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| Tags: appropriate, ban, chess, club, player |
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#1
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When is it appropriate to ban a player from a chess club?
Veteran Master Boris Feldman has recently been banned from the Marshall Chess Club. He will not be allowed to enter the club until December 31, 2003, but he will be allowed to return to the club after that. His membership dues are paid up-to-date and will not be refunded. The person who initiated the proposal to ban Feldman was John Fernandez. Grandmaster William Lombardy is strongly opposed to the ban. New club president Doug Bellizzi and Asa Hoffmann both support the ban. I feel that nobody should be banned from playing chess, except under very extreme circumstances. We should welcome back Raymond Weinstein among others. Invariably, the players who are banned are regular and frequently strong chess players who come to the chess club every day. It is mostly masters who get banned, not average players. They alienate a few opponents, win a few too many games, and suddenly they are out. I think that some objective standard should be established on when to ban or not to ban. I would like to start a discussion about this. Usually, when a player is banned, nobody knows except the parties directly involved. The player usually does not want it known that he has been banned. Therefore, it is only in a few exceptional cases that we find out that a player has been banned. For example, someone recently remarked that Rudy Blumenfeld was banned from the Manhattan Chess Club. Blumenfeld is a strong player, rated nearly 2400. I do not know why he was banned but I played him many times in the Manhattan Rapids and I can understand why some members might want him banned. Another example is Stephen Krasnov, a 1900 player, who was banned from the Mechanics Institute Chess Club in San Francisco while Jim Eade was the director. In that case, I felt that the ban was totally and completely unjustified. I do not know what happened, but apparently Krasnov appealed to the directors of the library and he was reinstated. The Mechanics Institute is an unusual situation. Although it calls itself a chess club, it is actually a library which has a room where library members are allowed to play chess. This is why Krasnov was able to appeal to the non-library members to get himself back in. More recently, Grandmaster Roman Dzindzichashvili has been banned from the Mechanics Institute Chess Club. I do not know the current situation, but I imagine that he is back in by now. I will create a semi-hypothetical situation. Ralph Martinelli died recently so he is a good example. Ralph Martinelli, also known as Big Ralph, was a player in Washington Square Park and in Liberty Park. He was a strong player at blitz chess, about 2300, but he never played tournament chess and he had no rating. I saw him win many games against Grandmaster Roman Dzindzichashvili at blitz chess. He never applied to join the Manhattan or the Marshall Chess Club. However, if he had applied to join, his application would have been rejected. In his case, I feel that they would have been justified in denying his application for membership. The reason? Actually, I cannot provide a rational reason. Ralph was a big man, about 6 foot three inches, weighed about 400 pounds. His very presence was intimidating. I several times saw him get into loud heated arguments, but I never saw him hit anybody. I imagine that he spent time in jail, but I do not know that for a fact. I do know for a fact that in the 1960s he often brought prostitutes into the Chess and Checker Club of New York on 42nd Street. They hung around Ralph because he provided them with friendship and protection. Does all this add up to a good reason to ban Ralph from the Marshall Chess Club? Yes and no. Many members would not have been comfortable playing in the club with Ralph around, so perhaps that would be a good reason to ban him. Let us take another example. Asa Hoffmann is a strong player rated about 2400. He comes to the club every day. Some members want to ban him. I do not know how many. The reason: One thing they do not like about Hoffmann is that he only plays when he is virtually guaranteed to win. He can win every game against simple masters, but he cannot beat the grandmasters. So, he hangs around the tournaments until the last moment. If no grandmasters enter, he joins the tournament and wins the money. If somebody like Michael Rohde shows up, Hoffmann refuses to play. Is that a reason to ban Hoffmann?: Of course not, but some people also do not like the fact that he plays in Liberty Park every day for money. So, my questions a 1. When should a player be banned or not banned? 2. Should the USCF regulate the question of when and whether clubs which are USCF affiliates are allowed to ban certain players? Can a club ban whomever they feel like banning? Should a player be allowed to appeal a ban to the USCF? 3. Can under USCF Rules Boris Feldman be banned from playing in a USCF rated tournament which is held at the Marshall Chess Club? Sam Sloan |
