17:Gull 3.syz14.5 / 36205.75=00.00000=0=0.=.
0.===0===.===.=.XX=.1==01.1.==
11(+5 -12 =19)
18:Fizbo 1.914.0 / 36218.00000.00=0=0=1=.=.
=.====0==.00=.=.=.XX===.=.====
1=(+2 -10 =24)
19:Wasp 3.2513.0 / 36214.500.0.=.=.=.==0=00
===00.===00==.=00===XX=10=1.=.
=.(+2 -12 =22)
20:Nemorino 5.0012.5 / 36161.500.0.0000=.0=00
0.0.00===00.101.00=1=.=0XX111.1.
=1(+8 -19 =9)
21:Ivanhoe 999946h10.5 / 37163.25000.00=00000=0
0.0.=0====1.10=.100.=.1=00XX0.
0.=1(+5 -21 =11)
22:Senpai 2.07.5 / 36118.5000000=00==0.0000
=00.==0.0==.000.0.==0.0.1.XX==
=.(+1 -22 =13)
23:Nirvana 2.45.5 / 3674.750000000.0=0.0000
000.0=0.000.000.=====.0.1.==XX
0.(+1 -26 =9)
24:Crafty 25.25.0 / 3662.000.000.0.=.000.00
00000.00000.0001000==.=0=0=.1.
XX(+2 -28 =6)

_ Rating performance so far after round 36 (plus some round 37 games):_

Rank Name               Elo    +    - games score oppo. draws   
   1 Stockfish 220818   520  105   94    36   82%   281   36%   
   2 Komodo 2118.00     506  102   91    37   81%   278   38%   
   3 Houdini 6.03       484  102   92    37   78%   274   32%   
   4 Fire 7.1           407   94   88    36   69%   276   39%   
   5 Lc0 17.11089       390   88   85    36   67%   285   61%   
   6 Booot 6.3.1        369   87   84    36   63%   283   53%   
   7 Andscacs 0.94      365   91   87    37   62%   277   38%   
   8 Shredder 13        356   86   83    36   64%   268   61%   
   9 Ethereal 10.88     353   91   88    36   60%   286   42%   
  10 Texel 1.07         309   88   86    36   57%   269   42%   
  11 Xiphos 0.3.17      284   87   87    36   49%   287   47%   
  12 Fritz 16.10        281   83   82    36   53%   270   67%   
  13 Pedone 1.8         273   82   83    36   50%   270   61%   
  14 Arasan CCCC-2018   263   85   86    36   47%   277   50%   
  15 Vajolet 2.6        263   87   88    36   44%   293   44%   
  16 Laser 1.6          257   86   88    36   43%   286   47%   
  17 Gull 3.syz         236   84   86    36   42%   285   56%   
  18 Fizbo 1.9          209   82   85    36   39%   283   67%   
  19 Wasp 3.25          205   83   86    36   36%   283   61%   
  20 Nemorino 5.00      175   92   97    36   35%   283   25%   
  21 Ivanhoe 999946h    142   92   99    37   28%   295   30%   
  22 Senpai 2.0         103   93  103    36   21%   310   36%   
  23 Nirvana 2.4         42  100  116    36   15%   309   25%   
  24 Crafty 25.2          0  104  125    36   14%   293   17% 

**This is with Lc0 - Gull game counted as draw. Since this is a rating list the real result should be counted, as the CCCC result by their rules because Gull crashed, was 1-0 in favor of Lc0.

Posted by: Bob23