![]() |
| If this is your first visit, be sure to check out the FAQ by clicking the link above. You may have to register before you can post: click the register link above to proceed. To start viewing messages, select the forum that you want to visit from the selection below. |
|
|||||||
| Tags: evans, hes, larry |
|
|
Thread Tools | Display Modes |
|
#21
|
|||
|
|||
|
"help bot" wrote in message oups.com... What actually happened is that GM Evans' was dropped by the new editor -- not "kept feeding at the trough". Only AFTER the ramifications of this action were made clear, that is, only after the "cult" members attacked in mass, did they decide to cave and reinstate one of his columns. The 'cult' of chess players, and another point, David Kanbe is correct, and his column was not reinstated, its orientation was changed. Apart from these 2 observations... If the nearly-an-IM could learn to write in a known language, his alleged "points" might then become known. (I would suggest English, since it has become very popular the world over.) I thought I'd drop in on a help-bot post to see if he was understanding what other people were writing about, or making his miscomprehension the subject. David Kane simply points out that the column he was offered was different than the one Evan's was deposed from. I am saying that the use of language in the above is an illustration that using the word 'cult' to indicate active and enthusiastic readership, is hardly honest! The Evans cult being some presumedsynonym for chess players... The longest word may be either "contrantidisestablishmentarianism" or else "supercalifragilisticexpealidocious". Your concoction falls short, besides which, it isn't even a real word! The bot, having noticed that a space doesn't exist where it aughta, skips the topic entirely. As usual with the bot's writing on strong players, comprehension gaps appear... which at least excuse him from discussions, since he quite literally doesn't know what he is talking about. The crime was not needlessly feeding the dying; it was caving under pressure, from what in Washington, D.C. would be known as a "special interest group". Chess players do have special interests. Chess. Denial. IM Innes seems to be in denial in that he wants to believe that by and large, all chess players are fans of GM Evans. I think we can all agree that that is exactly what I wrote - Not! No, its such a massive distortion hung on that 'seems to be saying' - but seems to whom? I said the chess public wanted to read the Evans column as-was. The chess public is not 'a cult' and if great numbers of the public [who pay for this magazine!] want the Evans column as-was, then this is precisely NOT like a "Washington, D.C. as a "special interest group".] The truth is, there are many who like his cold war rehash, and there are many who hate it. My guess is that the hangers-on are a dying breed, much like KKK members. Let me pass over the no doubt unintended pun and association between dying and KKK, to simple note the extremity of this commentary. Let me skip ahead a bit- 'Political' meaning chess management critique... I used that word to indicate that the primary focus of GM Evans' attacks is on two political organizations: the USCF and FIDE, not withstanding his frequent attacks on certain chess players like Karpov and Botvinnik, for instance. I think his primary focus is very similar to many other strong players who attained the world stage. I don't think its anti-organisational, but anti self-dealing. While we have read these same comments from Kasparov, Keene, Short, over the years, I read the same thing at Su Polgar's blog site a few weeks ago. The point is simple: the health of chess in the country is not a synonym with supporting chess organisations - and it is a comment which successfully seperates the entity from the behavior of the entity. Our Greg-Bot has nbot been able to understand the difference, or that it matters. He might look up the word 'polity' and see that it is not the same as 'politics'. In any case, if we understand Evans call it is not to attack USCF and FIDE, but their [bad] behavior, and those who would champion such bad behavior. The only difference between Evans and other comments by strong players is not that others make different points, but that Evans has made these points consistently over the years. I think in fact that he is now joined by a chorus of GMs who echo just the same sort of sentiments. The only difference among them is whether they thing they should start-over, or conduct strong reforms. snip And we playersOWN the game, contrary to all other opinion. This is the beginning of the end of chess as we now know it. Soon computers will RULE the game. My advice is to sell all your shares now, before it's too late! Take the proceeds and invest in China; here are a few ideas: SNP, CTRP, HMIN, ACH. To recap: sell CHESS and buy China stocks. See you on board one at the next Olympics. I said /players/ own the game. Is the bot a player? It doesn't seem evident to me that help bot enjoys the playing of it, and once more, it is fruitless to conduct conversation with people who do not understand the topic. Phil Innes -- help bot |
| Ads |
|
#22
|
|||
|
|||
|
SUSAN POLGAR VS. FIDE
http://wcn.tentonhammer.com/modules....rder=0&thold=0 Also see The Great Debate http://wcn.tentonhammer.com/modules....rder=0&thold=0 It is easy to understand how ostensible 'good works' become corrupted, as with the MonRoi examples - but these are not different in nature than the misrepresentation of Arpad Elo's recommendations to Fide, which slighted Susan Polgar alone for 100 points -- a factor Evans points out by following up with Dr. Elo to be greatly distorting of Elo's initiative. In that instance, the action was seen to be political, since it promoted a Russian player over Su Polar. -- Phil Innes |
|
#23
|
|||
|
|||
|
On Apr 19, 10:19 pm, " wrote:
The main criterion for judging whether a column is up to snuff is whether the readers enjoy it. This applies after the fact; reader enjoyment can only be estimated or measured *after* the writer publishes his work, at which point it is too late to give him the job (again). The worst of the lot, IMO, were a few of the younger GMs, who undoubtedly "earned" their columns by two criteria: being American chess players, and having the FIDE title of GM. IMO, their "work" was such as to make even the worst column ever written by GM Evans look good in comparison. I mention this to clarify that the criticisms toward GM Evans' work is not intended as an attack on "old timers" writing about chess, in general. David Kane and Greg Kennedy have begun one of their periodic attacks on GM Evans for his ... excellence. I expect they will need to dig *deep* for this project! As Tony Saidy put the matter accurately, no one has written a better newspaper column than GM Evans; Meaningless fluff. I imagine a side-by-side comparison of a random, recent column by GM Evans would fall well short if measured against one of GM Keres' old columns. OTOH, if the only competition (using the word loosely) consists in the other writers for CL then hey, he has a good shot. All I can say is that Mr. Saidy should get out more; for instance, he ought to read something by GM Seirawan, John Watson, and other high-class writers before embarrassing himself by such comments. and few have ever topped his magazine columns for Chess Life, Boy's Life, etc. Actually, Mark Twain... . :D Do the readers agree? Over the past three decades several Chess Life surveys were circulated. One such survey, if memory served, attracted over 3,000 responses. The results in every survey: Larry Evans was ranked first or second among columnists. As I recall, for years there were only two columnists whose work was given such prominence as to allow them to be fairly compared to one another: GM Evans and GM Soltis. Trying to use this kind of survey to compare lesser writers is hardly fair to them. For instance: many chess players despise the endgame to such a degree that they might very well skip over GM Benko's column, rating him low regardless of the true merit of his work. Another "forgettable" writer was the other Evans, whose work often appeared near the back of the magazine, where one would likely be too tired to even fool with it. I know that I often read the first column first, then the other (Soltis/Evans or Evans/Soltis), then had a quick look at others, working from front to back. By the time I got halfway through, I would, often as not, jump to the very back, to check what tournaments were coming up soon. The IM level writers generally wrote about boring stuff, or perhaps I was just too tired to properly appreciate their work. Now, our Greg hates GM Evans' success. The envy fairly drips. At times, over the years, it has come in gobs. How he HATES people who -- unlike him --have been successful in chess -- most especially, Bobby Fischer but also by extension his former friend GM Evans. Interesting. Larry Parr seems unable to make up his muddled mind as to whether or not GM Evans can stand on his own, or if he is merely an "extension" of GM Fischer. My view is that the emergence of Fischer quashed GM Evans' chess career to a large degree. It was not that GM Evans could not stand on his own, but rather, that GM Fischer cast a very long shadow. Standing next to such a towering figure has its drawbacks, as well as its rewards. In earlier messages, Greg told us that he coulda been a contendah, too, if he were not stuck in some factory job in the middle of Indiana. Larry Parr is obviously mistaken here; GM Kaidanov lives in Kentucky, and has no need of any "day job" other than playing and teaching chess. As for being a contender, that is only a pipe-dream. Our best contender was (and may still be) Gata Kamsky, who has in common with these other pretenders the obvious issue of ego-inflation from having moved from somewhere in the USSR to America, where their sudden success seems to have gone to their heads. And for the lunatic fringe, there is always the hope that GM Fischer will return again... . -- help bot |
|
#24
|
|||
|
|||
|
MORE KENNEDY RAMBLING
At least Greg Kennedy does not deny his earlier nonsense about being a contendah were it not for his factory job in Indiana as well as his posited picture of Indiana as a cultural wasteland. Nor does he wish to address his bogus charge that Larry Evans "brainwashed America" into accepting Fischer's match conditions vs. Karpov in 1975. Now, then, Greg simply lies when arguing that GM Evans scored well because his column was up front in Chess Life. Lie. Lie. Lie. Indeed, Andy Soltis' column came first. If one searches the pages of Chess Life, one will find that GM Evans' column generally appeared after the feature section during the many years when he scored well in repeated reader surveys. Indeed, on occasions, he appeared last in the magazine or well buried in the second half of the magazine. Yet he repeatedly scored first or second in all surveys. Greg's next attempt to attack Evans is that -- well, okay -- the veteran GM may have scored well in reader surveys,but there were columns that readers did not care for, especially those devoted to a subject such as, say, the endgame. Such as, for example, Pal Benko's work. How low can this guy go! The fact is that Benko not only wrote a great column filled with analysis that merited praise from Tal, Geller and others, he often scored well in these surveys, including if memory serves, a third place finish in the largest of all the surveys ever taken. Greg's next attempt to belittle Evans is to argue that Anthony Saidy's comment on GM Evans' newspaper column embarrasses our Greg because Keres wrote a better one. To my knowledge, Keres was never a newspaper columnist. More sheer nonsense. Greg's next attempt to attack Evans