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#2
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"Sam Sloan" wrote in message
... When is it appropriate to ban a player from a chess club? Veteran Master Boris Feldman has recently been banned from the Marshall Chess Club. He will not be allowed to enter the club until December 31, 2003, but he will be allowed to return to the club after that. His membership dues are paid up-to-date and will not be refunded. The person who initiated the proposal to ban Feldman was John Fernandez. Grandmaster William Lombardy is strongly opposed to the ban. New club president Doug Bellizzi and Asa Hoffmann both support the ban. I feel that nobody should be banned from playing chess, except under very extreme circumstances. We should welcome back Raymond Weinstein among others. Invariably, the players who are banned are regular and frequently strong chess players who come to the chess club every day. It is mostly masters who get banned, not average players. They alienate a few opponents, win a few too many games, and suddenly they are out. I think that some objective standard should be established on when to ban or not to ban. I would like to start a discussion about this. Usually, when a player is banned, nobody knows except the parties directly involved. The player usually does not want it known that he has been banned. Therefore, it is only in a few exceptional cases that we find out that a player has been banned. For example, someone recently remarked that Rudy Blumenfeld was banned from the Manhattan Chess Club. Blumenfeld is a strong player, rated nearly 2400. I do not know why he was banned but I played him many times in the Manhattan Rapids and I can understand why some members might want him banned. Another example is Stephen Krasnov, a 1900 player, who was banned from the Mechanics Institute Chess Club in San Francisco while Jim Eade was the director. In that case, I felt that the ban was totally and completely unjustified. I do not know what happened, but apparently Krasnov appealed to the directors of the library and he was reinstated. The Mechanics Institute is an unusual situation. Although it calls itself a chess club, it is actually a library which has a room where library members are allowed to play chess. This is why Krasnov was able to appeal to the non-library members to get himself back in. More recently, Grandmaster Roman Dzindzichashvili has been banned from the Mechanics Institute Chess Club. I do not know the current situation, but I imagine that he is back in by now. I will create a semi-hypothetical situation. Ralph Martinelli died recently so he is a good example. Ralph Martinelli, also known as Big Ralph, was a player in Washington Square Park and in Liberty Park. He was a strong player at blitz chess, about 2300, but he never played tournament chess and he had no rating. I saw him win many games against Grandmaster Roman Dzindzichashvili at blitz chess. He never applied to join the Manhattan or the Marshall Chess Club. However, if he had applied to join, his application would have been rejected. In his case, I feel that they would have been justified in denying his application for membership. The reason? Actually, I cannot provide a rational reason. Ralph was a big man, about 6 foot three inches, weighed about 400 pounds. His very presence was intimidating. I several times saw him get into loud heated arguments, but I never saw him hit anybody. I imagine that he spent time in jail, but I do not know that for a fact. I do know for a fact that in the 1960s he often brought prostitutes into the Chess and Checker Club of New York on 42nd Street. They hung around Ralph because he provided them with friendship and protection. Does all this add up to a good reason to ban Ralph from the Marshall Chess Club? Yes and no. Many members would not have been comfortable playing in the club with Ralph around, so perhaps that would be a good reason to ban him. Let us take another example. Asa Hoffmann is a strong player rated about 2400. He comes to the club every day. Some members want to ban him. I do not know how many. The reason: One thing they do not like about Hoffmann is that he only plays when he is virtually guaranteed to win. He can win every game against simple masters, but he cannot beat the grandmasters. So, he hangs around the tournaments until the last moment. If no grandmasters enter, he joins the tournament and wins the money. If somebody like Michael Rohde shows up, Hoffmann refuses to play. Is that a reason to ban Hoffmann?: Of course not, but some people also do not like the fact that he plays in Liberty Park every day for money. So, my questions a 1. When should a player be banned or not banned? 