Mig Greengard's ChessNinja.com
Free sample issues  White Belt: Sample issue #1#2  Black Belt: Sample issue #1 #2

February 24, 2007

Linares 2007 r7

Well THAT sucked. Three quick draws and one flame-out to another draw, leaving the standings unchanged. Tell me again why these guys took a rest day yesterday? Anand played h3-g4 against Chucky's Najdorf, a new move in the exact position but not a new idea. It did send Ivanchuk into his usual deep think and Anand's massive lead on the clock seemed to be the best hope for excitement. But Vishy blitzed in Ivanchuk's time trouble and it looks like Black could have safely poached the white d-pawn with 26..Rxd5. Instead there was general liquidation and the fourth draw of the day. Ban the draw offer.

The Carlsen-Leko draw is only worth mentioning because they repeated beyond the usual three times. Leko must have felt it was up to Carlsen to offer or claim, and rightly so. Maybe they'd just rather be playing tennis with each other. I was on ICC Chess.FM with Susan Polgar and we spoke with Carlsen's father Henrik for a few moments. He said that Magnus had been surprised by Leko's choice in the Slav and wasn't happy with his position after following a Kramnik-Topalov game for a while. I felt bad for Susan not having much to analyze for us, but she's a good person to have around on such a day, considering her long life at high-level chess and a million stories. She's back in a few weeks.

Tomorrow it's Leko-Anand, Ivanchuk-Aronian, Topalov-Morozevich, Svidler-Carlsen.

Posted at 21:12 | Permanent link | Tags: Carlsen, draws, Linares, Morelia, S Polgar
Subscribe now! Buy ChessNinja gear!
Comments

Are Svidler and Leko even trying?

Posted by: LukeNukem at February 24, 2007 22:14

Can someone explain proper etiquette for offering draws. Please include an explanation of why Magnus should have offered the draw or how this is suppose to take place.

I think many people were finding the ending kind of strange today.

Posted by: Frank H at February 24, 2007 22:26

I say they should change it from the Linares 'Chess' tournament to the Linares 'Tennis' tournament. At least that way the players could not draw!

Posted by: Matt Helfst at February 24, 2007 22:32

It sucks that the games ended inconclusively, however the two I watched went pretty far out of theory and produced a lot of exciting ideas.

Posted by: Yuriy Kleyner at February 24, 2007 23:28

The problem is not to ban draw offer: it would be useless: ban all the draw possibilities like in go games and the problem would be solved :)

If it 's not possible to ban draw from chess then: you must do with, even if you are angry sometimes

Who would even have imagine that the players would burn their forces in games a few days before a trip to linares from mexico???

It is a total nonsense! They wouldn't have the time needed to recover efficiently from time lag for the rest of the tournament!

Ban the rest day! That is something useless!

Posted by: dcax at February 24, 2007 23:43


Wow, I was amazed to see how much fighting chess emerged after the rest day !

I believe its long over due that the draw offer be banned from chess. What other spot or competition can you think where the participants can just decide not to play ? I think the players should be ashamed of themselves for this display and I think no one should ask themselves why tournaments are drying up either. The players only have themselves to blame.

I do not know why Linares does not have any anti-draw rules whatsoever. Are they stuck in a time warp ?

Posted by: Cyric Streicher at February 25, 2007 00:04


Re: Peter Leko

He is going to try and set a record and draw all his games ? Why does this guy keep getting tournament invites ? Is it because he is clean cut and always wears a suit or maybe it is his hot wife ?

Whatever the reason is, it is certainly nothing to do with his chess.

Posted by: Gerry Goetzee at February 25, 2007 00:10

Hm, maybe it is because Leko is rated 2750 and is one of the 6 highest rated players in the world? Or maybe it is because he is only rated 34 points behind the #1 rated player in the world? Or maybe it is the fact that he won more tournaments than anyone else his age, and those tournaments include category 20 tournaments? Or maybe it is the fact he was able to draw Kramnik in a match, which is more than can be said about Kasparov and Topalov?

Posted by: Russianbear at February 25, 2007 00:34

What Russianbear said.

Also, why was Anand-Ivanchuk less interesting just because it ended up 1/2-1/2 rather than with Ivanchuk blundering in time trouble and losing? It was an interesting game and you can hardly blame them for the draw - it was a dead draw.

I may be alone, but I like the draw offer. I don't think that two highest-level participants who think the position will be drawn should have to risk ELO points on random blunders and play it out until the fools like us know it's a draw.

Maybe I'd feel differently if I was a sponsor, but I'm not.

And neither are you guys.

Posted by: gmc at February 25, 2007 00:46

I agree that organizers should reduce the number of "rest days". It is silly to give the players a rest day after every 2-3 games. It seems that once the players are rested up, their extra energy I'd channeled into a fear of losing. This leads to cautious, softly fought, games. It would be interesting to analyze the statistical evidence, and determine if there is any correlation between rest days, and the number of decisive games in the subsequent rounds. Maybe players ought to be allowed to make quick draws, but only if they put on an ad hoc simultaneous exhibitions to fill out the balance of the 7 hours allotted for a playing session!

Posted by: Doug at February 25, 2007 01:06

I agree with dcax. It is not hard to change the rules very very slightly to get rid of a lot of draws.

The easy way is to simply allow the king to move into check and lose. Thus all the stalemates disappear and become decisive games.

I see nothing wrong with that simple change.

But everyone seems to feel it will be the death end of chess if that tiny simple change were made.

For no draw by repetition. The arbitor comes along and flips a coin. One player is told to deviate. He can play back and forth to decide when he wants to deviate but he has to deviate.

The game approaches K vs K then the last one to have any material becomes winner.

other ideas can be discussed to take the game completely to no draws. It all depends on how serious one wants to be.

Draws are the death of the game. The game can not survive in this fast paced world with draws. If you want the game to be real popular so there is lots of money for professionals then you must get rid of all the draws. And it does not matter how you do it. Both players play under the same rules so they will be fair.

Do Not blame the players for draws. The blame belongs with the RULES. It makes no sense to set up a game with rules and then ask the players to not play by the rules. You have draws then the players will use draws. It is really very simple.

Posted by: Frank H at February 25, 2007 01:11


Imagine this scenario. You have paid big bucks to go watch the heavyweight championship of the world in boxing. Lets say you have ringside seats. After 2 rounds the fight is about even when each boxer decides they have had enough and don't need to go the 15 because they are so evenly matched. Sorry folks we aren't going to be fighting today, we apologize for all those who bought tickets but we are just not in the mood for 15 rounds.

Posted by: Cyric Streicher at February 25, 2007 01:15


Maybe they cover the tennis matches ? Certainly they are more exciting then what we say today.

Posted by: Frank Gonzalez at February 25, 2007 01:18


GMC is incorrect. There was still play in the position Anand - Ivanchuk. Certainly Anand would risk nothing by playing on in Chucky's time trouble.

If he really cared about winning the tournament then he would have kept playing. But he's getting older and his play is getting ever more cautious to the point of dullness. Certainly he doesn't need the money so where is the incentive. I think that is always been Anand's problem. No killer instinct. That's why he stood no chance against kasparov and he will never be WC which is a shame because I think he has more "Natural Talent" Then any of them.