is that -- well, okay -- the 5-time U.S. champion may score well in these surveys but he had little competition. You see, the readers had so little to choose from that GM Evans kinda does well by forfeit. Every reader survey taken involving many thousands of responses show a high level of overall satisfaction with Chess Life among the subscribership. Indeed, when one considers that only half of the members play in tournaments and many of that half play only once or twice a year, it's obvious that the magazine is the main attraction for shelling out 40 or so bucks a year. Greg's next attempt to attack Evans is to bring in Mark Twain when comparing any newspaper columns the latter might have written on American social mores and other subjects with GM Evans' chess column. Pitiful. Greg spent years telling us that his failings were the result of living in Indiana and being stuck in a piecework job in some factory. He promised repeatedly to find a spellchecker to hide some of his weaknesses, though he certainly failed in that quest. He used to speak about Fischer as a guy who made it because of the accidental advantages of living in NYC. By extension, he went after Fischer's friend, GM Evans, also a product of the remarkable NYC chess scene of the 1940s and 1950s. Our Greg can't hide envy of his better. He is one of the victims of chess -- the would-be contendah who got kayoed within the first minute of the first round when trying to move up in weight and class. And so it goes. help bot wrote: On Apr 19, 4:37 pm, "David Kane" wrote: It's hard to imagine anyone so dense as to believe that scholastic members would actually want to read a column by Evans. What a silly comment! Scholastic players will hardly be able to tell the difference between a column by GM Evans and one by any other random GM, for the content is focused upon basic chess, not politics or any of the other areas in which GM Evans frequently stumbles. (Please tell me if I'm wrong, and his kiddie column is filled with attacks on Botvinnik, etc.) You're not. But if your definition of a good scholastic ariticle is the absence of political ranting and raving, you are part of the problem. Your ad hom. tendency is duly noted. This leads to the explanation that the column was continued for the Evans' own benefit. No, it doesn't. If you would learn to think, you would be able to see that if the column was in fact "continued", as you say, then all that means is that the editors were either not redoing the children's mag. at that time, or else they saw no reason to replace GM Evans column, as it was not flawed in the same way or to the same extent as his political ranting column in CL. There may also be a difference in supply/demand of authors in the two different mags. I seriously doubt that kids were writing in complaining about GM Evans, the way adults would do. His column has not always been in CL for Kids. Like I said, I don't read the kiddie publication. What I write is based on such things as *your* claim that the column has been "continued" (a direct quote of you) and many comments by such writers as Larry Parr, who through a hissy fit when, as he claimed, GM Evans was dropped or "fired" (not my choice of word). It was not in Aug 2006 but has appeared in each CL for Kids since Oct 2006. Compare to the chronology for his CL column, and it appears to me that the USCF's motivation for putting his column in CL for Kids was to keep Evans happy That's silly. If the editor wanted to keep GM Evans happy, he would never have "fired" him in the first place! Clearly, anything along the lines of what you are suggesting would have been motivated, not by any desire to make LE happy, but to get the Evans "cult" to cease fire. This is precisely the caving I talked about before. after his column was removed from CL (That it demonstrates utter contempt for scholastic chess probably doesn't trouble the USCF insider gang in the least) Perhaps they are deluded into equating having a FIDE GM title with being an instructive writer. This would also explain why they gave similar jobs to some of the worthless younger GMs in CL. I was just pointing out that his QA column has been restored - and is so uninteresting that the readers apparently aren't even sending in questions. This may or may not be GM Evans' fault. It is quite possible that children simply aren't inclined to write letters anymore. Send emails, yes. Carry cell phones, yes. Play video games, yes. But write with pen and paper? So five minutes ago... . Email questions are accepted. You are perhaps correct that it would be hard to do well, but certainly none could do worse. And I am not aware of any laws requiring columns in the Q&A format. Well, it seems to be a tradition of sorts for big magazines like CL to hand out columns to big names with big titles, regardless of merit. In order for this to change, it would take a tsunami in terms of intellectual thinking, a switchover from fame- ocracy to meritocracy. It may well never happen. One answer (well, sort of) is to accept the status quo and search elsewhere for quality chess writing. Another option is to get inside the USCF, and blow it up, so to speak. This may be what Sam Sloan has in mind. -- help bot |
|
#25
|
|||
|
|||
|