2. Should the USCF regulate the question of when and whether clubs which are USCF affiliates are allowed to ban certain players? Can a club ban whomever they feel like banning? Should a player be allowed to appeal a ban to the USCF? 3. Can under USCF Rules Boris Feldman be banned from playing in a USCF rated tournament which is held at the Marshall Chess Club? Sam Sloan Nobody I've ever heard of gets banned for no reason. Yes, we're scraping the bottom of the barrel for players (e.g. Sam Sloan) and we need all the people we can get. If you can fog a mirror, you can be a member of a chess club -- simple as that. Getting banned from a tournament, let alone a club, is pretty tough to do. You either have to have caused severe problems for the players and/or the director, blatantly disregarded the rules while playing, become violent to the point of throwing pieces and/or threatening physical violence, or just been a complete and utter jackass to be banned. I'm sure John Fernandez can enlighten us on what's gone down at the Marshall and the reasons for this player's "suspension" from the club -- I'm quite positive there was good reason for it. You'll forgive me if I don't blindly swallow every tidbit of information Sloan spews onto this forum. True to form, Sloan is (once again) screaming at the top of his lungs about a perceived injustice without even knowing the facts of the matter. Typical. Even the so-called examples he cites make no sense, yet he seems to think that his hypothesese support his idea. They don't. The USCF absolutely CANNOT regulate what clubs can and cannot do. Maybe the ACLU, NAACP, or some other similar civil rights organization (or even our broken judicial system) could raise a big enough stink about it to get somebody who was banned reinstated if they could prove racism, sexism, or any other ism you can think of that supports the theory that the club was being prejudiced, but the USCF is pretty much out of the loop on this one. Chess clubs, like the motto on many of the bars I frequented in my more unruly days, have the right to "refuse service to anyone." Regards, Matt |
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#3
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You don't give a reason why any of these people were banned, so I have to
conclude they were being assholes. There are 1001 ways to be an asshole. Chess players are pretty tolerant of deviant behavior. But every so often assholes are so assholy that they get banned. It's all very simple. Angelo "Sam Sloan" wrote in message ... When is it appropriate to ban a player from a chess club? Veteran Master Boris Feldman has recently been banned from the Marshall Chess Club. He will not be allowed to enter the club until December 31, 2003, but he will be allowed to return to the club after that. His membership dues are paid up-to-date and will not be refunded. The person who initiated the proposal to ban Feldman was John Fernandez. Grandmaster William Lombardy is strongly opposed to the ban. New club president Doug Bellizzi and Asa Hoffmann both support the ban. I feel that nobody should be banned from playing chess, except under very extreme circumstances. We should welcome back Raymond Weinstein among others. Invariably, the players who are banned are regular and frequently strong chess players who come to the chess club every day. It is mostly masters who get banned, not average players. They alienate a few opponents, win a few too many games, and suddenly they are out. I think that some objective standard should be established on when to ban or not to ban. I would like to start a discussion about this. Usually, when a player is banned, nobody knows except the parties directly involved. The player usually does not want it known that he has been banned. Therefore, it is only in a few exceptional cases that we find out that a player has been banned. For example, someone recently remarked that Rudy Blumenfeld was banned from the Manhattan Chess Club. Blumenfeld is a strong player, rated nearly 2400. I do not know why he was banned but I played him many times in the Manhattan Rapids and I can understand why some members might want him banned. Another example is Stephen Krasnov, a 1900 player, who was banned from the Mechanics Institute Chess Club in San Francisco while Jim Eade was the director. In that case, I felt that the ban was totally and completely unjustified. I do not know what happened, but apparently Krasnov appealed to the directors of the library and