Posted by: Gerry Goetzee at February 25, 2007 01:25

While banning the premature draw offers (using Sofia rules or something similar) is a good way to make games more interesting, altering the rules of the game as suggested by dcax and Frank will simply eliminate chess as we know it. It will be a completely different game, and not necessarily a very interesting one at that.

Also, as mentioned before in other threads, those who think that eliminating draws will result in a big money influx into chess are either misinformed or are fooling themselves.

Posted by: yander at February 25, 2007 01:31

Leko neutralized against Carlsen in about 20 moves and some people wonder why he is invited?

But sure, nice attitude the peasants have, here. We are the audience, we like chess, but if you don't play the kind of games we want to see, there's gonna be hell to pay.

Botvinnik was absolutely right when he condemned blitz chess and popularization of the game...he knew what was going to happen. The more popular anything becomes, the more base it also turns.

i enjoyed the games, for what it's worth. And i think Carlsen should be more than a bit shaken for what happened with Leko...Leko was in total charge.

Posted by: kehaar at February 25, 2007 02:50

Cyric, it's quite an interesting observation that you make. Could you please tell me how much you paid for a ticket to see only these 4 chess games and nothing else? If it is a serious amount of money, I fully agree that the players owe you an apology.

I understand that everybody is disappointed; I myself would have prefered to see longer games as well. But to be honest, I have my bad days at work as well, just like most humans. That is no problem for my boss, because he only looks at the big picture. Shouldn't we do that with the tournament as well? All the rounds together have been pretty interesting until now. I remember somebody said "Zowie, what a wild tournament this is turning out to be." only yesterday. Did everything change in a single day?

Posted by: Oscar at February 25, 2007 03:37

Kehaar:

Carlsen-Topalov was the same game with Carlsen-Leko, so it was theory. Topalov on the 16th move instead of repeating, he continued...

If holding Carlsen this way is sufficient to get an invitation to top tournaments, then any player being able to remember 16 moves of theory (that appeared the previous day!!) should be invited...

Ofcourse, I understand why Leko is invited (Russianbear covered the issue:)) But if organisers do care, they should encorage agressiveness by inviting easier (within some limits) a player if his playing style is more agressive.

Posted by: derida at February 25, 2007 03:44

Anand, like Leko, isn't terribly interested at this point in playing drawn positions on in case his opponent suddenly does an impression of an American chess player.

At one point this might have been thought of as sportsmanship, but now the peanut gallery wants binary results regardless of what the game looks like - witness the hoopla over Carlsen's amateurish loss to Anand, but the silence about the very interesting game between Morozevich and Aronian the same round - I'm no more a fan of 16 move draws than the next man, but I'd rather that than Anand and Ivanchuk playing out their game and Ivanchuk losing to a time trouble blunder in a dead drawn position.

Posted by: gmc at February 25, 2007 04:08

Not sure if these complaints about three short draws and one correct, balanced game are appropriate here. Both the players and journos agree that we've seen high-level games so far, with almost no exception, which is remarkable. Can you really blame a player taking it easy in this phase of the tournament? Not sure. Which doesn't mean I'm against investigating a change of the draw offer rule, by the way.

P.S. Don't want to be spammer but this time I'm too proud not to mention it. For all the bored people: check Manuel Weeks's big (photo) report on Aeroflot. Lots of good fighting games ;-)
http://www.chessvibes.com/?p=601&lp_lang_view=en

Posted by: peter at February 25, 2007 04:40

Could anyone explain the Grand Slam concept
to me? This seemed like such a promising
concept but it's never mentioned in the
news anymore and how does it work anyway?

Posted by: HanSolo at February 25, 2007 05:02

Draws are fine, they happen, just don't count them in the scoring. A drawn game must be made up. Very simple.

Posted by: Bruce Towell at February 25, 2007 07:13

They tried that 120 years ago (replaying drawn games) and it led to very prolonged tournaments with exhausted players. Not the solution, sorry.

The solution is so simple, just use the Sofia rules. No draw offers during the game. How simple is that? Highly effective, too.

Posted by: ComputoJon at February 25, 2007 07:28

Just a thing to say:

I am not for the ban of draws like we have in chess rules!

I have just said that it is useless to ban only draw offers! it is always possible to make draw by 3 times: there are a lot of opening that offer this possibility, so: ban only draw offer like sofia's rule is stupid!
the players can always bypass this ban by playing a known drawing line ...

Ban 3 times draws, is stupid also... for the same reason...

Ban short draws: there are a lot of longer lines that end in a draw... what do you want? player that act franckly to a draw, or hypocrits?

Players are what they are... even the super great fighter topalov made a lot of boring draws, continuing drawn positions to an end with leko, resigning a drawn position against carlsen etc... LOL

So: if you just want to see players playing more moves hypocritically just to draw after the limit fixed, then ban draw offer...

But the problem would still remain!

I am for the actuals rules! let's draw offers, 3 fold draw and so and so!

Players said they are tired in the middle of a tournament, so they make short draws... but... give them more rest days..; they find another to have more rest days...

In lasker's days, in Fisher's day: tournaments were longer and rest days were very rare guests...

You can't force someone to do something he doesn't really want to do (except with a gun in his head... ) ;oX

Posted by: dcax at February 25, 2007 08:41

In the past the top level chess was different. Today you must play much more precise moves and calculate thoroughly every move, not mentioning you must remember exact variations from computer assisted analysis, and amount of theory (both openings and endgame rise dramatically anually).
25 years ago you could play driven by general positional understanding, and calculate mostly for tactics in wild positions or in endgame.
If you do a computer-assisted analysis of games from, say, Bronstein's excellent book 1953, you will find numerous mistakes and missing opportunities in moves made and in David's analysis as well, which would lead to a lose this days, and most of which would be found OTB by any top gun today for sure, but weren't discovered at that time. Compare this book to the computer-assisted analysis, and you will see the difference between chess of the past and the modern one.

Also, remember that the time control was shortened, and now players are under more time pressure than before.
IMHO.

Posted by: Vlad Kosulin at February 25, 2007 09:09

One problem with this tournament is the split format to use tyhe in word in this thread it sucks I know that it has been debated before but it is basically two tournaments more rest more travel momentum is lost everything can and does change. I gues we will get the usual Top resurgence and Magnus will fade a bit

Posted by: Andy at February 25, 2007 09:18

Also the Anand-Ivantchuk game was a joke making a draw in this position. I was dissapointed by all players.

Posted by: Kramnik-Fan at February 25, 2007 09:47

Chess is a sport for pro's and for amateurs. If we would change the rules for pro's, then that would also count for amateurs. Those amateurs play for fun first of all. And a beautiful draw is as much fun as a win and for some people even more then that!
Why is it so important to make chess more attractive for spectators, why is there a need to commercialize chess? Isn't just playing the game and having fun, regardless the outcome, more important?
The possibility of a draw also gives a lot of character to the game of chess, in which it can distinct itself from other sports.

Posted by: mayadi at February 25, 2007 10:14

Plenty of sports have different rules for professionals and amateurs. Basketball and golf come to mind quickly. Tennis even has different rules for professionals, depending on the sex of the participants.

Posted by: Theorist at February 25, 2007 10:46

I might be an acceptable rule not allowing draw offers before the 30th move. Means, Anand vs. Chuko would have been draw, but not the other three games. A visitor who paid for a ticket would have seen 120 moves and maybe more exciting games than just one.

