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#1
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Some years ago I was playing in a non-rated team match. The opposing
team consisted of scholastic players. I was recruited to play first board for the Lynchburg team because our team was short one player. I played a nice combination and won a piece in the opening. I was thinking about having the game published. However, my opponent refused to resign. He just kept playing. Finally, I was two rooks up and still he refused to resign. By now, the game was so long that no chess magazine would ever publish it. I got mad and started to get angry with my opponent. Finally, I won his queen too. Then, he resigned. By then the game had dragged on for 40 moves and was far too long to be published. I complained to his coach (his team had a professional coach who was a well known chess master) about the fact that his player had refused to resign even though he was two rooks down. The coach explained that he had told his team players not to resign unless they were at least a queen down. This explained why he had not resigned when he was two rooks down but did resign when I won his queen. In this match, we had to play two games. I got so mad about this that I played carelessly in the second game and lost. Sam Sloan |
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#3
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#5
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On Wed, 17 Mar 2004 15:09:58 GMT, (Sam Sloan)
wrote: Since several people have asked here is the game. My opponent was a 1900 player. His coach was Rusty Potter, a well known chess master. In case anybody is wondering, Rusty Potter is listed as John Russell Potter. http://www.64.com/uscf/ratings/10199018 His current rating is 2216. He has been rated as high as 2355 and never lower than 2200. Sam Sloan |
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#7
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#8
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(Danny Purvis) wrote in message . com...
(Sam Sloan) wrote in message ... On Wed, 17 Mar 2004 15:09:58 GMT, (Sam Sloan) wrote: Since several people have asked here is the game. My opponent was a 1900 player. His coach was Rusty Potter, a well known chess master. In case anybody is wondering, Rusty Potter is listed as John Russell Potter. http://www.64.com/uscf/ratings/10199018 His current rating is 2216. He has been rated as high as 2355 and never lower than 2200. Sam Sloan Sometime around 1970 my friend Roger Ramsey, since passed away, and I met Rusty Potter, I believe in Raleigh. I think we might have been on a city bus when he approached us. After asking us if those weren't chess sets we were carrying, he told us that he was trying to learn how to play chess himself and that he was glad to meet some experienced players. (Roger and I were teenagers, not very experienced, both rated around 1600.) He then asked us all sorts of beginner questions about chess and eventually started a game with Roger in which he made only pawn moves. When we got to the tournament, which was at a shopping mall, we soon learned that he was a chess master. He had just been having a little fun with us. He was athletic and charismatic. I lost to him in the third, Saturday evening round. During that game he kept gazing up at the second tier of the mall and commenting on women's legs and undergarments. At one point Charles Powell, who eventually won the tournament, walked past our board and, in response to Potter's boasts, taunted Potter by observing that my position was not bad. I remember later that night Potter shouting in a parking lot, "I'm the best ****ing chess player in the world!" Danny Purvis I now remember clearly that Rusty Potter's exuberant shout was actually, "I'm the best chess player in the world!" How the notorious f-word infected my initial recollection I will never know. My abject apologies to one of the finest players I have ever met. Danny Purvis |
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#9
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On Thu, 18 Mar 2004 12:17:44 +0200, Bob Lablaw
wrote: Sam Sloan wrote: On 15 Mar 2004 06:14:27 -0800, (KidDon) wrote: (Sam Sloan) wrote in message ... Some years ago I was playing in a non-rated team match. The opposing team consisted of scholastic players. I was recruited to play first board for the Lynchburg team because our team was short one player. I played a nice combination and won a piece in the opening. I was thinking about having the game published. However, my opponent refused to resign. He just kept playing. Finally, I was two rooks up and still he refused to resign. By now, the game was so long that no chess magazine would ever publish it. I got mad and started to get angry with my opponent. Finally, I won his queen too. Then, he resigned. By then the game had dragged on for 40 moves and was far too long to be published. I complained to his coach (his team had a professional coach who was a well known chess master) about the fact that his player had refused to resign even though he was two rooks down. The coach explained that he had told his team players not to resign unless they were at least a queen down. This explained why he had not resigned when he was two rooks down but did resign when I won his queen. In this match, we had to play two games. I got so mad about this that I played carelessly in the second game and lost. Sam Sloan ________________________________ That is what many scholastic chess coaches instruct their kids for scholastic tournaments, especially those with shorter time controls; the reason being that every 1/2 pt. can help in the team standings, and as long as the player