he was reinstated. The Mechanics Institute is an unusual situation. Although it calls itself a chess club, it is actually a library which has a room where library members are allowed to play chess. This is why Krasnov was able to appeal to the non-library members to get himself back in. More recently, Grandmaster Roman Dzindzichashvili has been banned from the Mechanics Institute Chess Club. I do not know the current situation, but I imagine that he is back in by now. I will create a semi-hypothetical situation. Ralph Martinelli died recently so he is a good example. Ralph Martinelli, also known as Big Ralph, was a player in Washington Square Park and in Liberty Park. He was a strong player at blitz chess, about 2300, but he never played tournament chess and he had no rating. I saw him win many games against Grandmaster Roman Dzindzichashvili at blitz chess. He never applied to join the Manhattan or the Marshall Chess Club. However, if he had applied to join, his application would have been rejected. In his case, I feel that they would have been justified in denying his application for membership. The reason? Actually, I cannot provide a rational reason. Ralph was a big man, about 6 foot three inches, weighed about 400 pounds. His very presence was intimidating. I several times saw him get into loud heated arguments, but I never saw him hit anybody. I imagine that he spent time in jail, but I do not know that for a fact. I do know for a fact that in the 1960s he often brought prostitutes into the Chess and Checker Club of New York on 42nd Street. They hung around Ralph because he provided them with friendship and protection. Does all this add up to a good reason to ban Ralph from the Marshall Chess Club? Yes and no. Many members would not have been comfortable playing in the club with Ralph around, so perhaps that would be a good reason to ban him. Let us take another example. Asa Hoffmann is a strong player rated about 2400. He comes to the club every day. Some members want to ban him. I do not know how many. The reason: One thing they do not like about Hoffmann is that he only plays when he is virtually guaranteed to win. He can win every game against simple masters, but he cannot beat the grandmasters. So, he hangs around the tournaments until the last moment. If no grandmasters enter, he joins the tournament and wins the money. If somebody like Michael Rohde shows up, Hoffmann refuses to play. Is that a reason to ban Hoffmann?: Of course not, but some people also do not like the fact that he plays in Liberty Park every day for money. So, my questions a 1. When should a player be banned or not banned? 2. Should the USCF regulate the question of when and whether clubs which are USCF affiliates are allowed to ban certain players? Can a club ban whomever they feel like banning? Should a player be allowed to appeal a ban to the USCF? 3. Can under USCF Rules Boris Feldman be banned from playing in a USCF rated tournament which is held at the Marshall Chess Club? Sam Sloan |
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#4
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"Matt Nemmers" wrote in message
You'll forgive me if I don't blindly swallow every tidbit of information Sloan spews onto this forum. Eeeww. Thanks for the visual. The USCF absolutely CANNOT regulate what clubs can and cannot do. Maybe the ACLU, NAACP, or some other similar civil rights organization (or even our broken judicial system) could raise a big enough stink about it to get somebody who was banned reinstated if they could prove racism, sexism, or any other ism you can think of that supports the theory that the club was being prejudiced, but the USCF is pretty much out of the loop on this one. Chess clubs, like the motto on many of the bars I frequented in my more unruly days, have the right to "refuse service to anyone." Regards, Matt Private Clubs have a lot of leeway. Dunno if that means physical buildings or membership. |
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#5
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Sam Sloan wrote: When is it appropriate to ban a player from a chess club? The statues of the club should make it clear. Typically, a member who is consistently acting against the interest of the club, or whose influence in other ways on the club, society or organization will be detrimental can be expelled. Banning -- i.e. temporary suspension of membership privileges -- seems like an appropriate measure against first offences of a nature that, once it's clear it is deliberate and wilful, would cause explusion. -- Anders Thulin http://www.algonet.se/~ath |
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#6
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Come on you never saw ralph win a bunch of blitz games from dzinzi.