Posted by: freitag at February 25, 2007 11:09

Note that of the 7 non-drawn games so far in Morelia, Carlsen has been involved in 4 of them!

Posted by: Gorgon at February 25, 2007 11:10

2cents' proposal targeting premature draws:

Dont change rules of the chess game, adjust _rules of the tournaments_ instead as follows:

If a game ends before 50 moves in any kind of a draw, or before say 5 hrs of cumulative time play between the players in a given round/day, then start a new game right away between those two players with the same colors and the same time control as before. The result of the final game is counts whether it is a win or draw.

What that means is that players can agree on a draw as quickly in a game or frequently as they like all according to the chess rules. Regardless, they will be forced to play at least 5 hrs, or at least 50 moves in any single game to be able to take a "day off".

Repeating the same game multiple times etc would endanger future invites.

Note, 50 moves and 5 hrs above are arbitrary and could be adjusted to make this work for everybody (players, sponsors, fans).


Posted by: 2cents at February 25, 2007 11:33

Obviously changing the rules of chess or the scoring systems merely to reduce premature draws is nonsense. Half points are part of the game: if you want to force well-paid professionals to earn their money, applying Sofia rules is the most extreme measure I can think of if you want to stay within the boundaries of reason. No such constraints in amateur events, however, please: we pay an entry fee and (usually) a hotel, so let us do as we wish with our mediocre chess.

Speaking of amateurs, however, on the rare occasions where I manage to get a few days' leave in order to play chess, I play 1 if not 2 games every day, without any rest days (luckily, otherwise it would be even tougher to get away from work), and I feel the level of play is not that much lower than it would be anyway with a more relaxed schedule. Even the top guns can cope perfectly well with 9 games in 9 days if they ever happen to enter an Open (e.g. Aeroflot). So, why all these rest days in closed tournaments?! Not much use for the players, wasted days for the fans, extra costs for the sponsors...

Posted by: prugno at February 25, 2007 12:32

From 'mayadi' at February 25, 2007 10:14
{
"Why is it so important to make chess more attractive for spectators, why is there a need to commercialize chess?"
}

Why? Because most Americans who like chess do not participate in organized chess. That means local chess clubs struggle to exist, even in large cities. It means that when we play in local tournaments, we play the same opponents over-and-over. It means organized chess lacks the ecomonies of scale that should enable chess clubs to maintain a rented space. It generally means several social potentials of chess are unreached.

Attracting spectators, or more interest in general, would signal an increase in enthusiam for chess, in the hearts of that majority of chess players who are absent from organized chess. That increased enthusiam would bring some of them out of their cacoons and into the local chess clubs.

Posted by: GeneM at February 25, 2007 12:40

Wake up, people! "Banning draws" is not a new idea; all sorts of more or less stupid ways to do this have already been tried and abandoned. A game of chess seems to be a by default drawn thing; the ability to draw a game without going through ridiculous rituals is only fair.

Posted by: jussu at February 25, 2007 13:14

Yes, lets not ban the draw option. A draw is a reasonable result in chess, but there is a BIG difference between a fighting draw and pre-arranged draw.

Posted by: Matt Helfst at February 25, 2007 13:25

It seems like Carlsen was "drawed" by Leko in the opening. Quote from Carlsen senior's blog:

"Magnus thought for a while but felt he would be worse if he avoided the repetition although (as the spectators could see from his body language)
he did not really want a draw (...)

We have been asked if the recent success and taking the lead in the tournament made Magnus more inclined to accept a draw to secure his position. It is definitely not the case. With his new confidence he says he is generally more willing then ever to play on."

It seems that if Leko decides not to loose against a player, it takes some skill to score the whole point. However, blood-hungry spectators should not shoot the wrong piano player.

Posted by: yoda at February 25, 2007 13:42

2cent's rule does not change rules of chess at all. if does not change how the games are played/scored either. All games even initially drawn are valid chess games and would/should count towards fide ratings/ranking. It gives a tool to the organizers how to make the rounds more attractive to the fans. There are no obvious disadvantages of that system except for forcing players work harder in every round which should be good for chess and fans one would think.

The Sofia Rule affects the rules of the chess game since it prevents draw offers which are part of the game. The players still can easily circumvent that rule by early repetitions and go to play tennis instead (not a jab at Carlsen).

2cent's rule is streight forward and more attractive than the Sofia Rule.

Posted by: confused at February 25, 2007 14:22

Banning the Draw: "It is a tale told by idiots, full of sound and fury...signifying nothing." =:-(

Posted by: chesstraveler at February 25, 2007 14:41

"Why is it so important to make chess more attractive for spectators, why is there a need to commercialize chess?"

Because money is good and greed is awesome!

Posted by: pingu at February 25, 2007 14:49

Nothing to do with 'Banning the Draw'.

2cent's rule allows draws as per current chess rules. The players can agree on a draw anytime in any game. They will just not always be able to leave the playing hall early for more attractive activities :) while others play. The only way will be to either win a game quickly or reach 50 moves in a game... otherwise, one is stuck in there for 5 hrs at least should the final result be a DRAW.

Posted by: confused at February 25, 2007 14:52

To encourage fighting chess and discourage tame draws, organisers could adopt a scoring system of 3 points for a win and 1 point for a draw. Then there would be no need to change the fundamental rules of our game. I wonder if the more tepid styles of Kramnik, Leko etc wouldn't rapidly adjust to the inevitable reduction in prizes.
BTW a well-fought draw can be more entertaining and instructive than a decisive result full of blunders. Chess is a game of skill and intelligence and not a bloodsport so the slam-bang-wallop style might not be to everyone's taste.

Posted by: Hardy Berger at February 25, 2007 14:53

Hardy, your proposal reminds changes in soccer to make games more attractive. However, unfortunatelly, it would affect the chess game rules (and deep tradition). Scoring is part of the chess rules.

2cent's proposal is about adjusting the tournament format for round-robin, drb, swiss etc. A similar adjustment (for a different, obvious reason) is used in the KO system when you have 2 games per round and then blitz to find the winer etc. Again this is about the _format of the tournamnet_ or _tournament rules_ and nothing about the chess game rules themselves which are not affected by the 2cent's proposal.

As stated, the Sofia Rule has the same disadvantage of affecting the chess rules.

Posted by: confused at February 25, 2007 15:06

A drawn 50 move game is a valid draw. Modified penny pincher's proposal: make it 20 moves (before repetitions) and white must be punished (and/or motivated...) for example by swapping colors or by a time penalty or more draconianly white gets a zero and black the whole point if black manages to draw the second game. I really think with the advantage of the first move it is white's responsibility to achieve something.

Posted by: poisoned pawn at February 25, 2007 15:21

Didn't have you in mind.

Posted by: chesstraveler at February 25, 2007 15:23

Topalov - Morozevich should be fun... even though Moro seems to have given up on openings like the Albin counter gambit or the Chigorin

Posted by: stringTheory at February 25, 2007 15:25

No need to change rules or scoring. Make it a 10 percent purse loss for every draw that fails to meet a chosen requirement set.

For example, draw under 30 moves. Or draw proposal must be submitted to arbiter panel for approval--if they don't consider the position drawn, the GMs can either take the pay cut or continue playing. GMs chose draw because of a safe non-aggressive nothing to lose mentality (see Leko, Svidler, Kramnik) and this will make the idea less safe and give them something to lose. At the same time it won't punish them over the board for what is a perfectly valid chess decision to make. That is, a person will not lose points be ranked lower in ratings for not wanting to continue to play a given position.

