![]() |
| 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: 1921, capablancalasker, game, repetition, wch |
|
|
Thread Tools | Display Modes |
|
#21
|
|||
|
|||
|
On Apr 23, 7:01 am, David Richerby
wrote: No, it's an historical fact. For example the Hannak biography, page 195, says "Finally, after long and fruitless efforts to come to mutually satisfactory terms, Lasker threw quite a bombshell by publishing a statement solemnly renouncing his title for good and all." This was in 1920, I believe. But did anyone take this seriously? In the eyes of the world, was it any more legitimate for Lasker to say, ``I'm not World Champion any mo Capablanca is'' than it would have been for Capa to say, ``He's not World Champion any mo I am''? These days world champions are not allowed to hand off their titles, as they are the property of FIDE. Back then, things were different, but still such a hand-off can hardly be equated to earning the title in the traditional way. You're right, Capablanca definitely wanted to win the title the right way, by beating Lasker. I was merely reporting the fact that Lasker *had* resigned the title before them match, and so, technically, Capa was *already* champion. Capa was already champion in Lasker's opinion. I'm not sure anyone else really agreed with him. Becoming world champion requires a bit more than becoming the strongest player in the eyes of any one man -- even the reigning champ. -- help bot |
| Ads |
|
#22
|
|||
|
|||
|
raylopez99 wrote:
Curious why you think Sonas formulae are flawed (if that's what you meant). That is what I meant. They're flawed because they assume that inactivity results in weakening. Yet most players will take some time off before an important match or tournament, both to rest and to study. Sonas's formulae penalize them for doing this even though two players who take a month off to play a private training match will inevitably emerge stronger rather than weaker. Dave. -- David Richerby Incredible Tool (TM): it's like a www.chiark.greenend.org.uk/~davidr/ handy household tool but it'll blow your mind! |
|
#23
|
|||
|
|||
|
On Apr 24, 3:56 am, David Richerby
wrote: raylopez99 wrote: Curious why you think Sonas formulae are flawed (if that's what you meant). That is what I meant. They're flawed because they assume that inactivity results in weakening. Yet most players will take some time off before an important match or tournament, both to rest and to study. Sonas's formulae penalize them for doing this even though two players who take a month off to play a private training match will inevitably emerge stronger rather than weaker. Dave. -- David Richerby Incredible Tool (TM): it's like awww.chiark.greenend.org.uk/~davidr/ handy household tool but it'll blow your mind! Thanks for that clarification Dave. See also this article from late last year, which deserves a long hard look, and which I've made into a seperate post, claiming that Capa, Kramnik, Karpov and Kasparov (in that order) were the greatest chess players ever: http://www.chessbase.com/newsdetail.asp?newsid=3455 I was thinking of this article not the Sonas article when I posted in this thread. The above article makes sense to me, if you value "pure play", that is, play the board, not the man, as opposed to a Tal psychological tactic of playing the man, not the board, and winning that way. RL |
|
#24
|
|||
|
|||
|
On Apr 23, 5:50 am, raylopez99 wrote:
bot, have you seen the articles by chess statistician Jeff Sonas on the greatest champions ever? The research that 'backsolved' GW games using computers to show which GMs made the fewest errors (both in winning AND in losing games)? That showed Capa (and Lasker) and Kasparov (and Karpov) and Fischer (and Petrosian) to be the greatest players ever? No, I haven't seen it. Google it. Here,http://www.chessbase.com/newsdetail.asp?newsid=2409 I recently downloaded all four of these articles and am just beginning to read the first of them. I noticed right off the same flaw pointed out by David Richerby: the loony assumption that inactivity equates to a loss in playing strength. At one time I became frustrated that my rating was no longer increasing, despite considerable playing activity. My solution was to stop playing so much and instead, spend more time studying. The result was an improvement, but one which did not show up as quickly as I would have hoped in the rating numbers. (In fact, it wasn't until 1971 that I was finally able to break the 2750 level... .) ;D -- help bot |
|
#25
|
|||
|
|||
|