Maybe at like 5 to one or something. "Matt Nemmers" wrote in message news:3Vv9b.470398$uu5.81944@sccrnsc04... "Sam Sloan" wrote in message ... When is it appropriate to ban a player from a chess club? Veteran Master Boris Feldman has recently been banned from the Marshall Chess Club. He will not be allowed to enter the club until December 31, 2003, but he will be allowed to return to the club after that. His membership dues are paid up-to-date and will not be refunded. The person who initiated the proposal to ban Feldman was John Fernandez. Grandmaster William Lombardy is strongly opposed to the ban. New club president Doug Bellizzi and Asa Hoffmann both support the ban. I feel that nobody should be banned from playing chess, except under very extreme circumstances. We should welcome back Raymond Weinstein among others. Invariably, the players who are banned are regular and frequently strong chess players who come to the chess club every day. It is mostly masters who get banned, not average players. They alienate a few opponents, win a few too many games, and suddenly they are out. I think that some objective standard should be established on when to ban or not to ban. I would like to start a discussion about this. Usually, when a player is banned, nobody knows except the parties directly involved. The player usually does not want it known that he has been banned. Therefore, it is only in a few exceptional cases that we find out that a player has been banned. For example, someone recently remarked that Rudy Blumenfeld was banned from the Manhattan Chess Club. Blumenfeld is a strong player, rated nearly 2400. I do not know why he was banned but I played him many times in the Manhattan Rapids and I can understand why some members might want him banned. Another example is Stephen Krasnov, a 1900 player, who was banned from the Mechanics Institute Chess Club in San Francisco while Jim Eade was the director. In that case, I felt that the ban was totally and completely unjustified. I do not know what happened, but apparently Krasnov appealed to the directors of the library and he was reinstated. The Mechanics Institute is an unusual situation. Although it calls itself a chess club, it is actually a library which has a room where library members are allowed to play chess. This is why Krasnov was able to appeal to the non-library members to get himself back in. More recently, Grandmaster Roman Dzindzichashvili has been banned from the Mechanics Institute Chess Club. I do not know the current situation, but I imagine that he is back in by now. I will create a semi-hypothetical situation. Ralph Martinelli died recently so he is a good example. Ralph Martinelli, also known as Big Ralph, was a player in Washington Square Park and in Liberty Park. He was a strong player at blitz chess, about 2300, but he never played tournament chess and he had no rating. I saw him win many games against Grandmaster Roman Dzindzichashvili at blitz chess. He never applied to join the Manhattan or the Marshall Chess Club. However, if he had applied to join, his application would have been rejected. In his case, I feel that they would have been justified in denying his application for membership. The reason? Actually, I cannot provide a rational reason. Ralph was a big man, about 6 foot three inches, weighed about 400 pounds. His very presence was intimidating. I several times saw him get into loud heated arguments, but I never saw him hit anybody. I imagine that he spent time in jail, but I do not know that for a fact. I do know for a fact that in the 1960s he often brought prostitutes into the Chess and Checker Club of New York on 42nd Street. They hung around Ralph because he provided them with friendship and protection. Does all this add up to a good reason to ban Ralph from the Marshall Chess Club? Yes and no. Many members would not have been comfortable playing in the club with Ralph around, so perhaps that would be a good reason to ban him. Let us take another example. Asa Hoffmann is a strong player rated about 2400. He comes to the club every day. Some members want to ban him. I do not know how many. The reason: One thing they do not like about Hoffmann is that he only plays when he is virtually guaranteed to win. He can win every game against simple masters, but he cannot beat the grandmasters. So, he hangs around the tournaments until the last moment. If no grandmasters enter, he joins the tournament and wins the money. If somebody like Michael Rohde shows up, Hoffmann refuses to play. Is that a reason to ban Hoffmann?: Of course not, but some people also do not like the fact that he plays in Liberty Park every day for money. So, my questions a 1. When should a player be banned or not banned? 2. Should the USCF regulate the question of when and whether clubs which are USCF affiliates are allowed to ban certain players? Can a club ban whomever they feel like banning? Should a player be allowed to appeal a ban to the USCF? 3. Can under USCF Rules Boris Feldman be banned from playing in a USCF rated tournament which is held at the Marshall Chess Club? Sam Sloan Nobody I've ever heard of gets banned for no reason. Yes, we're scraping the bottom of the barrel for players (e.g. Sam Sloan) and we need all the people we can get. If you can fog a mirror, you can be a member of a chess club -- simple as that. Getting banned from a tournament, let alone a club, is pretty tough to do. You either have to have caused severe problems for the players and/or the director, blatantly disregarded the rules while playing, become violent to the point of throwing pieces and/or threatening physical violence, or just been a complete and utter jackass to be banned. I'm sure John Fernandez can enlighten us on what's gone down at the Marshall and the reasons for this player's "suspension" from the club -- I'm quite positive there was good reason for it. You'll forgive me if I don't blindly swallow every tidbit of information Sloan spews onto this forum. True to form, Sloan is (once again) screaming at the top of his lungs about a perceived injustice without even knowing the facts of the matter. Typical. Even the so-called examples he cites make no sense, yet he seems to think that his hypothesese support his idea. They don't. The USCF absolutely CANNOT regulate what clubs can and cannot do. Maybe the ACLU, NAACP, or some other similar civil rights organization (or even our broken judicial system) could raise a big enough stink about it to get somebody who was banned reinstated if they could prove racism, sexism, or any other ism you can think of that supports the theory that the club was being prejudiced, but the USCF is pretty much out of the loop on this one. Chess clubs, like the motto on many of the bars I frequented in my more unruly days, have the right to "refuse service to anyone." Regards, Matt |
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#7
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Without reasons what are we to think about these people being banned?
