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| Tags: anything, chess, does, draw, headline, interest, kasparov, retails, title, toincrease |
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#41
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On Apr 22, 9:02 pm, Quadibloc wrote:
If the "detail" makes the vast majority of proposed solutions impossible, then it settles the question of applying those solutions. John Savard Then you have a Titanic type situation, where things are doomed and nothing will change it? Just keep riding it out in hopes another Bobby Fischer comes along? Not sure how chess will produce another Bobby Fischer, unless there is another Cold War. Kasparov is probably the closest to Fischer, but how large of an impact did he have on Chess? - Rich |
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#42
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On Apr 22, 9:25 pm, Kenneth Sloan wrote:
Quadibloc wrote: I wasn't trying to get *personal*. I didn't think that the need to book a hall for a fixed amount of time was irrelevant to having to arrange the World Championship match so that it takes a fixed amount of time - and thus involves a fixed number of games. Not at all. Simply change the time controls so that each game takes no longer than HALF the amount of time left until the end of the hall rental. Disciplined use of this strategy will allow you to play an unlimted number of games. If you are going with an unlimited amount of games, how about having it so the first player win with white and black would be the world champ? You throw out draws. Halving the time per game is like the solution of blitz as an overtime solution. - Rich |
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#43
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On Apr 23, 3:23 am, " wrote:
In return for ditching the 24-game format in favor of the first player to win six games, FIDE restored the rematch clause in 1978 as a sop to Karpov, a favorite of the Kremlin, against Soviet defector Viktor Korchnoi whose family was held hostage inside the USSR. This dirty deal disgusted Fischer. - THIS CRAZY WORLD OF CHESS by GM Larry Evans (page 13) How many organized sports have players playing 24 games? And, let's get real here people, when you start to introduce time controls to chess, having titles, awarding points, Chess becomes a sport. Why should any sport need more than 24 games in order to decide who the world champion is? Want a simple solution? How about if the defending champion doesn't secure more points than his opponent after 24 games, then he loses his title, and there is no reigning world champ. At this point, chess could end up changing the rules and introducing a superior tiebreaking system. You then would end up having a year without a world champ at chess. Someone please tell me exactly what reigning world champions do to help the growth of chess? If nothing, why not end up not having one, if allows chess to to make needed changes. As I see it, the reigning chess champion is known by next to no one outside the chess world. How useful is that? Are we supposed to blame the reigning champ as not being Bobby Fischer? In other word, if the world champion isn't know around the world, not having one would end up meaning they won't be missed. As far as unlimited number of games go, are they going to hold the world championship in the FIDE headquarters? Please tell me how exactly you will be able to have a location to have the tournament for MONTHS? Also, tell me how the world is going to care. Is the unlimited number of games going to be like selection of Pope? One day we end up producing a winner? - Rich |
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#44
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On Apr 22, 11:04 pm, help bot wrote:
Let's suppose that the goal is to eliminate, or at least reduce to a sliver, any unfairness in the W. C. cycle; the first step might be to eradicate the FIDE; or perhaps, to somehow move the championship cycle outside its grasp. But that would not in any way guarantee a fairer handling of the title; for instance, suppose the surrogate organization were to be the USCF: it's a good bet that in spite of everything, FIDE's "achievements" would be in grave danger of being "bested" in short order... . -- help bot I am not looking to personally eliminate FIDE. However, if anyone here wants to help IAGO get into the chess business to have the best solution (even if not perfect), for chess in a tournament level, that is up for being changed, please speak up. I don't have any chess yet on the 2008 IAGO World Tour. I am up for chess in some form being on IAGO World Tour calendar. Well, some form outside of chess variants. - Rich |
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#45
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On Apr 21, 6:43 pm, "David Kane" wrote:
The problem, as I've said, is that in a short match, the tied match possibility is not at all small. That's a real problem, and can be reasonably addressed by various tie-breaks. Unfortunately, the real world is going the other way - matches are getting shorter thereby increasing the champion's advantage. Of course, for various reasons, we've seen the prestige of the WC devalued greatly over the past decades. When you speak of the "real world" do you mean the world outside of chess, or how chess is actually done in reality? If it is done by the later, that should be in the scope of chess to change. But, it also can reflect practical realities. If it is the former, then isn't that a sign that the chess world has lost touch with the real world? In those cases, should necessary changes be made? - Rich |