The second proposal which I have gotten some odd eyebrows over is listing every draw proposal made during the game in the game log. It puts the name of the GM proposing the draw on the record, and makes it clear if he was particularly anxious to draw. Right now we kind of have a no-fault draw proposal where you can offer the draw ten times in the game and nobody will be the wiser, plus the final arrangement looks mutual, whereas clearly some GMs offer draw more often than they accept.

Posted by: Yuriy Kleyner at February 25, 2007 15:33

"Swapping colors"??? Right, perhaps he should also have to do some sort of jig to the amusement of others while leaving the tournament hall.

Posted by: chesstraveler at February 25, 2007 15:33

No need to change rules or scoring. Make it a 10 percent purse loss for every draw that fails to meet a chosen requirement set.

For example, draw under 30 moves. Or draw proposal must be submitted to arbiter panel for approval--if they don't consider the position drawn, the GMs can either take the pay cut or continue playing. GMs chose draw because of a safe non-aggressive nothing to lose mentality (see Leko, Svidler, Kramnik) and this will make the idea less safe and give them something to lose. At the same time it won't punish them over the board for what is a perfectly valid chess decision to make. That is, a person will not lose points be ranked lower in ratings for not wanting to continue to play a given position.

The second proposal which I have gotten some odd eyebrows over is listing every draw proposal made during the game in the game log. It puts the name of the GM proposing the draw on the record, and makes it clear if he was particularly anxious to draw. Right now we kind of have a no-fault draw proposal where you can offer the draw ten times in the game and nobody will be the wiser, plus the final arrangement looks mutual, whereas clearly some GMs offer draw more often than they accept.

Posted by: Yuriy Kleyner at February 25, 2007 15:34

Yuriy, for goodness' sake. We've already had this discussion. The laws already require draw offers to be entered on the scoresheet. It's true they don't usually go on websites or in databases, but that's basically because it just isn't as interesting a piece of information as you think. What does it matter who offers the draw, if it's accepted (and, as I have already explained, you can in fact deduce this anyway)? And your fantasy about some players pestering opponents constantly with draw offers just doesn't happen; even two draw offers by the same player is a rare event.

It's not that your proposal would do any harm; it's just that it would make no contribution whatever towards the end it seeks to achieve. You're getting odd eyebrows not because your idea is boldly iconoclastic but because it is ineffectual and suggests you have no idea of the relevant rules and etiquette (despite having been told them repeatedly).

Posted by: rdh at February 25, 2007 15:45

rdh,

Scoresheet smoresheet. We don't know what it says so of course it has no relevance or impact. Change what I said from "game log" to "round reports". Even if you guess that my rule has no impact, it would be no loss either. Danailov recently wrote an article in which he claimed Morozevich offered Topa a draw on move 13 or so of their San Luis game. Don't you think that has impact on our perception of Moro as a player? When we found out that Kramnik repeatedly offered Topalov a draw in a sharp position in Game 4 (I think it was Game 4 or maybe 3) that also said a lot about both players.

My fantasy is not that somebody makes five offers a game. My fantasy is that somebody offers an early draw in many and many games, or that he makes them more than once per game, that is, after his opponent rejects the offer. I understand that the latter may be against etiquette. But every time I ask what the rules are, everybody who responds throws in a caveat of "well, this is how it usually happens, but there are exceptions and it's not a big deal to do it this way blah blah". Nobody has decisively told me previously that the only time you can offer a draw is after making your move (if I understand correctly).

Even if it wouldn't radically change the rate of draws (and I don't think it would), such a rule would help us understand what is going on in the players' heads. It matters who offered the draw and it matters if somebody rejects an offer of a draw because it lets the public know how drawish a given player's mentality is. You say repeated offers are rare, but most games end in a draw and I doubt that the first offer is always accepted.

Posted by: Yuriy Kleyner at February 25, 2007 16:13

derida: Ah, i didn't know they followed a previous game.
But you suggest invite aggressive players. Yes, that's good, but i like Leko's style (when he plays his own games, in this case, as much blame falls on Carlsen, and on any opponent of Leko's who goes down the same short draw path with him) and i don't see how anything would be improved by not having him in a tournament. Even Morozevich makes short draws, i was very disappointed by him playing a line by which white has never won.

i think all styles of play should be allowed, and not activelly discouraged by not inviting players of certain style. And when someone like Leko wins, it is always a brilliant game (much the same with Kramnik, though i don't like Kramnik but that's not the point). He is a brilliant player after all.

i don't know, btw, why tournaments don't have brilliancy prizes these days. That should encourage seeking new lines of play.

Also there could be something to new way of dividing the prize money. A certain sum for a win, a much smaller sum for a draw and a loser gets no pay. This way i think the winner of the tournament would still get the biggest sum and the one at the bottom the lowest sum.
This would encourage them to win by more than +2 or +3.

That's just of the top off my head and maybe it's a silly suggestion but if it is someone can explain why.

At any rate, i'm against the idea that players are there just to play games which the spectators want to see.

Posted by: kehaar at February 25, 2007 16:26

My solution is one I heard many years ago - make a draw offer binding throughout the game; ie, if you offer a draw, your opponent can say "thanks, I'll take it when I feel like it" and continue playing. If the position is *really* drawn, there's no point in playing on and you'd accept immediately. If the position is just "equal", you'd see the offer-ee continue on in the most speculative fashion possible and maybe win (or at worst...get in a dead lost position and play his get out of jail free card and accept the still pending draw offer).

Under such a rule, you'd be insane to offer a draw in anything but the most obviously dead drawn position, but perfectly free and correct to do it when the position is really drawn.

Posted by: David Ottosen at February 25, 2007 16:58

LOL, David O. I can see you've never played Gufeld!

Let's just say that the formalities surrounding any draw offer would have to be ramped up substantially. Otherwise the likes of the late Eddie would be accepting that draw offer you made back on move fourteen every time they obtained a lost position.

It's true that we would know if players repeatedly offered early draws and were turned down, although to be honest I think in these supertournaments there's enough press conferences and reporter interest that we normally find out anyway about rejected draw offers. You might get a new insight into the likes of Bogdan Lalic if you needed one, I agree.
You did say that the drawback of the present system was that people could offer a draw ten times in a game and no-one would be the wiser, Yuriy.

As to Topalov-Kramnik game four, it was not a sharp position, and personally I assume the multiple offers were the usual Danailov lies. I think Kramnik was asked about this somewhere and said as much, though I can't be arsed to look for it now.

Posted by: rdh at February 25, 2007 17:22

Kehaar,

For what it's worth, considering our history, I agree with your last post. In regards to the brillancy prizes, the last one I remember being awarded was Radjabov's win with Black over Kasparov; and we all know what the outcome of that was. Anyway, it would be good to see that more often in big time chess again. I'm sure at this tournament Aronian wouldn't object.

Posted by: chesstraveler at February 25, 2007 17:32

I like David Ottosen's solution even though it changes the chess rules. It also does not address directly the "day off" cases when both players do not feel like playing. Although it would be pretty dangerous for a player offering a draw while still in the book to assume the opponent has the same desire to end the game quickly unless the situation was totally pre-arranged which seams rare...

