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| Tags: benkos, endgame, laboratory, now, online, ordered, pal |
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#11
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samsloan írta:
On Oct 7, 6:26 am, help bot wrote: On Oct 7, 3:15 am, wrote: What are the titles for endgame composition, and who doles them out? Organization is FIDE for Chess Compositions:http://www.saunalahti.fi/~stniekat/pccc/general.htm What's this -- they did not give GM Benko a title until 1995, and then misspelled his name? "Paul Benko"??! -- help bot They did not mis-spell his name. His name really is Paul. It is spelled Pal in Hungarian with a umlaut over the a as in ä. Take a close look at the cover of my book. Notice the two little dots over the letter a. That is the correct spelling of his name. In Hungarian there's an accent on the 'a': Pál. That is the correct spelling of his name. http://www.samsloan.com/palbenko.htm Sam Sloan |
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#12
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WHAT INCONSISTENCY?
"Many famous composers of pure endgame studies were weak players working in splendid isolation who rarely competed in tournaments" -- Larry Evans Yes, the ever-consistent Evans, who in last month's CL and R featured such a "weak player's" compositions in his "column" - Smyslov. -- SBD Dr. Dowd knows as well as anyone else that Smyslov's fame derives from his play, not his compositions. Evans clearly stated in his Chess Life column of September 2007: "But few fans realize that his lifelong passion for composing endgame studies started in 1936 when he was 15!" SBD wrote: On Oct 7, 1:31 am, wrote: "Many famous composers of pure endgame studies were weak players working in splendid isolation who rarely competed in tournaments" -- Larry Evans Yes, the ever-consistent Evans, who in last month's CL and R featured such a "weak player's" compositions in his "column" - Smyslov. Chess composition is a fascinating world and those, like helpbot, who don't partake - I figure it is just more for me. Anyone who can't appreciate problems such as Hans Vetter's effort in a 1975 Schach Echo: FEN: 8/1pR5/pP6/8/PpB5/kPp5/2P5/1K6 w - - 0 1 #5 R sac, B sac, Phoenix. let them fester in their little world of "practical" chess. As to me, I like all forms of chess - not just one person's stylized version. |
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#13
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On Oct 7, 5:10 am, SBD wrote:
On Oct 7, 2:47 am, help bot wrote: Many problemists created positions which bear almost no resemblance to real-world chess play, while others proclaimed a mate-in-257-moves with absolutely no way to back it up. (Me, I have trouble seeing more than about a hundred-fifty moves ahead, unless it's just Queens or Rooks on the board). Maybe that is why you don't see any way to back it up. Sometimes composers spend years doing the gritty analysis for such problems, and they can "back it up." Funny I never saw one of those kind published. Generally, they like to show the ones which have been "cooked", meaning that somebody demonstrated that it was flawed in some way. Why the obsession with "cooks" is beyond me, for much of the analysis in CL, for instance, can easily be "cooked". I've seen long problems often accompanied with 20-30 pages of analysis I've seen a single paragraph of analysis which contained many errors, so that would be quite a bit more work to plow through. The best sort of analysis is the kind which says that White wins by penetrating his King to square x, then maneuvering piece y to square z, whereupon Black is zugzwanged. (And of course, where he actually can do all that!) or the length of one of your favorite comic books X-men!? Flash?!! or is that "graphic novel?") I don't actually like comic books; they jump from one "frame" to the next, creating a herky-jerky effect. Now cartoons are a definite step up, but movies are the best. Preferably color movies... with sound. There are more things in chess, helpbot, than you apparently have room for in your "philosophy." Perhaps what we've learned here is that some problemists have very short tempers, equally small minds, and are quick to "defend" against criticism which is nothing more than an expression of personal taste. For instance, the reason I don't like ultra-complex, artificial-looking chess problems is that solving them (if I ever could) would be of very little value toward improving my OTB results. Compare and contrast to solving realistic chess problems, which can be highly instructive. In fact, the way I see it, the simpler the position, the more instructive it is likely to be. -- help bot |
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#14
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On Oct 7, 5:59 am, samsloan wrote:
What's this -- they did not give GM Benko a title until 1995, and then misspelled his name? "Paul Benko"??! -- help bot They did not mis-spell his name. His name really is Paul. It is spelled Pal in Hungarian with a umlaut over the a as in ä. In my quotation above, I did not include the umlaut simply because my keyboard doesn't have 'em. In fact, the Web site has his name as Paul Benko with an umlaut over the o. So if the correct spelling has umlauts over both the o and the a, they still got it wrong. (Or maybe I am too sleepy to remember?) Take a close look at the cover of my book. Okay: it says: Winning with the Damiano's Attack, and then underneath it has the moves 1. e4 e5, 2. Nf3?! f6!!, 3. Nxe5?? fxe5!!! - + I think you must have written that before the invention of Fritz. Notice the two little dots over the letter a. O k a y. I am seeing dots... over the letter a... That is the correct spelling of his name. Now I am feeling sleepy, very sleepy. The dots... over the letter a... . -- he:lp bo:t |