Chessplayes are smoking, drinking, egotistical, swearing, arseholes. That's why we love them. For them to ban another member must take some real bad action on the part of the banned player. Maybe they opened with e4 or stole the toilet paper from the john, or more likely they didn't pay their annual dues. |
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#8
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Well I remember a couple of guys who were banned for cheating. There isn't anything worse than to be accused of being a cheater in chess. If you get that reputation then what TD would want you anyway or club for that matter. EZoto |
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#9
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I suppose clubs ban people on the theory that banning
one person will bring in more people. Its usually not true. People who didn't join before don't join after. Chess is not a game for snobs. The image of wealthy Englishmen playing chess in their private clubs is not where American chess has its roots. Chess was brought to this country by poor immigrants from Russians and other countries. There was the case of the Tamarkin trial at the Manhattan. Larry was actually defended by a lawyer who was with the ACLU. There wasn't any "ism" involved. She just showed that Larry had not done what he was accused of doing. The people who falsely accused him should still be hanging their heads in shame. But I guess we have a high tolerance for dishonesty. Matt Nemmers wrote: "Sam Sloan" wrote in message ... When is it appropriate to ban a player from a chess club? Veteran Master Boris Feldman has recently been banned from the Marshall Chess Club. He will not be allowed to enter the club until December 31, 2003, but he will be allowed to return to the club after that. His membership dues are paid up-to-date and will not be refunded. The person who initiated the proposal to ban Feldman was John Fernandez. Grandmaster William Lombardy is strongly opposed to the ban. New club president Doug Bellizzi and Asa Hoffmann both support the ban. I feel that nobody should be banned from playing chess, except under very extreme circumstances. We should welcome back Raymond Weinstein among others. Invariably, the players who are banned are regular and frequently strong chess players who come to the chess club every day. It is mostly masters who get banned, not average players. They alienate a few opponents, win a few too many games, and suddenly they are out. I think that some objective standard should be established on when to ban or not to ban. I would like to start a discussion about this. Usually, when a player is banned, nobody knows except the parties directly involved. The player usually does not want it known that he has been banned. Therefore, it is only in a few exceptional cases that we find out that a player has been banned. For example, someone recently remarked that Rudy Blumenfeld was banned from the Manhattan Chess Club. Blumenfeld is a strong player, rated nearly 2400. I do not know why he was banned but I played him many times in the Manhattan Rapids and I can understand why some members might want him banned. Another example is Stephen Krasnov, a 1900 player, who was banned from the Mechanics Institute Chess Club in San Francisco while Jim Eade was the director. In that case, I felt that the ban was totally and completely unjustified. I do not know what happened, but apparently Krasnov appealed to the directors of the library and he was reinstated. The Mechanics Institute is an unusual situation. Although it calls itself a chess club, it is actually a library which has a room where library members are allowed to play chess. This is why Krasnov was able to appeal to the non-library members to get himself back in. More recently, Grandmaster Roman Dzindzichashvili has been banned from the Mechanics Institute Chess Club. I do not know the current situation, but I imagine that he is back in by now. I will create a semi-hypothetical situation. Ralph Martinelli died recently so he is a good example. Ralph Martinelli, also known as Big Ralph, was a player in Washington Square Park and in Liberty Park. He was a strong player at blitz chess, about 2300, but he never played tournament chess and he had no rating. I saw him win many games against Grandmaster Roman Dzindzichashvili at blitz chess. He never applied to join the Manhattan or the Marshall Chess Club. However, if he had applied to join, his application would have been rejected. In his case, I feel that they would have been justified in denying his application for membership. The