wrote in message oups.com... Greg's next attempt to attack Evans is that -- well, okay -- the 5-time U.S. champion may score well in these surveys but he had little competition. You see, the readers had so little to choose from that GM Evans kinda does well by forfeit. Every reader survey taken involving many thousands of responses show a high level of overall satisfaction with Chess Life among the subscribership. Indeed, when one considers that only half of the members play in tournaments and many of that half play only once or twice a year, it's obvious that the magazine is the main attraction for shelling out 40 or so bucks a year. As far as I can determine from Mr. Nolan, its true, less than half /adult/ members play even one rated game per year, not just no tournaments, but no club or other rated chess either. Of those who do play, half of those are provisional ratings, with less than 10 games/yr. Which is to say, yes - evidently the subscription pays for the magazine. Although I have asked I can't determine how many of the 7,500 adults with 10+ games actually play them in tournament chess rather than club chess. I can't tell because USCF don't know. A mere aside is to note that Don Schultz noted an unwanted side effect of introducing ELO ratings to USA, that players fled clubs and played most of their rated chess at typically, weekend Swiss events. Whereas in England, where the norm for club players was in my league, about 35 rated games year, that was all at club level, mostly interclub engagements. Oddly the USA with 5x pop, seems to play less rated chess, not pro-rata, but in abolute numbers than UK. I suppose these figures make the magazine in US actually more popular than playing rated games - and hence, justifies its importance. Our Greg can't hide envy of his better. He is one of the victims of chess -- the would-be contendah who got kayoed within the first minute of the first round when trying to move up in weight and class. And so it goes. I think it is at understandable to hold such resentment, and animus against strong players, since in effect if you don't play much, or at all, you have to read about those who do. Then I suppose you could be stimulated by their greater involvement and get back into playing, or become a passive and envious commentator, nit picking away for the rest of your time, just like the gnome in the Winter palace. The odd thing about the UK system [courtesy Wade] is that hardly anyone at our club read BCF's magazine, or better said, subscribed to it, and we perhaps received one official copy to Secretary which was dutifully handed round week to week, and maybe you read 6 months later. Now, this is interesting since it was so typical - players did not read for novelty, everything topical in the magazine was long past, and instead there were essays on chess and its play - these we devoured, since these were the only ones available. So what you got to read were about players in the West, mostly in Europe, and of Americans; Reschevsky, Evans, maybe citing Marshall and Capablanca in the notes - though not Morphy-the-romantic [we were too sophisticated in those days]. I think there was still some resentment over Alekhine's collaborationist stance, and Keres too! Botvinnik showed up sometimes, and Taimanov. But not much. Sometimes you could ask Peter Clarke who this was? Holding up a picture of Bronstein from 64, and, of course, appalled, he would tell you. But the big excitement was about the duo Tal and Larsen who were expected to contest the world championship. Even when Fischer's sudden, event meteoric rise to prominence became evident to us, he was still equated with particularly Larsen as the great Hopes of the West, and probably second to Larsen - and though Fischer played in Europe we rather felt as though the US scene was too soft for him, and his successes therefore qualified ones, but against Russians they would collectively wear him down and break his spirit. In some corres. with Taimanov I asked who /he/ studied in the Western chess press, while he noted the principle contenders in the US, he thought of contemporary challengers there were only two, Evans having passed the US baton to Fischer, so to speak, and Larsen the strongest European. To answer, 'who were you afraid of', he replied, not Larsen. And that was a corporate reply. RJF gave them the woolies! They just didn't understand how to think of a man without corporate support, who was a highly technical player, and better at attacking than Tal [who of course, was resented for not being really-Russian]. I still think in 1970 they thought they could deal with him in the usual way - which was not cheating exactly, but you know, not exhausting each as much as saving all their energy for Fischer. At that time I think Fischer was so misunderstood in the UK, he was a sort of cipher, and before you knew it he achieved those 6-0 results and then the cataclysmic encounter in Iceland really brought it home to us the true stature of the player. Now - while there is usual criticism of having to hear more and more about Fischer, especially aimed at Evans, who after all can incontestable, from friendship, from high chess art, and also from an experience of top level pressure, an Evans column in the UK in 1968-1975 would have been a sensation! If I were to critizise Larry Evans it would be to the effect that he has written so little about Fischer, or rather, about Fischer's Art, and indeed, his own. Though so much /has/ been written, how much of it is much understood? Even the context of the times is less than appreciated. Of course in any interview I would ask LE about the daunting atmosphere of the times - you know, you are playing Taimanov with Che and Castro looking on, while back in DC, in just the preceding period the hawks, are urging a first-strike from Ike. And like Fischer, you too are playing chess against the enemy [let's not kid ourselves!]