Taylor Kingston wrote: Good Lord, bot, when it comes to ignorant rants, you've posted some doozies, but I think this one may take the cake. Just about everything you write below is nonsense, but especially foolish, not to say insulting, is your characterization of Lasker as an "over-hyped cowardly scumbag." It's become painfully obvious that you post here not because you have anything worth saying, you just like to hear yourself talk. I apologize to the group for trying one last time take you seriously. If there is anyone in this thread who cannot be taken seriously, it is the man in his ivory tower who shouts down ad hominem insults in place of *rational* commentary. IMO, your equating GM Lasker's "interview" comments with hard facts is proof enough of your hideously low standards for evidence in support of your wobbly opinions. Add to this your laughable comment regarding GM Lasker's "savings", and there is nothing left to do but note your hopeless ignorance and move on. [FYI: the man married into money, and if anything, he squandered, rather than saved the stuff.] Much like the Evans ratpack, you seem over-eager to attribute invented motives to others whose opinions do not square perfectly with your own. OTOH, you quite possibly do owe the group some kind of apology, but not the one you think. If you need to catch up further on your Lasker history, just let me know. He was an interesting man, if a poor world champion; and by poor I mean of course that he failed to defend willingly against his worthy competitors, not that he was a weak player -- just the opposite, in fact. Here is a very brief summation of the points you took exception to: 1. The "hype" would be such frequent comments as his holding the title for 27 years. This gives the term "holding" a whole new dimension. LOL 2. As for Mr. Lasker being a "cowardly scumbag", this was shown out in his handling of the match negotiations with Mr. Capablanca, wherein Mr. Lasker demanded odds, and upon this condition being rejected, sneaked off with his title to crawl back under some rock, I suppose. (In the Disney movie, 101 Dalmations, Cruella Deville is so described, and she never ducked anybody.) Perhaps my comments are ungenerous, but then, what has the man ever done to earn generosity from me? I call 'em as I see them, no holds barred. -- help bot |
|
#26
|
|||
|
|||
|
On Apr 22, 5:39 am, raylopez99 wrote:
bot, have you seen the articles by chess statistician Jeff Sonas on the greatest champions ever? The research that 'backsolved' GW games using computers to show which GMs made the fewest errors (both in winning AND in losing games)? That showed Capa (and Lasker) and Kasparov (and Karpov) and Fischer (and Petrosian) to be the greatest players ever? I still haven't gotten to the back-solving part, but in addition to the misguided assumption that a player ought to be penalized for inactivity, the author, Jeff Sonas, seems to be lacking in common sense. For instance, I just read his assertion that he was hired by KasparovChess.com to -- get this -- place GM Kasparov's tournament success into "proper historical context". Now, where I come from even a child could see the conflict of interest in such a job; one does not place things into proper historical context by taking money from the subject, or anyone else, for that matter. At one point, Mr. Sonas reveals that he was in fact influenced directly by GM Kasparov o this project. This also explains why the current articles are framed as they are, not to discover "who" was the greatest or most dominant player, but to determine if it was GM Kasparov, or (chuckle) someone else. Objectivity just flies out the window and apparently migrates South for the duration. In fact, I noted a certain heavy bias when Mr. Sonas refused to allow GM Steinitz to win just one of his many categories over GM Fischer, calling a clear victory by the former a sort of tie. The name Fischer pops up quite frequently, while other big names are largely ignored -- playing to the audience, to what they want to hear. Now, after declaring GM Kasparov clear victor in the best tournament performance overall category, Mr. Sonas wants to "refine" his methods to account for the fact that the vast majority of top-category events have taken place recently. You know, had he thought about this a few seconds sooner, it would have served to call into question any sweeping conclusions regarding GM Kasparov's stellar record, which was based largely on -- you guessed it -- the number of events won in top-category play! In the author's own words: "...28 of the top 30 category tournaments...occurred within the past twenty years." By strange "coincidence", these are the very same years when GK did his thing. Mr. Sonas writes: "It is a historical curiosity that there has never been a tournament that included all of the top ten players in the world...". This is easy to explain; known only to a handful of insiders at GetClub and RedHotPawn, I rarely travel outside my home base, deep under Antarctica. ;D "I think it is indisputable that Kasparov had the most dominant tournament career of anyone in chess history." This statement shows a surprising ignorance of the myriad claims to the contrary, published over the years in the pages of chess magazines like, say, Chess Life. How often have I read similar claims about the career of GM Karpov, for instance, noting how unconvincing was the evidence they