reason? Actually, I cannot provide a rational reason. Ralph was a big man, about 6 foot three inches, weighed about 400 pounds. His very presence was intimidating. I several times saw him get into loud heated arguments, but I never saw him hit anybody. I imagine that he spent time in jail, but I do not know that for a fact. I do know for a fact that in the 1960s he often brought prostitutes into the Chess and Checker Club of New York on 42nd Street. They hung around Ralph because he provided them with friendship and protection. Does all this add up to a good reason to ban Ralph from the Marshall Chess Club? Yes and no. Many members would not have been comfortable playing in the club with Ralph around, so perhaps that would be a good reason to ban him. Let us take another example. Asa Hoffmann is a strong player rated about 2400. He comes to the club every day. Some members want to ban him. I do not know how many. The reason: One thing they do not like about Hoffmann is that he only plays when he is virtually guaranteed to win. He can win every game against simple masters, but he cannot beat the grandmasters. So, he hangs around the tournaments until the last moment. If no grandmasters enter, he joins the tournament and wins the money. If somebody like Michael Rohde shows up, Hoffmann refuses to play. Is that a reason to ban Hoffmann?: Of course not, but some people also do not like the fact that he plays in Liberty Park every day for money. So, my questions a 1. When should a player be banned or not banned? 2. Should the USCF regulate the question of when and whether clubs which are USCF affiliates are allowed to ban certain players? Can a club ban whomever they feel like banning? Should a player be allowed to appeal a ban to the USCF? 3. Can under USCF Rules Boris Feldman be banned from playing in a USCF rated tournament which is held at the Marshall Chess Club? Sam Sloan Nobody I've ever heard of gets banned for no reason. Yes, we're scraping the bottom of the barrel for players (e.g. Sam Sloan) and we need all the people we can get. If you can fog a mirror, you can be a member of a chess club -- simple as that. Getting banned from a tournament, let alone a club, is pretty tough to do. You either have to have caused severe problems for the players and/or the director, blatantly disregarded the rules while playing, become violent to the point of throwing pieces and/or threatening physical violence, or just been a complete and utter jackass to be banned. I'm sure John Fernandez can enlighten us on what's gone down at the Marshall and the reasons for this player's "suspension" from the club -- I'm quite positive there was good reason for it. You'll forgive me if I don't blindly swallow every tidbit of information Sloan spews onto this forum. True to form, Sloan is (once again) screaming at the top of his lungs about a perceived injustice without even knowing the facts of the matter. Typical. Even the so-called examples he cites make no sense, yet he seems to think that his hypothesese support his idea. They don't. The USCF absolutely CANNOT regulate what clubs can and cannot do. Maybe the ACLU, NAACP, or some other similar civil rights organization (or even our broken judicial system) could raise a big enough stink about it to get somebody who was banned reinstated if they could prove racism, sexism, or any other ism you can think of that supports the theory that the club was being prejudiced, but the USCF is pretty much out of the loop on this one. Chess clubs, like the motto on many of the bars I frequented in my more unruly days, have the right to "refuse service to anyone." Regards, Matt |
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#10
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It may be that way at some clubs. At new york clubs
its usually done when the administration doesn't want to face up to the real problems. Angelo DePalma wrote: You don't give a reason why any of these people were banned, so I have to conclude they were being assholes. There are 1001 ways to be an asshole. Chess players are pretty tolerant of deviant behavior. But every so often assholes are so assholy that they get banned. It's all very simple. Angelo "Sam Sloan" wrote in message ... When is it appropriate to ban a player from a chess club? Veteran Master Boris Feldman has recently been banned from the Marshall Chess Club. He will not be allowed to enter the club until December 31, 2003, but he will be allowed to return to the club after that. His membership dues are paid up-to-date and will not be refunded. The person who initiated the proposal to ban Feldman was John