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#15
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On Oct 7, 7:02 am, " wrote:
WHAT INCONSISTENCY? "Many famous composers of pure endgame studies were weak players working in splendid isolation who rarely competed in tournaments" -- Larry Evans Yes, the ever-consistent Evans, who in last month's CL and R featured such a "weak player's" compositions in his "column" - Smyslov. -- SBD Dr. Dowd knows as well as anyone else that Smyslov's fame derives from his play, not his compositions. Evans clearly stated in his Chess Life column of September 2007: "But few fans realize that his lifelong passion for composing endgame studies started in 1936 when he was 15!" Is it fame that is important Larry? Or is it the chess? To me, there is no less joy in Smyslov's treatment of the Open Ruy than there is in his 3 bishop promotion study. Botvinnik's little book on the endgame ("Trousers!") is what I read, not a book that discusses his fame or whether games were thrown to him..... or FIDE nonsense.... If some of these "famous chess people" would pay more attention to chess than their own fame, the game might provide them the same joy it does the real fans. |
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#16
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On Oct 7, 7:26 am, help bot wrote:
On Oct 7, 5:10 am, SBD wrote: Perhaps what we've learned here is that some problemists have very short tempers, equally small minds, and are quick to "defend" against criticism which is nothing more than an expression of personal taste. For instance, the reason I don't like ultra-complex, artificial-looking chess problems is that solving them (if I ever could) would be of very little value toward improving my OTB results. Compare and contrast to solving realistic chess problems, which can be highly instructive. In fact, the way I see it, the simpler the position, the more instructive it is likely to be. Come on bot, you can dish it out but not take it? Seriously, what is a "realistic" chess problem? Chess is by nature abstract, or? You probably never saw the full analysis of such problems because hack journalists will freely reprint chess problems and their keys, but rarely spend any time on the analysis required, or even reference the original source. There are a whole group of chess problems called "miniatures" (positions with 7 men or less) and composers still compose interesting ones today, with whole chess magazines devoted to this topic alone. Would those be "simple" enough for you? What is "simple"? Seriously, all swipes aside, a few hours with one book of chess problem miniatures (many of which you can find for free in pdf form on the net) might change your mind about chess composition... if not, more for me..... |
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#17
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On Oct 7, 7:26 am, help bot wrote:
Generally, they like to show the ones which have been "cooked", meaning that somebody demonstrated that it was flawed in some way. Why the obsession with "cooks" is beyond me, for much of the analysis in CL, for instance, can easily be "cooked". That is because a chess problem should be exact : there should be one key, unless more than one is intended and the analysis should be flawless. A mate in six should not be a mate in five or seven. Duals, such as multiple ending mates, tend to be intolerable. And that is one of the points of a chess problem: it isn't a vague "and wins" but a sure win or a mate or stalemate in x moves. |
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#18
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The Value of Chess Problems
As I read what bot wrote, and his emphasis on "realistic" chess problems, I realized what the issue was - or at least I think so. Chess is a game with a certain level of abstraction. In fact, this abstraction is often associated with the positive attribute of "abstract thought." Chess problems provide a higher level of abstraction than the game itself. You can interpret that negatively or positively. But I suppose if the idea that "learning chess teaches you certain abstractions that will make you better at x, y, and z," then problem chess would be seen as on an even higher level than the game. But just as playing chess won't make you a better general, per se, I understand the contention that chess problem solving or composing won't make you a better player. Composing a song doesn't make you a better musician, no matter how good the song. But I certainly have learned the full power of some of the pieces, like queen and bishop, by composing helpmates, something very far from the game of chess - a form where black and white must precisely cooperate to mate black. Some have compared chess composition and play as similar to choreographed martial arts on the stage or screen to the bar brawl. Like all human comparisons, you can argue back and forth on the merits of each. In the end, though, it seems to me that certain players - who already have ELO envy of seemingly everyone around them - are dismissive of problems without ever having tried the experience, or try to see why a series of Umnov maneuvers provide beauty and interest to a problem. I still find Evans comment about endgame composers being relatively weak players a sign of snobbery - who cares if they even played the game at all? Isn't the chess what is important? And what is a "weak player?" Sigh..... |