listed in view of GM Kasparov's results. Nevertheless, it most certainly *is* disputable. But here's the clincher: "[Gary Kasparov] ...in fact never lost a match to any human until...". Why the need to hide his loss to Deeper Blue? Such actions tell a tale in themselves. Add to this the hocus-pocus of penalizing GM Lasker's chessmetrics rating for mere inactivity, and we see that something truly is amiss. Mr. Sonas shows a chart where it is quite obvious that without this senseless penalty, GK would be threatened, if not overwhelmed entirely, by GM Lasker for longest stretch as #1. GM Lasker falls off in 1902, which is absurd. [I wasn't even born until 1909. ;D] The final proof of pro-Kasparov bias: "For a stretch of 18.5 years, not a single other player even came within 10 rating points of Kasparov on any of [my] monthly lists. Nobody else in chess history has come remotely close to having such a stretch of dominance like that, with Lasker managing 8.8 years". Once again, the *only thing* saving GM Kasparov from GM Lasker is the very peculiar aspect of Mr. Sonas' ratings formula, which is designed to penalize Lasker's inactivity just the same as if he had played poorly, rather than not at all. Take away Mr. Sonas' loony penalty, and Gary Kasparov is seen to fall below one of his many rivals -- here, GM Lasker -- on the chart. As for the 10-point rating margin, this would seem to apply only to Mr. Sonas' own peculiar ratings, not FIDE's. I seem to recall that at some point, GM Karpov came that close, if not GM Ivanchuck or GM Anand. All these "coincidences", these over-reliances on peculiarities in Mr. Sonas' chosen ratings formulae, reveal much about the agenda of the author, but little about the objective merits of the supposed contenders for greatest champion ever. I have now concluded the first three articles, and will comment on the fourth, the one regarding back-solving, later, after I read it. [Yes, this is unusual for me.] :D -- help bot |
|
#27
|
|||
|
|||
|
"help bot" wrote in message oups.com... On Apr 22, 5:39 am, raylopez99 wrote: Now, after declaring GM Kasparov clear victor in the best tournament performance overall category, sure he did, as have others. i think the top 5 are kasparov, fischer, karpov, alekhine and sopia polgar Mr. Sonas wants to "refine" his methods to account for the fact that the vast majority of top-category events have taken place recently. You know, had he thought about this a few seconds sooner, it would have served to call into question any sweeping conclusions regarding GM Kasparov's stellar record, which was based largely on -- you guessed it -- the number of events won in top-category play! In the author's own words: "...28 of the top 30 category tournaments...occurred within the past twenty years." By strange "coincidence", these are the very same years when GK did his thing. (a) if the measure is by ELO, then the scale is not linear (b) retrofitting ratings is a difficult task, especially since they are hypothesised to be if the historic player were to be in the contemporary scene they would not perform as perhaps 2600 level, but 2800 level, by virtue of the suggestion that they would compass current theory et al., yet this is a very problematic idea - as if to say the 'romantic' Morphy could inculcate modern defensive technique a-la-Karpov. That, IMO, is a psychological absurdity. A more recent example in just a half-generation is Capablanca's comment on Alekhine's programmed study; 'if that's chess, you can keep it!' --------- But here's the clincher: "[Gary Kasparov] ...in fact never lost a match to any human until...". Why the need to hide his loss to Deeper Blue? Since some people hold the not unreasoned point of view that Deeper Blue is not a human. Such actions tell a tale in themselves. Add to this the hocus-pocus of penalizing GM Lasker's chessmetrics rating for mere inactivity, and we see that something truly is amiss. Mr. Sonas shows a chart where it is quite obvious that without this senseless penalty, GK would be threatened, if not overwhelmed entirely, by GM Lasker for longest stretch as #1. GM Lasker falls off in 1902, which is absurd. [I wasn't even born until 1909. ;D] I should be interested to know the views of active players in these newsgroups on the effect of activity and preparation. I ask GMs this questions, and usually receive an unquantifiable answer, while yet affirming, 'a lot!' For myself a week or two of preparation, booking up, playing over games of others, and also right physical preparation in exercises [therefore to be able to concentrate and also relax, unfocuss, rather than obsess and go blind!] - plus some tough sparring partners in practice games has boosted rating as much as 150 points in subsequent play over its nominal level. I don't know if a metaphor is necessary, but we would not expect an out-of-practice 400-metre runner to do very well if 'inactive', no? Therefore rating entropy occurs - an opposite idea to rating