How much are "Open Book Odds" worth?
Sam,
You're a ****ty player, about my strength. You couldn't offer a C player
"dictionary" odds and neither could I, even though I now own not one but
THREE pair of "chess glasses."
You'd be losing at move 12 90% of the time. Very bad odds. Go find Win Moe,
dude. Convert him to Islam.
adp
"Sam Sloan" wrote in message
...
A common misconception weak players have is that they are weak and the
strong players are strong only because the strong players have
memorized more opening book lines.
In the game of Scrabble, it is common for strong players to offer weak
players "Dictionary Odds". Players who are not good at scrabble are
allowed to look up words in the dictionary, which the strong player
cannot do.
It turns out that dictionary odds are worth very little in scrabble.
I have never seen this done but in chess I am prepared to offer
opening book odds. I will alow my opponent to bring any chess opening
book to the board, and he will be allowed to look up any opening in
the book and play any more he finds there.
Since I play off-beat openings not found in any book, I will give the
added stipulation that I will only play standard normal openings found
in MCO and other standard works.
The question is: How much is this worth?
I believe that this will be worth about 100 rating points, not more.
In other words, a 1700 player will play equal to an 1800 player with
these odds.
Sorry, but you 1700 players out there will not play like a grandmaster
even with these odds.
Sam Sloan
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