Posted by: confused at February 25, 2007 18:05

David Ottosen, I think that is a great idea. I haven't heard it before. You would have to make sure the draw offers are noted by the arbiter but I am sure that could be arranged in the top tournaments, at least.

Posted by: southcoastkevin at February 25, 2007 18:15

Topalov - Morozevich looks like a wild one...

D.

Posted by: Dimi at February 25, 2007 18:34

Anyway - back to the chess - today's games have the potential to be more interesting than yesterday (well that is a low bar).

Topalov - Morozevic is one of those fascinating French defences where both sides seem to stand badly.

Carlsen appears to be playing like a child again. He has the two bishops but seems to have made some horrible concessions to get them and keep them.

I fancy White's chances in Leko - Anand and it is certainly unbalanced - Black has two extra pawns on the queenside, and White two extra pawns on the kingside (admittedly a few doubled pawns in this lot). Many are being a bit rude about the two Peters being unable to win - the video of their post mortem (round 5) suggested that it wasn't a matter of not trying! So I think they might both win today.

Meanwhile Ivanchuk appears to have an edge he can nurse for hours against Aronian.

If the games go as I predict it could be a massive tie for first place at +1 as we end the first part of the tournament. A revival from one of the so called "bottom feeders" is therefore not ruled out.

Posted by: mcb at February 25, 2007 18:36

Nice idea David Ottosen, but I don't think it is fair. Example: One player has a very good position but is in time trouble. He offers a draw. The other player of course plays on for a win since he cannot lose anymore. No risk.

Posted by: freitag at February 25, 2007 18:49

David, the more your proposal is considered the worse it looks. Argh.

First, it is hard to see a situation any player would actually make such a draw offer. Since if the draw offer was made, the opponent considering it would simply play at the bullet speed from that point on hoping for mistakes from the other side ie after the draw offer the game's quality would instantly degenerate, and the player who made the offer would be potentially in a lot of trouble. That would most likely eliminate in practice any draw offers and lead to the Sofia Rule in effect.

Pehpahs an improvement to that idea could be to have a fix limit for how many moves (like 5 or 10) the offer is valid. It could not be too few moves since it would then be pretty much the same as now.

Overall 2cent's approach seams much better since it does not impact the quality of games in anyway (the same current rules would apply to the game itself). It is only about what happens AFTER any given game ie it is about the format for playing a tournament round and how to score it (not even how the games are scored). All chess rules intact.

Posted by: confused at February 25, 2007 19:04

freitag exactly.

I was thinking about Vishy - Chucky game and concluded neither would be able to offer 'Dave's draw' at any time. If Vishy offered a draw, Chucky would go for Rxd5 and played at full speed to see if he could mate Vishy or reach the time control. If Chucky made the offer, Vishy would play bullet as well to force Chucky out of time if possible. So the draw offer would not be possible from either side.

Posted by: confused at February 25, 2007 19:11

One more confirmation that Moro does not belong there. His fanciful style is very effective vs. 2600, but top players too frequently manage to understand position better than him and realize on weaknesses he creates.

Posted by: Vlad Kosulin at February 25, 2007 19:16

And Topalov - also! He can't play without his manager doing passes in front of him!!! Oh, Moro, please, no more losing jokes!

Posted by: Vlad Kosulin at February 25, 2007 19:26

I am sory, folks, but do you need any more proof that Topa can't win even with help from an opponent?

Posted by: Vlad Kosulin at February 25, 2007 19:29

This is why I hate French. My nerves are not strong enough, I need to take a medicine to continue watching this game!!!

Posted by: Vlad Kosulin at February 25, 2007 19:35

Pathetic: Svidler-Carlsen draw on move 27th and in ~1hr of play time.

If the 2cent's rule was in effect, then they would be starting another game right now and continue to play... It is possible they would just continue to play this game and not go for a draw. There are 4 hrs left to utilize here.

Posted by: confused at February 25, 2007 19:45

Vlad, see how difficult it is to be a Topalov fan -- there is an expectation on him to win regularly, while there are times when ti simply doesn't work. But I will have my fun in Mexico when your favorite player is on the spot...

D.

Posted by: Dimi at February 25, 2007 19:49

This is chess. Magnus managed to survive and to equalize finally. The game was interesting enough, we can't blame them for a draw.

Posted by: Vlad Kosulin at February 25, 2007 19:49

Chuky a pawn up...

Arriba Ivanchuk!

Posted by: ronald at February 25, 2007 19:52

Dimi, see you there ;-)
By the way, are you from east coast? I am from NYC area.

Posted by: Vlad Kosulin at February 25, 2007 19:57

Chuky a pawn up...

Arriba Ivanchuk!

Posted by: ronald at February 25, 2007 19:58

Leko is making up for all of his previous draws today.

Posted by: Linux fan at February 25, 2007 20:02

If Moro played so wild vs. my favorite player, he would resign before the first time control!

Posted by: Vlad Kosulin at February 25, 2007 20:08

Leko lost track and can even lose having big time troubles!

Posted by: Vlad Kosulin at February 25, 2007 20:11

Moro is an idiot!!!
36...Kc7??

Posted by: Vlad Kosulin at February 25, 2007 20:13

Hey, may be I miss the point, and they play a give-away?

Posted by: Vlad Kosulin at February 25, 2007 20:15

Hey, is it sponsored by grug lords?
Topa-Moro and Leko-Anand are definitely being played under some influence...

Posted by: Vlad Kosulin at February 25, 2007 20:20

@Vlad: Yes, Anand's 3-1 queenside majority could easily become a pair of connected passed pawns and then Leko is doomed.

Posted by: gmnotyet at February 25, 2007 20:23

Leko had only 1 second left for his 40th move!!!
No guys, I am right to never play blits... This is not about chess, this is all about nerves...

Posted by: Vlad Kosulin at February 25, 2007 20:24

Oem. Anand gave a rook for a bishop. Is it good? Don't think so.

Posted by: freitag at February 25, 2007 20:24

Viva Chuky! Beating the Levon Monster!!

Posted by: ronald at February 25, 2007 20:27

Urra!!

Chuky 1-0

Posted by: ronald at February 25, 2007 20:32

Correct myself. Anand will win.

Posted by: freitag at February 25, 2007 20:33

Moro is gone.

Posted by: Vlad Kosulin at February 25, 2007 20:34

I'm sorry for Leko. He tries once, and gets into trouble.

Posted by: Linux fan at February 25, 2007 20:38

How did Leko lose? The position after 41 ... Bc6 has lots of fight left in it. If White can somehow split up the Black connected passed pawns, he might have drawing chances.

Posted by: gmnotyet at February 25, 2007 20:41

I just love how Topalov's exposed White h1-king is shielded on the h-file by the White h6-rook, on the a8-h1 diagonal by the White e4-bishop, and along the first rank by the White b1-rook. Every single line of attack that Black could use to threaten the exposed White h1-king (h-file, a8-h1 diagonal, first rank) is BLOCKED by a White piece.

A WEAKNESS IS A WEAKNESS -ONLY- IF IT CAN BE EXPLOITED.

Posted by: gmnotyet at February 25, 2007 20:53

Will Topalov pull out one of his amazing second round comebacks in Linares?

Posted by: Francisco at February 25, 2007 21:32

Topalov needs to finish off Morozevich first. Moro's pieces seem to be taking control of the game!

