The final match:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=mzpW10DPHeQA final match which was full of expectation, especially after Lee's win. Lee said that he at least found two weaknesses of AlphaGo, first was that AlphaGO played well when it was the white side, i.e. play later. The second was that it did not respond well on the unusual moves.
With that in mind, I expected that Lee would play some unusual moves in game 5, but it turned out that not many unusual moves.
Lee played very well at the beginning and AlphaGo seemed to make another mistake, which resulted in losing the lower right corner and quite a lot of white stones killed. I expected that Lee would win again at that time, as his territory was far larger than that of AlphaGo's.
However, AlphaGo fought back beautifully by taking territory bit by bit. At the end, the game was so close that Lee only resigned close to the finish, after he calculated that he cannot win. He was really disappointed.
Some professional said that Lee only lost 2.5 points. As Lee took the black side and played first, there was an adjustment that Lee had to get 7.5 points more than AlphaGo in order to win, i.e. for the territory per se, Lee was ahead of AlphaGo by 5 points.
I thought that Lee won all along this game and did not think that AlphaGo can win.
As I understand from AlphaGo from the press conference, AlphaGo played each move in accordance with its calculated winning probability. It does not care how many points he will win, as long as the move can enhance its winning probability. This needs a very deep calculating which I don't think human being can do. Like this game which Lee, as a professional, or the commentator, who is a 9-dan professional, can roughly estimate how many points he is ahead or behind but they can never be so precise to know he is winning 1 or 2 points, but it seems AlphaGo can.
I do learn a lot by watching these games and it makes my hand etching to play some.