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#19
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THE TRUTH HURTS
I still find Evans comment about endgame composers being relatively weak players a sign of snobbery -- who cares if they even played the game at all? Isn't the chess what is important? And what is a "weak player?" Sigh..... SBD Dr. Dowd continues his cheap shots. What shobbery? So far Evans has devoted two columns in Chess Life this year to great problems (in May to Pauli Perkonoja of Finland who is virtually unknown to most fans, and in September to Smyslov who is not known as an endgame composer} so clearly he has celebrated their achievements. What is a weak player? A good test is someone whose tournament results are poor. Sam Loyd, perhaps the most famous American composer ever, quit playing after his disastrous result at Paris in 1867. Alain C. White in SAM LOYD AND HIS CHESS PROBLEMS writes on page 47: "What induced Loyd to enter the International Masters' Tournament at Paris in 1867 has always been a mystery to me. Browning has a poem about how Dante wished to excel for once as an artist and Raphael aspired to distinction in poetry; so it may be that Loyd, who had the very highest fame as a problemist, desired to be known rather as a great player. Be that as it may, he entered the Congress as representative of America against Kolisch, Winawer, Steinitz and some ten other masters....and his final score was only 6 won, 17 lost, and 1 drawn...Certainly Loyd cared more for brilliancy far more than for soundness, but whether his ideal is that of good chess is another question" SBD wrote: The Value of Chess Problems As I read what bot wrote, and his emphasis on "realistic" chess problems, I realized what the issue was - or at least I think so. Chess is a game with a certain level of abstraction. In fact, this abstraction is often associated with the positive attribute of "abstract thought." Chess problems provide a higher level of abstraction than the game itself. You can interpret that negatively or positively. But I suppose if the idea that "learning chess teaches you certain abstractions that will make you better at x, y, and z," then problem chess would be seen as on an even higher level than the game. But just as playing chess won't make you a better general, per se, I understand the contention that chess problem solving or composing won't make you a better player. Composing a song doesn't make you a better musician, no matter how good the song. But I certainly have learned the full power of some of the pieces, like queen and bishop, by composing helpmates, something very far from the game of chess - a form where black and white must precisely cooperate to mate black. Some have compared chess composition and play as similar to choreographed martial arts on the stage or screen to the bar brawl. Like all human comparisons, you can argue back and forth on the merits of each. In the end, though, it seems to me that certain players - who already have ELO envy of seemingly everyone around them - are dismissive of problems without ever having tried the experience, or try to see why a series of Umnov maneuvers provide beauty and interest to a problem. I still find Evans comment about endgame composers being relatively weak players a sign of snobbery - who cares if they even played the game at all? Isn't the chess what is important? And what is a "weak player?" Sigh..... |
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#20
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On Oct 7, 5:06 am, SBD wrote:
"Many famous composers of pure endgame studies were weak players working in splendid isolation who rarely competed in tournaments" -- Larry Evans Yes, the ever-consistent Evans, who in last month's CL and R featured such a "weak player's" compositions in his "column" - Smyslov. Some people just aren't very bright; it looks to me as though SBD has completely misinterpreted the above comment by GM Evans and twisted it into some contorted shape to fit his own insecurity as a problem solver or composer. Here is the obvious meaning: Many famous composers (have they earned their fame, like GM Benko, the hard way?) were weak players (unlike me, Larry Evans, and Pal Benko) working in isolation (i.e. they were not exposed to the stress of tournament play, had infinite time for only this work, etc.) who rarely competed (unlike me, Larry Evans, and PB). What GM Evans was trying to suggest is that weak players should not be allowed to commingle with the elite, that they do not deserve fame, that they are a lower class than the greats of chess, the grandmasters. He was *not* putting down problem composition -- far from it! You have to account for the man's, um, arrogance, in order to /get/ the true meaning. So you see, there was no inconsistency in GM Evans having written this put-down and then writing about GM Smyslov's chess compositions -- none whatever. Stop being so insecure about your inability to compete OTB at chess; it's only a game. -- help bot |
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