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| Tags: didnt, games, petrosian, win |
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#21
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#22
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Petrosian had 8 wins and 14 draws in that tournament. Fischer was 4th and he claimed that all the sowjet players drew against each other to spare their energy. Well, judge for yourself. I think Fischer had a very good point. Didn't Smyslov say that Fischer always looked to blame others rather than himself. Smyslov did say that he just wasn't quite ready for the highest level yet. Granted the Soviets didn't like him and maybe some stories are true but overall Fischer was the problem. No one else. EZoto |
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#23
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Mike Murray wrote in message . ..
On 29 Nov 2003 06:20:11 -0800, (Mark Houlsby) wrote: Mike Murray wrote in message . .. On Sat, 29 Nov 2003 02:41:34 GMT, EZoto wrote: How about when Petrosian beat Karpov in a game and Karpov begged Petrosian to show him his mistake. Karpov thought he played a near perfect game and still lost. Don't tell Houlsby about this. It will break his heart. Why would the fact that it supports my argument and counters yours "break [my] heart"? Notice: "mistake", "*near* perfect", "lost". Perfect (no mistake)=draw "mistake" "near perfect"="lost" Houlsby, you're dumber than a bag of hammers. That's beyond doubt. What's your point? Here's the point you missed: After all your jabber about "go read Informant" for evidence that decisive games are *lost*, not *won* (and therefore, the perfect game is a draw), we now see that even Karpov couldn't tell where he went wrong in one of his own games. Right, but he did not doubt that it *contained* a decisive mistake. So notwithstanding my being "dumber than a bag of hammers" I understood this, and yet you did not. Trolling therefore makes you look *even dumber* than somebody who is, unequivocally, "dumber than a bag of hammers". Way to go! As Watson points out, moves deemed *the* critical mistake in one era of annotation often become more than playable in another. Indeed. This is what the advancement of theory is all about. The idea that an average player can identify a mistake in a non-trivial GM game, i.e., decided by something other than an obvious blunder, is naive, indeed. Agreed. This is *why* I *entreat* patzers like me to "go read Informant". (Now, what is an"obvious blunder"? Operationally, something that an average player can spot, of course). Ummmmmm OK. What's your point, troll? |
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#24
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Mike Murray wrote in message . ..
On 29 Nov 2003 12:41:26 -0800, (Nick) wrote: Don't tell Houlsby about this. It will break his heart. I doubt it. Actually, it might reinforce his evident position. I see where my point was obscure. I clarified it in a reply to Houlsby. Did you? Which clarification, in which reply, was that? Can Mike Murray recognise any distinction between a '*near* perfect game' (to quote EZoto) and a 'perfect game'? No, Mike Murray would be frustrated by the distinction between a "good" game and an "excellent" game. I mentioned some time ago that distinguishing between perfect and near-perfect will be problematic for testing or validating any computer program, several millennia from now, that claims to play "the perfect game". I reckon that it's safe for me to predict that "several millennia from now", chess *will have been solved*, that computers will have played their part in solving chess, and that the perfect game (or, indeed, perfect games, if chess proves to have a number of solutions) will be beginning to languish in obscurity, as will the game itself. Indeed, "several millennia from now", I predict, Fischerrandom chess will have been solved, too..... 'To err is human,' But to really screw things up requires a computer. ....programmed by humans. |
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#25
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In article m,
EZoto wrote: Petrosian had 8 wins and 14 draws in that tournament. Fischer was 4th and he claimed that all the sowjet players drew against each other to spare their energy. Well, judge for yourself. I think Fischer had a very good point. Didn't Smyslov say that Fischer always looked to blame others rather than himself. Smyslov did say that he just wasn't quite ready for the highest level yet. Granted the Soviets didn't like him and maybe some stories are true but overall Fischer was the problem. No one else. The Jews paid you to day that! --Harold Buck p.s. Just kidding, of course. That's an allusion to Fischer's paranoia. |
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#26
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EZoto wrote in message ws.com...
Petrosian had 8 wins and 14 draws in that tournament. Fischer was 4th and he claimed that all the sowjet players drew against each other to spare their energy. Well, judge for yourself. I think Fischer had a very good point. Didn't Smyslov say that Fischer always looked to blame others rather than himself. Smyslov did say that he just wasn't quite ready for the highest level yet. Granted the Soviets didn't like him and maybe some stories are true but overall Fischer was the problem. No one else. I don't think that is fair to Fischer. After all the system was changed after Fischer's protests. Why would they do that if it hadn't been a problem? To please Fischer? No! |
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#28
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EZoto wrote in
message ws.com... Nick wrote: (context snipped by EZoto; please read my earlier post in this thread) As far as I know, Karpov did *not* say to Petrosian: "I am certain that I made no errors in the game that I just lost to you. Hence, that's evidence that chess should be a forced win for White." Karpov asked ( begged ) Petrosian to show him his mistake. He didn't know what he did wrong. What is so unusual about that? I did *not* write or imply that it was 'so unusual' for a chess game's loser (Karpov) to ask its winner (Petrosian) for that explanation. Unfortunately, misreading what I have written hardly seems 'so unusual' here. --Nick |
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#29
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I did *not* write or imply that it was 'so unusual' for a chess game's loser (Karpov) to ask its winner (Petrosian) for that explanation. Unfortunately, misreading what I have written hardly seems 'so unusual' here. --Nick No problem then. Was misread on my part. Sorry about that. EZoto |
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