. When this was politically expedient then you got Evans/Taimanov games, and Fischer/Spassky games, and Taimanov can leave Russia to play chess in Liverpool with a permit signed by Stalin himself, and when it was not, though the players didn't do aught else, you got the Feds on your tail for a decade. And I should also wonder about his [Evans'] own artistic stimulation since I once read from Karpov that playing Korchnoi could motivate him to great effort, that Kasparov did not, but -a great compliment I think- Fischer would do so more than any other player. I believe him. I think Evans was perhaps like Reschevsky, not lazy, but insufficiently challenged, and without support system such as Russians had from the State, which was economic for sure, but in terms of high chess art was a strong psychological factor. So, I think LE has yet much to write, and I even agree with some critics who say that they don't like his current column - though not because someone else could maybe write it better, but because sure to god Evans could write on these deeper subjects where no one else can. But I, alas, am not his editor. Neither is CL the likely best vehicle for these appreciations, but a new work on the chess art, inclusive of these artistic appreciations above, is, IMO, strongly indicated, and would certainly be well received - even within the same market of scholastics, since the crucial thing about chess is nothing theoretical at all, but about being at the board, and whatever preparations you made to get there, and how you perform in the next hour or two. Where is that sort of publication, which has this superadded factors of politics or other pressures, and where the games that really inspired an entire generation were born? In closing, I think I also faithfully echo the sentiments of strong players around the world, specifically of Timman and Adorjan, who saw themselves in this ur-group of modern chess, as its continued potency into our times, and Fischer, a rare flowering example of its highest potential. Cordially, Phil Innes Vermont |
|
#26
|
|||
|
|||
|
BOTVINNIK'S LEGACY
http://wcn.tentonhammer.com/modules....cle&sid= 1267 "Botvinnik passed the baton to two pupils, Anatoly Karpov and Gary Kasparov,who went on to capture the crown. "I am sure that the five years I spent at Botvinnik's school (1973-1978) played a decisive role in my formation as a chess player and determined the path of my subsequent improvement," said Kasparov. After looking at some of Karpov's early games, however, Botvinnik told an assistant, "The boy doesn't have a clue about chess, and there's no future at all for him in this profession." I think Evans was perhaps like Reschevsky, not lazy, but insufficiently challenged, and without support system such as Russians had from the State, which was economic for sure, but in terms of high chess art was a strong psychological factor. -- Phil Innes Chess One wrote: wrote in message oups.com... Greg's next attempt to attack Evans is that -- well, okay -- the 5-time U.S. champion may score well in these surveys but he had little competition. You see, the readers had so little to choose from that GM Evans kinda does well by forfeit. Every reader survey taken involving many thousands of responses show a high level of overall satisfaction with Chess Life among the subscribership. Indeed, when one considers that only half of the members play in tournaments and many of that half play only once or twice a year, it's obvious that the magazine is the main attraction for shelling out 40 or so bucks a year. As far as I can determine from Mr. Nolan, its true, less than half /adult/ members play even one rated game per year, not just no tournaments, but no club or other rated chess either. Of those who do play, half of those are provisional ratings, with less than 10 games/yr. Which is to say, yes - evidently the subscription pays for the magazine. Although I have asked I can't determine how many of the 7,500 adults with 10+ games actually play them in tournament chess rather than club chess. I can't tell because USCF don't know. A mere aside is to note that Don Schultz noted an unwanted side effect of introducing ELO ratings to USA, that players fled clubs and played most of their rated chess at typically, weekend Swiss events. Whereas in England, where the norm for club players was in my league, about 35 rated games year, that was all at club level, mostly interclub engagements. Oddly the USA with 5x pop, seems to play less rated chess, not pro-rata, but in abolute numbers than UK. I suppose these figures make the magazine in US actually more popular than playing rated games - and hence, justifies its importance. Our Greg can't hide envy of his better. He is one of the victims of chess -- the would-be contendah who got kayoed within the first minute of the first round when trying to move up in weight and class. And so it goes. I think it is at understandable to hold such resentment, and animus against strong players, since in effect if you don't play much, or at all, you have to read about those who do. Then I suppose you could be stimulated by their greater involvement and get back into playing, or become a passive and envious commentator, nit picking away for the rest of your time, just like the gnome in the Winter palace. The odd thing about the UK system [courtesy Wade] is that hardly anyone at our club read BCF's magazine, or better said, subscribed to it, and we perhaps received one official copy to Secretary which was dutifully handed round week to week, and maybe you read 6 months later. Now, this is interesting since it was so typical - players did not read for novelty, everything topical in the magazine was long past, and instead there were essays on chess and its play - these we devoured, since these were the only ones available. So what you got to read were about players in the West, mostly in Europe, and of Americans; Reschevsky, Evans, maybe citing Marshall and Capablanca in the notes - though not Morphy-the-romantic [we were too sophisticated in those days]. I think there was still some resentment over Alekhine's collaborationist stance, and Keres too! Botvinnik showed up sometimes, and Taimanov. But not much. Sometimes you could ask Peter Clarke who this was? Holding up a picture of Bronstein from 64, and, of course, appalled, he would tell you. But the big excitement was about the duo Tal and Larsen who were expected to contest the world championship. Even when Fischer's sudden, event meteoric rise to prominence became evident to us, he was still equated with particularly Larsen as the