New York 1913
Capablanca, J.R.
Kline, Harry
After 21...h5-h4
The machine comes to a different conclusion after 22.Nf5 hxg3 23.hxg3 Bxf5 24.exf5 Ne7 25.Kg2, and now instead of 25...Kg7, Black plays 25...Nd5, threatening a family fork on e3. The point is that if 26.Qd2, Black has the sacrificial variation 26...Nhf4+ 27.gxf4 Nxf4+, when 28.Kg3 (28.Kf2 is similar) gives Black at least a draw with 28...Rad8.
One line is 29.Rd1 Qh8 30.Qh2 Qxh2+ 31.Kxh2 Kg7 32.Kg1 Rh8 33.Bc2 Nh3+ 34.Kg2 Nf4+ with perpetual check. The move 29...Qh8 is hardly forced, as Black has more speculative moves like 29...Kg7, 29...e4, and 29...c5. I wasn't able to work through all of the complications in the time I had available, but I found nothing where Black was in any danger of losing.
Calculation or intuition: did Capablanca see what the engine sees? To play through the complete game, including the analysis by Nimzovich, see...
N Kline vs Jose Raul Capablanca; New York 1913
http://www.chessgames.com/perl/chessgame?gid=1261977
...on Chessgames.com.
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