floors, where you can be playing a nominal 2200 player whose performance level is 1900. For these reasons, many of which are variables and could be assessed as or more or less worth, but not of no worth, I cannot think Mr. Sonas is employing any /necessary/ bias toward Kasparov, or against Lasker - though the argument may he held that the bias-factors are over emphasisied, and should be scored an minor rather than major factors. Phil Innes The final proof of pro-Kasparov bias: "For a stretch of 18.5 years, not a single other player even came within 10 rating points of Kasparov on any of [my] monthly lists. Nobody else in chess history has come remotely close to having such a stretch of dominance like that, with Lasker managing 8.8 years". Once again, the *only thing* saving GM Kasparov from GM Lasker is the very peculiar aspect of Mr. Sonas' ratings formula, which is designed to penalize Lasker's inactivity just the same as if he had played poorly, rather than not at all. Take away Mr. Sonas' loony penalty, and Gary Kasparov is seen to fall below one of his many rivals -- here, GM Lasker -- on the chart. As for the 10-point rating margin, this would seem to apply only to Mr. Sonas' own peculiar ratings, not FIDE's. I seem to recall that at some point, GM Karpov came that close, if not GM Ivanchuck or GM Anand. All these "coincidences", these over-reliances on peculiarities in Mr. Sonas' chosen ratings formulae, reveal much about the agenda of the author, but little about the objective merits of the supposed contenders for greatest champion ever. I have now concluded the first three articles, and will comment on the fourth, the one regarding back-solving, later, after I read it. [Yes, this is unusual for me.] :D -- help bot |
|
#28
|
|||
|
|||
|
On Apr 22, 9:53 pm, help bot wrote:
Whoa! If GM Lasker were physically incapacitated while in Cuba, he would have been hospitalized there, per common sense. Only a reasonably well man would dare venture to cross the Atlantic back then -- or a darned fool, or a man running from something. The competitor's health state is not a black & white issue. Someone may be in a proor shape at the beginning of the event, then his/her health may get either worse or better. Lasker always had delicate health. During the match he asked Capablanca for a break and postponement. Capablanca refused and Lasker resigned the match. For a contrast, Karpov tried to **impose** a postponement on his terms. Campo followed the Karpov's instruction but not quite :-) After returning to Europe, Lasker was hospitalized for months. His had a serious health condition. *** I agree with Taylor that you make sense and are fun to read only in the context of Sanny and his GetClub. I wish you would diversify without losing quality. Regards, Wlod |
|
#29
|
|||
|
|||
|
On Apr 24, 7:34 pm, raylopez99 wrote:
Curious why you think Sonas formulae are flawed (if that's what you meant). That is what I meant. They're flawed because they assume that inactivity results in weakening. While further information is claimed to exist at the Web site, this article itself does not claim that the purpose of penalizing a player for inactivity is to adjust for any assumed weakening. Instead, the author simply stated that he wanted to reward players for their activity, and he noted that otherwise one could "sit on" a great performance, as with FIDE ratings. Now, if the author had studied chess history and scientifically determined that inactivity was strongly correlated with a certain weakening, we might be able to accept this more easily. But as it is, we can only note that it is illogical to pretend you are trying to measure or estimate strength, while introducing such measures which interfere with that very goal. I could speculate that early attempts to quantify the data invariably resulted in favor of GM Lasker or GM Fischer, so "adjustments" were made accordingly to boost GM Kasparov into the desired spot. The drawback (from one point of view) is that along with him, GM Karpov was lifted to new heights, due to his extraordinary playing activity. This is merely a guess, of course, but it seems to accord well with the facts. -- help bot |
| Thread Tools | |
| Display Modes | |
|
|
Similar Threads
|
||||
| Thread | Thread Starter | Forum | Replies | Last Post |
| Is the initial position in chess a mutual Zugswang? | kmoorthyrbi@gmail.com | rec.games.chess.misc (Chess General) | 66 | April 4th 07 03:14 PM |
| Interview with CJA Award Winning Historian in The Chess Journalist | The Historian | rec.games.chess.politics (Chess Politics) | 215 | November 16th 06 09:34 PM |
| Did Lasker get the Immortal Game wrong? | Taylor Kingston | rec.games.chess.misc (Chess General) | 9 | September 17th 06 07:24 PM |
| Lasker's time troble game 5 1921 | Alan OBrien | rec.games.chess.misc (Chess General) | 2 | June 22nd 06 02:53 PM |
| Looking for Capablanca Game | mike | rec.games.chess.misc (Chess General) | 6 | March 16th 06 03:20 AM |