great Hopes of the West, and probably second to Larsen - and though Fischer played in Europe we rather felt as though the US scene was too soft for him, and his successes therefore qualified ones, but against Russians they would collectively wear him down and break his spirit. In some corres. with Taimanov I asked who /he/ studied in the Western chess press, while he noted the principle contenders in the US, he thought of contemporary challengers there were only two, Evans having passed the US baton to Fischer, so to speak, and Larsen the strongest European. To answer, 'who were you afraid of', he replied, not Larsen. And that was a corporate reply. RJF gave them the woolies! They just didn't understand how to think of a man without corporate support, who was a highly technical player, and better at attacking than Tal [who of course, was resented for not being really-Russian]. I still think in 1970 they thought they could deal with him in the usual way - which was not cheating exactly, but you know, not exhausting each as much as saving all their energy for Fischer. At that time I think Fischer was so misunderstood in the UK, he was a sort of cipher, and before you knew it he achieved those 6-0 results and then the cataclysmic encounter in Iceland really brought it home to us the true stature of the player. Now - while there is usual criticism of having to hear more and more about Fischer, especially aimed at Evans, who after all can incontestable, from friendship, from high chess art, and also from an experience of top level pressure, an Evans column in the UK in 1968-1975 would have been a sensation! If I were to critizise Larry Evans it would be to the effect that he has written so little about Fischer, or rather, about Fischer's Art, and indeed, his own. Though so much /has/ been written, how much of it is much understood? Even the context of the times is less than appreciated. Of course in any interview I would ask LE about the daunting atmosphere of the times - you know, you are playing Taimanov with Che and Castro looking on, while back in DC, in just the preceding period the hawks, are urging a first-strike from Ike. And like Fischer, you too are playing chess against the enemy [let's not kid ourselves!]. When this was politically expedient then you got Evans/Taimanov games, and Fischer/Spassky games, and Taimanov can leave Russia to play chess in Liverpool with a permit signed by Stalin himself, and when it was not, though the players didn't do aught else, you got the Feds on your tail for a decade. And I should also wonder about his [Evans'] own artistic stimulation since I once read from Karpov that playing Korchnoi could motivate him to great effort, that Kasparov did not, but -a great compliment I think- Fischer would do so more than any other player. I believe him. I think Evans was perhaps like Reschevsky, not lazy, but insufficiently challenged, and without support system such as Russians had from the State, which was economic for sure, but in terms of high chess art was a strong psychological factor. So, I think LE has yet much to write, and I even agree with some critics who say that they don't like his current column - though not because someone else could maybe write it better, but because sure to god Evans could write on these deeper subjects where no one else can. But I, alas, am not his editor. Neither is CL the likely best vehicle for these appreciations, but a new work on the chess art, inclusive of these artistic appreciations above, is, IMO, strongly indicated, and would certainly be well received - even within the same market of scholastics, since the crucial thing about chess is nothing theoretical at all, but about being at the board, and whatever preparations you made to get there, and how you perform in the next hour or two. Where is that sort of publication, which has this superadded factors of politics or other pressures, and where the games that really inspired an entire generation were born? In closing, I think I also faithfully echo the sentiments of strong players around the world, specifically of Timman and Adorjan, who saw themselves in this ur-group of modern chess, as its continued potency into our times, and Fischer, a rare flowering example of its highest potential. Cordially, Phil Innes Vermont |
|
#27
|
|||
|
|||
|
wrote in message ups.com... BOTVINNIK'S LEGACY http://wcn.tentonhammer.com/modules....cle&sid= 1267 "Botvinnik passed the baton to two pupils, Anatoly Karpov and Gary Kasparov,who went on to capture the crown. "I am sure that the five years I spent at Botvinnik's school (1973-1978) played a decisive role in my formation as a chess player and determined the path of my subsequent improvement," said Kasparov. Even though Botvinnik also tried to dismiss Kasparov from /competing/ too hard, and besides, he was Jewish and had no /blat/, no pull at political levels, nor any liklihood of any. What did they say to him? 'go home boy, we already got a world champion' ? That's Fide, Russian style. After looking at some of Karpov's early games, however, Botvinnik told an assistant, "The boy doesn't have a clue about chess, and there's no future at all for him in this profession." See - he wrote the same anecdote himself in the 1991, Karpov on Karpov, which I think I am the only reader thereof on the entire planet. Karpov said he would restore his own confidence by playing the whole Botvinnik school at blitz chess, and staying up late, getting better and better, until he was suffering no loses for hours, and everyone gave up. What conclusion can we make? That Botvinnik was a great player, utterly without insight into others? I suspect that cannot be completely true, and instead I think in both cases, with Kasparov and Karpov, he was just a little bit afraid of them, no? Anyway, between reading your comment above, re Evans and the baton, which term I maybe subconsciously used myself about Evans