Thread: Who's #3??
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Old July 7th 04, 04:31 PM
Chess One
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Default Who's #3??


"Joshua B. Lilly" wrote in message
...
"How can you say that, Joshua?"

Uh, by looking at the openings he played? What more do you need?
Whether or not he`s one of the all-time GREATS is another matter entirely,
and I agree with that. And one of the strongest ever with relation to his
contemporaries. But in terms of actual, applicable strength, he would
simply not stack up against modern GMs. He`d get inferior or losing
positions in the opening, and all the combinational and calculation skills
in the world just don`t come into play from losing positions. He actually
thought the "modern position" (in the Evans Gambit) with Anderrsen`s d5

for
White was good. And you think this sort of play would stack up against,
say, Kramnik HOW exactly?


These are actually very good points. I have heard them before about even
quite recent players. Modern players are simply much better prepared, and
are in fact better than previous generations!

However, if we take Morphy as a player who dominated his entire generation,
then given our current resources of opening knowledge and computer training
and analysis, is it not true on the same basis as the previous paragraph,
that Morphy would also be a dominant player in the C21st?

Therefore, both these suppostions may be true! Morphy would suffer at the
hands of Kramnik, and even struggle against the top 100 players. However
given sufficient time and with modern resources, he would certainly be a
first tier grandmaster.

Cordially, Phil Innes

The opponents crushed by Morphy were strong by the standards of that time,
but your position is that chess has not advanced. I think anyone can look
at chess over the past 50 years and see clearly that it has advanced. If
Morphy could compete against modern GMs, that would mean that chess had
completely stagnated since the 1850s. Do you honestly believe that is the
case?




"Matt Nemmers" wrote in message
news:w_EGc.1635$WX.120@attbi_s51...

How can you say that, Joshua? Morphy beat *every single player* in the
world (who was worth playing) except Staunton, who, as everybody who

knows
the history will tell you, ducked him. All the worlds best players of

the
time....toppled by Morphy. Maybe he just outclassed his opponents so

much
that most of his games look like they weren't even worth his time, but

you
can hardly disqualify Morphy from the list because he was ahead of his

time.
And saying he couldn't "even compete against a modern 2500 player and
manager to survive the opening" is just ridiculous.

Of course, this is all speculation and conjecture, but IMHO, Morphy is
definitely one of the all time greats -- definitely worthy of being in

the
top five, if not the top three.

Regards,

Matt





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