Fernandez. Grandmaster William Lombardy is strongly opposed to the ban. New club president Doug Bellizzi and Asa Hoffmann both support the ban. I feel that nobody should be banned from playing chess, except under very extreme circumstances. We should welcome back Raymond Weinstein among others. Invariably, the players who are banned are regular and frequently strong chess players who come to the chess club every day. It is mostly masters who get banned, not average players. They alienate a few opponents, win a few too many games, and suddenly they are out. I think that some objective standard should be established on when to ban or not to ban. I would like to start a discussion about this. Usually, when a player is banned, nobody knows except the parties directly involved. The player usually does not want it known that he has been banned. Therefore, it is only in a few exceptional cases that we find out that a player has been banned. For example, someone recently remarked that Rudy Blumenfeld was banned from the Manhattan Chess Club. Blumenfeld is a strong player, rated nearly 2400. I do not know why he was banned but I played him many times in the Manhattan Rapids and I can understand why some members might want him banned. Another example is Stephen Krasnov, a 1900 player, who was banned from the Mechanics Institute Chess Club in San Francisco while Jim Eade was the director. In that case, I felt that the ban was totally and completely unjustified. I do not know what happened, but apparently Krasnov appealed to the directors of the library and he was reinstated. The Mechanics Institute is an unusual situation. Although it calls itself a chess club, it is actually a library which has a room where library members are allowed to play chess. This is why Krasnov was able to appeal to the non-library members to get himself back in. More recently, Grandmaster Roman Dzindzichashvili has been banned from the Mechanics Institute Chess Club. I do not know the current situation, but I imagine that he is back in by now. I will create a semi-hypothetical situation. Ralph Martinelli died recently so he is a good example. Ralph Martinelli, also known as Big Ralph, was a player in Washington Square Park and in Liberty Park. He was a strong player at blitz chess, about 2300, but he never played tournament chess and he had no rating. I saw him win many games against Grandmaster Roman Dzindzichashvili at blitz chess. He never applied to join the Manhattan or the Marshall Chess Club. However, if he had applied to join, his application would have been rejected. In his case, I feel that they would have been justified in denying his application for membership. The reason? Actually, I cannot provide a rational reason. Ralph was a big man, about 6 foot three inches, weighed about 400 pounds. His very presence was intimidating. I several times saw him get into loud heated arguments, but I never saw him hit anybody. I imagine that he spent time in jail, but I do not know that for a fact. I do know for a fact that in the 1960s he often brought prostitutes into the Chess and Checker Club of New York on 42nd Street. They hung around Ralph because he provided them with friendship and protection. Does all this add up to a good reason to ban Ralph from the Marshall Chess Club? Yes and no. Many members would not have been comfortable playing in the club with Ralph around, so perhaps that would be a good reason to ban him. Let us take another example. Asa Hoffmann is a strong player rated about 2400. He comes to the club every day. Some members want to ban him. I do not know how many. The reason: One thing they do not like about Hoffmann is that he only plays when he is virtually guaranteed to win. He can win every game against simple masters, but he cannot beat the grandmasters. So, he hangs around the tournaments until the last moment. If no grandmasters enter, he joins the tournament and wins the money. If somebody like Michael Rohde shows up, Hoffmann refuses to play. Is that a reason to ban Hoffmann?: Of course not, but some people also do not like the fact that he plays in Liberty Park every day for money. So, my questions a 1. When should a player be banned or not banned? 2. Should the USCF regulate the question of when and whether clubs which are USCF affiliates are allowed to ban certain players? Can a club ban whomever they feel like banning? Should a player be allowed to appeal a ban to the USCF? 3. Can under USCF Rules Boris Feldman be banned from playing in a USCF rated tournament which is held at the Marshall Chess Club? Sam Sloan |
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