Posted by: gmnotyet at February 25, 2007 21:37

Topalov x Morozevich:

Where is Fritz when you need him?

Posted by: ronald at February 25, 2007 21:38

"Where is Fritz when you need him?"

Suppose we gave each player three lifelines....

Posted by: Bill Brock - Chicago at February 25, 2007 21:42

So much for the draw whining. Leko-Anand and Ivanchuk-Aronian fought out past theory and Anand, in particular, had a great game. Aronian lost the plot so thoroughly it's hard to be too amazed by Chuky's play, but I'm glad he got a full point.

Svidler-Carlsen's final position was pretty drawn, although I suppose Svidler could have carried on. It looked like Svidler miscalculated though, thinking he was winning; otherwise the whole line with b4-b5 just seems wrongheaded. Perhaps after missing that he just decided to split the point rather than making Carlsen prove anything. By then, Svidler had traded all the wrong pieces anyway...

Posted by: gmc at February 25, 2007 21:49

It is over. Moro's king got caught in the crossfire.

Posted by: Francisco at February 25, 2007 21:53

Woohoo! Topalov wins! His -1 is much better than his -2 from last year at Morelia.

Poor Moro. He skips Corus to concentrate on Linares. Result? A winless -3 and sole possession of last place at the halfway point.

Meanwhile Magnus and Anand played at Corus and lead the field with a +2 score.

Posted by: gmnotyet at February 25, 2007 21:54

No whining..

Had 2cent's rule was in effect, we would be watching 4 games most of the time today, not 3 or fewer on other occasions like yesterday.

Svidler would be forced to play full time as well. If he wants draw, that's fine.. after 5hrs of play a draw is OK.

Posted by: confused at February 25, 2007 21:56

No whining..

Had 2cent's rule was in effect, we would be watching 4 games most of the time today, not 3 or fewer on other occasions like yesterday.

Svidler would be force to play full time as well. If he wants draw, that's fine.. after 5hrs of play a draw is OK.

Posted by: confused at February 25, 2007 21:56

I know there are a lot of people that are against my BAP system, but in practice it has eliminated the grandmaster draw. The GM vs. GM games played with BAP seem like chess to me.

With BAP, EVERY game, EVERY round will be hard fought. Isn't that worth exploring, at least a little bit?

Clint

Posted by: Clint Ballard at February 25, 2007 22:11

Finally, Topalov wins... It has been all suffering and pain since this terrible loss against Svidler at Corus...

I admire Morozevich -- see, not everyone has the desire to play the Kramnik/Karpov style of chess. Nothing wrong with it, that's the style to win matches, but it can be very dull with N(->infinity) draws until all stars align just right to push some pawn through... And I have no illusions that this wild game between Topalov and Moro wasn't exactly the route to win a WCC match against the best defenders in the game…

Topalov has not shown his traditional home preparation in this tournament and relied more on fireworks. It shows. They have to get back to the kitchen and cook some moves in the little time they have until Linares.

It's difficult at times to be a Topalov fan -- enduring all this abuse, and the expectations that he should win all the time in order to prove something to some fool, unworthy of it. But at the end it can be very sweet if things work out right. The same can be said about Carlsen who proved everybody wrong and played some extremely aggressive and mature chess.

BTW, Fritz 10 didn't like many of the moves, so here it is for the cheating theoreticians...

It's been a tough week – I lost my office foosball title (after having been undefeated in 3 championships), felt like paralyzed, can't pin the ball with my goddamn left hand… Lost against a guy I used to maltreat regularly. Topalov got stuck in minus territory, even all my other sport teams lost…

Anyway, now I feel a little bit better. I will not get that worked out over chess anymore. That's why I quit many years ago…

D.

P.S. V. Kosulin, I live on the West Coast, San Francisco Bay Area…


Posted by: Dimi at February 25, 2007 22:27

@Dimi: Yes, all of the idiotic Topalov bashers who claim Topalov cheats always vanish when he loses games.

Just wait until Topalov wins a few games at Linares and these imbeciles will come out of the woodwork again.

Posted by: gmnotyet at February 25, 2007 22:32

Is it true that Anand is worse out of the opening nearly every game these days? It appears that way after reading the commentary of his games with Svidler, Morozevich, Aronian, Ivanchuk and Leko. (The last one being mentioned on Carlsen's blog.) If so, is there any explanation for this?

Posted by: RR at February 25, 2007 22:48

What is BAP system?

Posted by: Sicilian B66 at February 25, 2007 22:53

GM Marin's sarcastic comments on the lack of fighting spirit in R6 are hilarious!

http://chessbase.com/newsdetail.asp?newsid=3694

Posted by: macuga at February 26, 2007 03:12

Dimi wrote:
BTW, Fritz 10 didn't like many of the moves, so here it is for the cheating theoreticians...
---

Topailov fans are probably the dumbest people around.


Posted by: Nark at February 26, 2007 03:34

People believe in anything... they make a books full of fabrications and lies like Chariots of Gods into a best seller and swear by 'The Bermuda Triangle'... What can you do?

Wait and watch Topalov's rating slide now that there is no signalling? Or wait for them to come up with more sophisticated cheating techniques? Believe in fairy tales?

Winning a single game without D* is hardly proof of Topalov's innocence as some abusive people seem to believe - He was a 2700+ player even without D and will of course win some games...

Proof of innocence would be something like repeating a San Luisian performance without D*lov around and without getting to sit in the same seat for the entire tournament...

Posted by: stringTheory at February 26, 2007 05:59

Too many mistakes in this round...

Topa-Moro leaving stuff hanging for the hell of it, Svidler's b5 push and Leko failure to see Rd8, both ruining carefully built advantages...

What would we do without Chuky and his breathtaking accuracy?

Posted by: Emmanuel at February 26, 2007 06:20

Indeed I will (for once) agree with the String Theorist. People believe whatever they want (even believe string theory:)). One bad or one good game (or tournament) cannot prove inocence or guilt.

As a matter of fact, guilt cannot be proven even if he drops back to 2750 for good. (the psycological effect of loosing the title and all this controversy is a sufficient reason for a 50 rating points drop)

He can prove to be inocent if he reaches 2800 and stays there for long (and without Danailov around), but failing to do so, hardly proves anything.

But then people will keep on saying and believe random things..

Posted by: derida at February 26, 2007 06:58

i don't really think it's about Topalov proving his innocence, he should simply ignore all nonsense.

Posted by: kehaar at February 26, 2007 08:07

I guess that players are tired from playing at attitude of over 2000m above the sea... They simply want to come to Linares :)

I bet that Topalov will win second part of the tournament! As far as I know, there will be no problems to keep visual contact with audience from the playing scene.

Posted by: Alfil del Rey at February 26, 2007 08:54

Moro did all fireworks himself. The only time Topa had shown his aggression was when he avoided queen exchange. At that time Moro was in big time trouble and lost the track.

Posted by: Vlad Kosulin at February 26, 2007 09:34

Why does Svidler get invited???

Based on chessgames.com, here are the stats for percentage of draws in all played games by some top players:

DRAW Masters

Leko: 49% <--- we knew that one
Svidler: 47% <--- !!!! (who wants to see this?)