and Fischer, I took a walk, and thought - who really could challenge Kasparov today? Albeit, such things are infamously difficult to evaluate - who, for example, would think that after 100 games Kasparov would only be one point better than Karpov? I think no one in UK could challenge him in a match; Short does not play in events of sufficient strength, and while Adams does, not enough of them. In the US there are 2 [maybe 3] candidates, but Kamsky plays not enough, and not against sufficient strength, and the new #1 Nakamura would surely clip Kasparov a couple of times, but also he would lose too many by trying. In the World, then, we have Toppy, who is an idiot at match-play - far too temperamental, or susceptible to 'friends'. Vishy Anand who I think is the best all round player now, but at match play? Perhaps because he doesn't do it, he knows he cant? Petr Svidler is an all-round tough player of considerablke resource but lacks the Nakamura punch to score enough wins, and the other Russo alternative is Kramnik, who might indeed suceed in boring Kasparov into a trance, but I think he too, wouldn't win enough, and Garry alone seems to have that extra half-gear of the truly big guys to deal with that scene. So guys are out! Instead, and this is highly speculative, of course and fun!~, emotion and psychology are very important to Kasparov, and could Judit take him in stress a match? If anything, her play is most similar to his, and this can be a psychological blind on his part. Then there is Szuszu, who, it is little known, actually has a better record than Judit when they have played serious OTB chess against each other. Susan has a small opening repetoire, and this might be too great a disadvantage - though in any even middle game, it would be a tough call, especially if Kasparov was possessed of a little too much need to prove himself and overstretched. I watched even Khalifman back off in that challenge, and she is certainly level with Karpov in their games. Finally there is the sleeper candidate, Sophia, who after all scored the 5th highest performance rating of all time, [and someone thereby who also has that extra half-gear] and who Susan says, frankly is the best of the 3. BUT, Susan also says she is lazy... Maybe we will get a word out of her since she is currently in NY City, and may yet respond to a few questions. Do I digress, Larry? Adorjan, when himself a bright young thing, well... with a solid beard, first encountered Kasparov at a tournament and at the time could hardly believe how strong and intent he was. I think he knew then that this player was going to be better than anyone else for a long long time. At the moment this guy who must have got bored by chess [as Fischer did early, GK did late - imagine giving up the #1 spot in the world!] is playing quite another game in Russia. I don't think any party there is playing for a draw - and Garry has succeeded to the particularly dangerous sport of being the #1 opposition candidate to Putin. What were you saying about Larry Evans, again? Cordially, Phil Innes The Winter P[a]lace, Vermontsky I think Evans was perhaps like Reschevsky, not lazy, but insufficiently challenged, and without support system such as Russians had from the State, which was economic for sure, but in terms of high chess art was a strong psychological factor. -- Phil Innes Chess One wrote: wrote in message oups.com... Greg's next attempt to attack Evans is that -- well, okay -- the 5-time U.S. champion may score well in these surveys but he had little competition. You see, the readers had so little to choose from that GM Evans kinda does well by forfeit. Every reader survey taken involving many thousands of responses show a high level of overall satisfaction with Chess Life among the subscribership. Indeed, when one considers that only half of the members play in tournaments and many of that half play only once or twice a year, it's obvious that the magazine is the main attraction for shelling out 40 or so bucks a year. As far as I can determine from Mr. Nolan, its true, less than half /adult/ members play even one rated game per year, not just no tournaments, but no club or other rated chess either. Of those who do play, half of those are provisional ratings, with less than 10 games/yr. Which is to say, yes - evidently the subscription pays for the magazine. Although I have asked I can't determine how many of the 7,500 adults with 10+ games actually play them in tournament chess rather than club chess. I can't tell because USCF don't know. A mere aside is to note that Don Schultz noted an unwanted side effect of introducing ELO ratings to USA, that players fled clubs and played most of their rated chess at typically, weekend Swiss events. Whereas in England, where the norm for club players was in my league, about 35 rated games year, that was all at club level, mostly interclub engagements. Oddly the USA with 5x pop, seems to play less rated chess, not pro-rata, but in abolute numbers than UK. I suppose these figures make the magazine in US actually more popular than playing rated games - and hence, justifies its importance. Our Greg can't hide envy of his better. He is one of the victims of chess -- the would-be contendah who got kayoed within the first minute of the first round when trying to move up in weight and class. And so it goes. I think it is at understandable to hold such resentment, and animus against strong players, since in effect if you don't play much, or at all, you have to read about those who do. Then I suppose you could be stimulated by their greater involvement and get back into playing, or become a passive and envious commentator, nit picking away for the rest of your time, just like the gnome in the Winter palace. The odd thing about the UK system [courtesy Wade] is that hardly anyone at our club read BCF's magazine, or better said, subscribed to it, and we perhaps received one