has a queen on the board against another scholastic opponent, he/she may be able to force perpetual check or otherwise secure a draw. In my opinion, such an instruction should not be given in a tournament that includes adult players, nor should it be given in the higher levels of scholastics (i.e. players rated @ 1200 - 2200+). Kiddon Since several people have asked here is the game. My opponent was a 1900 player. His coach was Rusty Potter, a well known chess master. In this game, first I won the exchange. Then, on move 28, I won a knight, leaving me a rook up. This is where I felt he should have resigned. After that, on move 32, I won another rook. Now, it was ridiculous for him to play on. Finally, on move 40 I won his queen. This left him in a king and queen vs, king endgame. I guess he figured that I knew how to mate with a queen and therefore he resigned. [Event "Pulaski-Lynchburg Match"] [Site "Lynchburg, Virginia"] [Date "1986.??.??"] [Round "?"] [White "Sloan, Sam"] [Black "Shelton, Jeffrey"] [Result "1-0"] [ECO "A00"] 1.g4 d5 2.Bg2 c6 3.h3 e5 4.e4 d4 5.d3 Be6 6.Ne2 c5 7.f4 Nc6 8.Nd2 Qh4+ 9.Kf1 exf4 10.Nf3 Qf6 11.Bxf4 h6 12.Qd2 O-O-O 13.Re1 c4 14.a3 Nge7 15.e5 Qg6 16.Nh4 Qh7 17.Be4 g6 18.Kg2 Bg7 19.Nf3 Bd5 20.Nfxd4 Nxd4 21.Nxd4 Bxe4+ 22.Rxe4 f5 23.exf6 Bxf6 24.Ne6 Nd5 25.Rxc4+ Kd7 26.Nxd8 Bxd8 27.Rd4 Qf7 28.c4 Kc8 29.cxd5 Bb6 30.Re4 g5 31.Qc3+ Kd7 32.Qxh8 gxf4 33.Rf1 Qxd5 34.Qe8+ Kc7 35.Rc1+ Bc5 36.Qe7+ Kb6 37.Rxc5 Qxc5 38.Rb4+ Kc6 39.Rc4 b6 40.Rxc5+ 1-0 Sam Sloan I think 20 Nfxd4 would have lost you your chance to have the game published anyway. It allows 20...Bxe4+ 21. dxe4 g4 and after ...Qxe4+ and ...Bxe5 Black has won two pawns at the very least, and possibly the knight on d4 if you're not careful. 20. Nexd4 would have prevented this. Thank you very much. You are right of course. The line you give wins for Black. I am going to have to check my original scoresheets if I can ever recover them to see if I really played 20. Nfxd4 because 20. Nexd4 accomplishes the same purposes and is superior in every way. Just to explain, after 20. Nfxd4 Bxe4+ 21. dxe4 g5 22. Bg3 Qxe5+ Black obviously has a win because he is about to win the knight on d4. However, by simply capturing the pawn with a different knight with 20. Nexd4 not with the knight no longer on e2 the Rook on e1 protects the pawn on e4 and so White has won a pawn. Sam Sloan |
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#10
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Poor sportsmanship like that should be met with disciplinary measures by the
TD. It is in very bad taste, disrespectful, and bad for the game. "Sam Sloan" wrote in message ... On 15 Mar 2004 06:14:27 -0800, (KidDon) wrote: (Sam Sloan) wrote in message ... Some years ago I was playing in a non-rated team match. The opposing team consisted of scholastic players. I was recruited to play first board for the Lynchburg team because our team was short one player. I played a nice combination and won a piece in the opening. I was thinking about having the game published. However, my opponent refused to resign. He just kept playing. Finally, I was two rooks up and still he refused to resign. By now, the game was so long that no chess magazine would ever publish it. I got mad and started to get angry with my opponent. Finally, I won his queen too. Then, he resigned. By then the game had dragged on for 40 moves and was far too long to be published. I complained to his coach (his team had a professional coach who was a well known chess master) about the fact that his player had refused to resign even though he was two rooks down. The coach explained that he had told his team players not to resign unless they were at least a queen down. This explained why he had not resigned when he was two rooks down but did resign when I won his queen. In this match, we had to play two games. I got so mad about this that I played carelessly in the second game and lost. Sam Sloan ________________________________ That is what many scholastic chess coaches instruct their kids for scholastic tournaments, especially those with shorter time controls; the reason being that every 1/2 pt. can help in the team standings, and as long as the player has a queen on the board against another scholastic opponent, he/she may be able to force perpetual check or otherwise secure a draw. In my opinion, such an instruction should not be given in a tournament that includes adult players, nor should it be given in the higher levels of scholastics (i.e. players rated @ 1200 - 2200+). Kiddon Since several people have asked here is the game. My opponent was a 1900 player. His coach was Rusty Potter, a well known chess master. In this game, first I won the exchange. Then, on move 28, I won a knight, leaving me a rook up. This is where I felt he should have resigned. After that, on move 32, I won another rook. Now, it was ridiculous for him to play on. Finally, on move 40 I won his queen. This left him in a king and queen vs, king endgame. I guess he figured that I knew how to mate with a queen and therefore he resigned. [Event "Pulaski-Lynchburg Match"] [Site "Lynchburg, Virginia"] [Date "1986.??.??"] [Round "?"] [White "Sloan, Sam"] [Black "Shelton, Jeffrey"] [Result "1-0"] [ECO "A00"] 1.g4 d5 2.Bg2 c6 3.h3 e5 4.e4 d4 5.d3 Be6 6.Ne2 c5 7.f4 Nc6 8.Nd2 Qh4+ 9.Kf1 exf4 10.Nf3 Qf6 11.Bxf4 h6 12.Qd2 O-O-O 13.Re1 c4 14.a3 Nge7 15.e5 Qg6 16.Nh4 Qh7 17.Be4 g6 18.Kg2 Bg7 19.Nf3 Bd5 20.Nfxd4 Nxd4 21.Nxd4 Bxe4+ 22.Rxe4 f5 23.exf6 Bxf6 24.Ne6 Nd5 25.Rxc4+ Kd7 26.Nxd8 Bxd8 27.Rd4 Qf7 28.c4 Kc8 29.cxd5 Bb6 30.Re4 g5 31.Qc3+ Kd7 32.Qxh8 gxf4 33.Rf1 Qxd5 34.Qe8+ Kc7 35.Rc1+ Bc5 36.Qe7+ Kb6 37.Rxc5 Qxc5 38.Rb4+ Kc6 39.Rc4 b6 40.Rxc5+ 1-0 Sam Sloan |
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