Regulars:

Kramnik: 43% <--- one would think it was worse
Pono: 42%
Chucky: 42%
Anand: 41%
Aronian: 41%

Fighters:

Topa: 38% <--- sharp & solid
Shirov: 38% <--- sharp, somewhat unsound
Moro: 28% <--- ultra sharp, unsound frequently

Magnus: 34% <--- good but against weaker players

I say replace Svidler with Chucky until Svidler shows some fighting spirit. Leko is a special case...useful for testing unsound players :)

Posted by: confused at February 26, 2007 09:41

The usual suspects...minus Kramnik.

Mig, what do you think FIDE will do to limit these GM draws we are seeing? Will they sit on their hands? What would G.K. do? Will the ACP do something - anything - to voice their feelings?

The solution seems simple to everyone except Kirsan and his cronies and most of the GM population.

Make them play through the first time control. You cannot accept a 'tie' in Football or Hockey before the end of regulation, so let's get with the program and make that the standard. If it's a 40/2, then you HAVE to make 40 moves.

The solution is in the simplicity of the thought that good chess sometimes takes a few moves to be created. How many 'unbalanced but equal' positions do we see in a year at top level events that end in draws under 20 moves? TOO MANY. Patzers like myself scratch our heads and say "WHY???".

We fans want to see the top players discuss these positions, at least until the first time control. Once they get this fixed into their minds, the entire chess world will be better. Sponsors will KNOW they will get 40 moves or so each game. Of course, a solution on threeefold repetion has to be constructed, but the basic idea is there.

The chess will be more exciting, you'll actually have to work the full time on ICC, and the sponsors might actually think they are getting their money's worth for once.

It's disheartening to see our heroes show a lack of interest in some of these games.

Go anyone?

Posted by: GoobersAndRaisinettes at February 26, 2007 09:55

confused:

Those 'stats' are just that. They are meaningless in the context of big events and until the GOVERNING BODY OF CHESS - F.I.D.E. - gets off it's hands and FORCES the top players in these events to play to the first time control, it will never change.

Posted by: GoobersAndRaisinettes at February 26, 2007 09:59

confused: According to the same statistics Kramnik has lost 11% of his games while Topa has lost 21%. Now would it make Kramnik a fighter if he had lost more?

(ps. Leko & Svidler 16%)

Posted by: Zombre at February 26, 2007 10:02

If he had lost more, but not win more, then he would be more of a fighter, BUT worse player.

On the other hand if he had same overall percentage (performance) with more losses, he would also have more wins and that would make him more of a fighter.

Posted by: derida at February 26, 2007 10:12

If he had lost more, but not win more, then he would be more of a fighter, BUT worse player.

On the other hand if he had same overall percentage (performance) but with more losses, he would also have more wins and that would make him more of a fighter.

Posted by: derida at February 26, 2007 10:12

Can somebody on-site confirm there was no handshake (and no spoken or visual greeting, of course) before and after the game Topa-Moro?
Only one source mentioned this briefly.

Posted by: Vlad Kosulin at February 26, 2007 10:18

If Topa would have managed to hold a draw in the games he lost, he would be less of a fighter indeed?

Posted by: Zombre at February 26, 2007 10:21

>> Finally, Topalov wins... It has been all suffering and pain since this terrible loss against Svidler at Corus...
BTW, Fritz 10 didn't like many of the moves, so here it is for the cheating theoreticians...
D.
Posted by: Dimi at February 25, 2007 22:27 >>

I agree with Dimi. Topalov has shown us what he can do without cheating. 2691 tournament performance rating. Exactly where everyone says he belongs.

Certainly better than the last year when he could not cheat. Morelia 2006 TPR 2620. We all hope he is better than that.

http://www.chessbase.com/newsdetail.asp?newsid=2949

http://www.chessbase.com/newsdetail.asp?newsid=2974

Even Susan Polgar was shocked by all the poor move choices Topalov made in his game yesterday. But then Topalov wanted to show what he can do when not cheating. And after all Susan is still in denial.

Now we all wait to see if he has the opportunity to cheat in Linares. That will be interesting. He did a great job last year. Or I should say, Danailov did a great job in Linares 2006 as Topalov won his first 3 games with perfect computer moves. I can only guess that his tpr was almost 2924 in Spain since his overall Linares TPR was about back to 2772. I would guess that the 2620 + 2924 = ave of 2772. Therefore last year he did 304 elo better in Linares than in Morelia. That sounds about right. Topalov must keep Danailov around if he helps add 304 elo to his performance. would you agree with me?

Anyway Dimi I am glad to see you think a tpr of 2680 is right where you think a non cheating Topalov should be.


Posted by: Frank H at February 26, 2007 10:23

So over twenty games it would seem that heroic fighter Topalov will have one draw less than miserable gutless draw machine Kramnik. Can it be that this nonsense is largely a matter of presentation?

I don't see that making them play forty moves is going to help. You reckon Carlsen and Leko couldn't have gone on playing Rf1 Bd6; Rfe1 Bb4 another few dozen times each, if that's what you'd like?

John Nunn analysed the draw rate in a famous article and showed that it's no different now from what it's more or less always been. The game is what it is. Deal with it and love it with all its imperfections, or else push off and watch wrestling.

And what in the world is all this whinging about rest days? What is it to you? Maybe the organisers simply want their tournament to go on longer and keep their sponsors in the eyes of the world for longer. Of course the players don't *need* a rest day. They're playing for money. They can play fourteen in a row if you like and if you pay. They just won't be able to play so well, that's all. Some of you people should maybe try playing one of these tournaments. Four hours' preparation, an emotional six-hour game, press conferences and whatnot, you probably can't sleep properly before or after the game, get up tired, repeat, get up exhausted and then sit down to play Anand. It's not as easy as you think - remember that picture of Adams about to play Kasimzhanov in the final in Libya? He looked white as a sheet, except for the luminous grey areas under his eyes.

I don't understand why anyone would have a problem with rest days. I can assure you they make it easier for the players to play their best. You want that or you wanna see blunders? That's what it comes down to.

Topalov fans ought to be glad he's taken a quick draw or two. The one thing which is absolutely fatal for any player in any sport is doing things not because they give you a better chance of achieving the sporting goal, but because your public expects it. Topalov's been in grave danger of falling into that trap, with all his silly rhetoric about pleasing the public unlike wicked Russian draw merchant Kramnik. If he doesn't mind halving out trivially with Leko, you should be pleased he's aiming at the goal and not worrying about you.

Posted by: rdh at February 26, 2007 10:44

Cracks me up when people point to Topolovs loses as proof he isnt cheating. Of course he isnt cheating, it seems pretty obvious that every eye is on him and getting signals would be so risky that they dare not try. He will never get caught with hard evidence on him, such as a device. Signaling is the only real deniable option. He is definatly on his own here and his score reflects it.

Posted by: Coolhandluke at February 26, 2007 10:52

As announced, Aronian lost again to Ivanchuk... Something must be happening (like watching Shirov against Kasparov, or Polgar against Kramnik), but there must be a beggining of psychological advantage from Ivanchuk against Levon. That is the reason I regret Aronian didn't try to win against Topalov on Saturday ... by judging his form, he could get a full point and still be at +1.

On Topalov, well, I am glad he defeated Morozevich, even in the bizarre way it happened ... no more comments in this issue.