official copy to Secretary which was dutifully handed round week to week, and maybe you read 6 months later. Now, this is interesting since it was so typical - players did not read for novelty, everything topical in the magazine was long past, and instead there were essays on chess and its play - these we devoured, since these were the only ones available. So what you got to read were about players in the West, mostly in Europe, and of Americans; Reschevsky, Evans, maybe citing Marshall and Capablanca in the notes - though not Morphy-the-romantic [we were too sophisticated in those days]. I think there was still some resentment over Alekhine's collaborationist stance, and Keres too! Botvinnik showed up sometimes, and Taimanov. But not much. Sometimes you could ask Peter Clarke who this was? Holding up a picture of Bronstein from 64, and, of course, appalled, he would tell you. But the big excitement was about the duo Tal and Larsen who were expected to contest the world championship. Even when Fischer's sudden, event meteoric rise to prominence became evident to us, he was still equated with particularly Larsen as the great Hopes of the West, and probably second to Larsen - and though Fischer played in Europe we rather felt as though the US scene was too soft for him, and his successes therefore qualified ones, but against Russians they would collectively wear him down and break his spirit. In some corres. with Taimanov I asked who /he/ studied in the Western chess press, while he noted the principle contenders in the US, he thought of contemporary challengers there were only two, Evans having passed the US baton to Fischer, so to speak, and Larsen the strongest European. To answer, 'who were you afraid of', he replied, not Larsen. And that was a corporate reply. RJF gave them the woolies! They just didn't understand how to think of a man without corporate support, who was a highly technical player, and better at attacking than Tal [who of course, was resented for not being really-Russian]. I still think in 1970 they thought they could deal with him in the usual way - which was not cheating exactly, but you know, not exhausting each as much as saving all their energy for Fischer. At that time I think Fischer was so misunderstood in the UK, he was a sort of cipher, and before you knew it he achieved those 6-0 results and then the cataclysmic encounter in Iceland really brought it home to us the true stature of the player. Now - while there is usual criticism of having to hear more and more about Fischer, especially aimed at Evans, who after all can incontestable, from friendship, from high chess art, and also from an experience of top level pressure, an Evans column in the UK in 1968-1975 would have been a sensation! If I were to critizise Larry Evans it would be to the effect that he has written so little about Fischer, or rather, about Fischer's Art, and indeed, his own. Though so much /has/ been written, how much of it is much understood? Even the context of the times is less than appreciated. Of course in any interview I would ask LE about the daunting atmosphere of the times - you know, you are playing Taimanov with Che and Castro looking on, while back in DC, in just the preceding period the hawks, are urging a first-strike from Ike. And like Fischer, you too are playing chess against the enemy [let's not kid ourselves!]. When this was politically expedient then you got Evans/Taimanov games, and Fischer/Spassky games, and Taimanov can leave Russia to play chess in Liverpool with a permit signed by Stalin himself, and when it was not, though the players didn't do aught else, you got the Feds on your tail for a decade. And I should also wonder about his [Evans'] own artistic stimulation since I once read from Karpov that playing Korchnoi could motivate him to great effort, that Kasparov did not, but -a great compliment I think- Fischer would do so more than any other player. I believe him. I think Evans was perhaps like Reschevsky, not lazy, but insufficiently challenged, and without support system such as Russians had from the State, which was economic for sure, but in terms of high chess art was a strong psychological factor. So, I think LE has yet much to write, and I even agree with some critics who say that they don't like his current column - though not because someone else could maybe write it better, but because sure to god Evans could write on these deeper subjects where no one else can. But I, alas, am not his editor. Neither is CL the likely best vehicle for these appreciations, but a new work on the chess art, inclusive of these artistic appreciations above, is, IMO, strongly indicated, and would certainly be well received - even within the same market of scholastics, since the crucial thing about chess is nothing theoretical at all, but about being at the board, and whatever preparations you made to get there, and how you perform in the next hour or two. Where is that sort of publication, which has this superadded factors of politics or other pressures, and where the games that really inspired an entire generation were born? In closing, I think I also faithfully echo the sentiments of strong players around the world, specifically of Timman and Adorjan, who saw themselves in this ur-group of modern chess, as its continued potency into our times, and Fischer, a rare flowering example of its highest potential. Cordially, Phil Innes Vermont |
| Thread Tools | |
| Display Modes | |
|
|
Similar Threads
|
||||
| Thread | Thread Starter | Forum | Replies | Last Post |
| Straw Poll: Should Larry Evans have been fired from CL? | Chess One | rec.games.chess.misc (Chess General) | 108 | June 26th 06 05:43 AM |
| Waiting for Hoffman | parrthenon@cs.com | rec.games.chess.politics (Chess Politics) | 38 | May 23rd 06 03:09 PM |
| Waiting for Hoffman | parrthenon@cs.com | rec.games.chess.misc (Chess General) | 38 | May 23rd 06 03:09 PM |