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#46
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"Rich Hutnik" wrote in message ... On Apr 23, 3:23 am, " wrote: In return for ditching the 24-game format in favor of the first player to win six games, FIDE restored the rematch clause in 1978 as a sop to Karpov, a favorite of the Kremlin, against Soviet defector Viktor Korchnoi whose family was held hostage inside the USSR. This dirty deal disgusted Fischer. - THIS CRAZY WORLD OF CHESS by GM Larry Evans (page 13) How many organized sports have players playing 24 games? And, let's get real here people, when you start to introduce time controls to chess, having titles, awarding points, Chess becomes a sport. Why should any sport need more than 24 games in order to decide who the world champion is? The reason for longer matches is so that they are meaningful. You haven't given a single reason why 24 games is too many. The point you are missing is that the "World Champion" designation is marketable. More people will pay attention to a match that is credibly a "World Championship" than to an equal number of games that aren't. The trend to deciding the WC with tournaments and short matches has weakened the WC title. FIDE's old way - where there was a difficult qualifying process including both tournaments and matches - followed by a significant 24-game match meant that if you had won the championship you had done something special. You seem to favor something like the FIDE knock-out titles. This was a single tournament "championship" involving short matches, and tie-breaks with increasingly fast time controls. The problem is that it produced a string of no-name winners, and everyone knew that the FIDE KO title was not a "real" championship. Want a simple solution? How about if the defending champion doesn't secure more points than his opponent after 24 games, then he loses his title, and there is no reigning world champ. You seem to be advocating trivializing the world championship so that there is *never* a credible champ. How is that better? At this point, chess could end up changing the rules and introducing a superior tiebreaking system. You then would end up having a year without a world champ at chess. Someone please tell me exactly what reigning world champions do to help the growth of chess? If nothing, why not end up not having one, if allows chess to to make needed changes. As I see it, the reigning chess champion is known by next to no one outside the chess world. How useful is that? Are we supposed to blame the reigning champ as not being Bobby Fischer? In other word, if the world champion isn't know around the world, not having one would end up meaning they won't be missed. As far as unlimited number of games go, are they going to hold the world championship in the FIDE headquarters? Please tell me how exactly you will be able to have a location to have the tournament for MONTHS? Also, tell me how the world is going to care. Is the unlimited number of games going to be like selection of Pope? One day we end up producing a winner? First, a finite length produces a winner if you give the champ tie-odds. Second, in practice you could have something like a 10-game sudden death tie-break in the event of a tied regulation match. Statistically that will break the tie a huge percentage of the time, without extending the match very long at all. - Rich |
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#47
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"Rich Hutnik" wrote in message ... On Apr 21, 6:43 pm, "David Kane" wrote: The problem, as I've said, is that in a short match, the tied match possibility is not at all small. That's a real problem, and can be reasonably addressed by various tie-breaks. Unfortunately, the real world is going the other way - matches are getting shorter thereby increasing the champion's advantage. Of course, for various reasons, we've seen the prestige of the WC devalued greatly over the past decades. When you speak of the "real world" do you mean the world outside of chess, or how chess is actually done in reality? If it is done by the later, that should be in the scope of chess to change. But, it also can reflect practical realities. I am speaking of what chess has done. I agree that it is likely driven by realities, probably relating to finding funding for organizing matches. If it is the former, then isn't that a sign that the chess world has lost touch with the real world? In those cases, should necessary changes be made? - Rich |
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#48
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On Apr 23, 10:03*am, Rich Hutnik wrote:
On Apr 22, 9:02 pm, Quadibloc wrote: If the "detail" makes the vast majority of proposed solutions impossible, then it settles the question of applying those solutions. Then you have a Titanic type situation, where things are doomed and nothing will change it? *Just keep riding it out in hopes another Bobby Fischer comes along? *Not sure how chess will produce another Bobby Fischer, unless there is another Cold War. *Kasparov is probably the closest to Fischer, but how large of an impact did he have on Chess? The specific problem that a tie score in a match of fixed length allows the World Champion to retain his title doesn't seem to be fixable if we accept that the World Championship match has to be organized in a way that is amenable to ordinary hall rentals. I felt that this wasn't the biggest problem with Chess, so I wasn't too concerned if we couldn't fix it completely. Going to blitz would indeed cause the problem that then people might not be satisfied that the victory really went to the best chess player. One of the things people *want* from the World Championship is examples of the finest chess that can be played, since it has the best players in it. Going to speed chess might heighten the drama of the event, but it would detract from another important element of its interest. So my inclination is to *stick* with giving "draw odds" to the old champion, since that's actually a widespread convention, but instead make other changes that will make draws less common. For a match, 1/3 - 1/3 and similar solutions don't work, but there are other measures that would. Besides changing the rules of chess so that there are more ways to win, at least partly, one could take measures like one I mentioned - if a match is tied, eliminate the last win. (Doing that would require giving the champion White in the first game, though, it seemed to me, if game order is crucial.) But *before* doing that, see if it's still tied if one gives extra points for wins with Black, I will now add, inspired by another post. John Savard |
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#49
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On Apr 23, 3:23 am, " wrote:
Both Botvinnik and Karpov enjoyed even greater advantages than Kasparov. The old two-wrongs-make-a-right fallacy again. This kind of muddled thinking leads to all sorts of delusions and fantasies, since Reason is simply tossed out the window. According to one fantasy, GM Botvinnik was the "favorite" of evil villains who did everything in their power to keep his challengers from getting the title. Unfortunately, just about everybody did in fact get the title, for GM Botvinnik lost the world championship title more times than any other person in the history of the game! The fantasy also held that one day, an insider would reveal that in his expert opinion, MB was the Kremlin's favorite, and this mere opinion was touted by storyteller Larry Evans as the smoking gun which would show his wild speculations to have been correct. Unfortunately, the story ends with that "insider" telling the world that, in his expert opinion, it was GM Smyslov who was the favorite of the powerful Kremlin puppet-masters... . Oh well, it made for a good story. -- help bot |
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#50
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In article ,
Rich Hutnik wrote: How many organized sports have players playing 24 games? It rather depends what you call a "game". Tennis in the form of a 5-set match between reasonably even players can easily go to 60+ games; professional golf tournaments are commonly held over 72 holes; bowls matches used to be held over a large number of ends, but fairly recently switched to shorter sets; boxing matches used [esp in the bare-knuckle era] to consist of a large number of rounds, but Elf'n'Safety has cut that down. A fairly direct "equivalent" to chess is the snooker world championship, being held currently, where the early rounds are over 19 frames, and matches get longer until the final is [IIRC] 35 frames. [...] Someone please tell me exactly what reigning world champions do to help the growth of chess? Well, at least in principle, it gives us a focus -- the WC has a certain amount of authority to speak for chess, eg to talk to governments, to raise money, to improve conditions for [eg] former professionals fallen on hard times, etc., etc. The same could be said of the FIDE President. In the days when the former was undisputed and the latter was of undisputed probity, this was clearly a force for good. If nothing, why not end up not having one, if allows chess to to make needed changes. Perhaps. Tennis and golf are two sports that manage without a WC [and boxing manages with lots]. As I see it, the reigning chess champion is known by next to no one outside the chess world. I suspect he is known by quite a lot of people who have no connexion with or interest in chess, but who happen to be Indian. I admit that in Europe he is probably less well known than were Kasparov, Fischer and Capablanca; but the actual weight of numbers may well be in favour of the current holder. [...] As far as unlimited number of games go, are they going to hold the world championship in the FIDE headquarters? Please tell me how exactly you will be able to have a location to have the tournament for MONTHS? That, of course, was the problem with KK1. A match that started with fanfares and grandeur in the best venue in Moscow finished in a telephone box somewhere in the suburbs in front of two men and a dog. -- Andy Walker Nottingham |
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