Posted by: Sandorchess at February 26, 2007 10:53

I think it's understandable that Topalov feels uncomfortable because he is by himself in Morelia.
That's what coaches and managers are for, to provide support. Forget about the allegations of Silvio signalling him.

Posted by: Pafnutij Grosser at February 26, 2007 10:56

rdh: if you remove fighters from stats, it gets worse since the percentage of draws gets much higher. Let's look at the games between players:

DRAW masters & some regulars: Anand, Kramnik

Svidler vs Leko: 67%
Leko vs Kramnik: 76% :)
Svidler vs Kramnik: 50%

Anand vs Leko: 72%
Anand vs Svidler: 71%

I am not against DRAWs. Only against taking a "day off" with short, say below 30 moves draws. The above stats do not show anything about that aspect btw.


Posted by: confused at February 26, 2007 11:55

Anand vs Kramnik: 73% (in case you were wondering)

Posted by: confused at February 26, 2007 11:58

rdh: "I don't see that making them play forty moves is going to help. You reckon Carlsen and Leko couldn't have gone on playing Rf1 Bd6; Rfe1 Bb4 another few dozen times each, if that's what you'd like?"

No, there is a better solution out there. 2cents rule: a game ends in a (quick) draw, players start another game until playing at least 5hrs or if any game reached 50 moves.. pretty simple. 3 move repeatition draw and any other draw during any game for that matter are still in effect obviously.

Posted by: confused at February 26, 2007 12:04

"I think it's understandable that Topalov feels uncomfortable because he is by himself in Morelia. That's what coaches and managers are for, to provide support. Forget about the allegations of Silvio signalling him."


Why? Wouldn't you call that support?

Posted by: Charles at February 26, 2007 12:16

The whole idea that the draw offer, result of a draw, or a player who has a high propensity to draw is bad... is patently absurd.

Many posters in this thread rag on Leko because of his higher draw percentage, some going so far as to question why he get tournament invites. Will the same people go ahead and pipe up on the topic of Morozevich, and why he gets tournament invites?

Didnt think so.

But let's really get to the bottom of the issue. As a chess fan you set aside some hours to watch the games on ICC, and they ruined your plans by playing a short game. Tough cookies. Find another hobby if you're so upset.

Posted by: Parsnips at February 26, 2007 12:18

No problem, confused - they can go on repeating for 50 moves easily. Or for five hours, for that matter.

Posted by: rdh at February 26, 2007 12:20

Can somebody on-site confirm there was no handshake (and no spoken or visual greeting, of course) before and after the game Topa-Moro?
Only one source mentioned this briefly.
Posted by: Vlad Kosulin at February 26, 2007 10:18

Yes, I was speculating this may happen and I want to know this, too.

Posted by: Russianbear at February 26, 2007 12:27

"2cents rule: a game ends in a (quick) draw, players start another game until playing at least 5hrs or if any game reached 50 moves.. pretty simple. 3 move repeatition draw and any other draw during any game for that matter are still in effect obviously."

I can easily see a player like Morozevich resigning after five minutes of play just to show how ridiculous this idea is.

Posted by: Censor at February 26, 2007 12:30

Moro would be least affected by that rule. Plus it is a tournament rule and can be adopted by one, some, or all major tournaments. Say Corus tries it first and to see how it goes. If a player does not like it, probably s/he can reject the invite to boot.

In practice, once players used to it, it should be a very few additional games per rounds. One would expect players get smart and play longer games. It is hard to see a case when 2 players would have to play more then 2 games anyway.

Posted by: confused at February 26, 2007 12:37

I think if it were me I would find it more aesthetic to agree a draw after two minutes' play, then another after four minutes, and so on. That should give the databases and confused's stats a bit of a boost.

But of course Moro might have different aesthetic values to me.

Posted by: rdh at February 26, 2007 12:41

@confused

you can prove anything you want with statistics, just dig up the right ones. Here is an interesting one:

Kasparov-Karpov: 72% draws

Of course we all know what gutless drawmasters both of those guys were.... :-)

Posted by: lakejen at February 26, 2007 12:59

Well the truth is that in their match they did several not hardly fought draws. But then matches should go to different statisitcs. Especially when the mathc ends to number of wins (as their first match) rather than number of games.

Posted by: derida at February 26, 2007 13:06

I think Short or Nunn gave a suggestion about draws. Just don't invite drawish players for tournaments again. For example bane Svlider from any grand slam tournament and give Leko a warning.
That would do it.

Posted by: aasj at February 26, 2007 13:08

Charles,
my point is that since Silvio is not there to support Topalov (in any way), Topalov feels uncomfortable.

Posted by: Pafnutij Grosser at February 26, 2007 13:14

That is exactly my point derida.
Statistics like that doesn't necessarily prove anything, and you can always make them fit into exactly what you want to prove (just ask any politician, lol).
We all know who the major culprits regarding the short draws are (we really don't need any statistics to prove that) and as long as it benefits them they are going to keep doing it - and why not?

Posted by: lakejen at February 26, 2007 13:19

aasj: "I think Short or Nunn gave a suggestion about draws. Just don't invite drawish players for tournaments again..."

aasj, I do not like that since each player has its own style and that would impact the games they play. After all, draws are perfectly valid outcome and often are results of exciting games. Leko clearly is a good player. (I would not invite Svidler however since he brings little to the picture).


Posted by: confused at February 26, 2007 13:20

>> But let's really get to the bottom of the issue. As a chess fan you set aside some hours to watch the games on ICC, and they ruined your plans by playing a short game. Tough cookies. Find another hobby if you're so upset.

Posted by: Parsnips at February 26, 2007 12:18 >>

Well Parsnips you have hit the perfect answer. That is exactly what millions of chess players have done. They have left chess. We need to attract them back. If chess is to become a good financial big time sport then it needs millions of fans.

Do you really want more people to abandon chess. Those remaining are hard core fans. I hope you do not propose having them abandon chess also.

Posted by: Frank H at February 26, 2007 13:32

We have seen tennis tournament finals where one or more players were clearly whizzed out of breath.

We have seen soccer games where neither team tried too hard to score a game-winning goal.

Boxing matches where neither side came close to a knockout and the decision of who seemed a matter of arbitrarily awarded points than anythinig else.

And yet we don't ask for rules to alter these games. We accept that once in a while those games will be boring.

It seems to me that in chess forcing players to play on is even worse idea as you can't just go through routine motions in chess--it's mental work and there is a finite number of moves you can make. In a situation where neither player feels he has a move to make that will make his position better, forcing them to play on will only lead to inferior chess that day and the next, when the less tired players might have played better.

Posted by: Yuriy Kleyner at February 26, 2007 13:41

Draws do not cause people to abandon chess. Draws cause people to b**** for a day about how drawish chess has gotten.
Then the next day we will get 3 decisive games out of 4.

I have seen no evidence that

a) Draws between Super-GMs cause chess players to abandon players.
b) Chess is sustainable as a fan-supported financial big-time sport. Unless by "fan" you mean "occasionally found millionaire".

Posted by: Yuriy Kleyner at February 26, 2007 13:49

Amen Yuri.

Posted by: parsnips at February 26, 2007 13:55

Personally I think the best idea is to award points only for wins. Loss = 0, Draw = 0, Win = 1. If you look at the current crosstable this would put Leko Svidler and Morozevich tied for last and bump Topalov up to be tied with Aronian for third, Ivanchuk would remain in second. Anand and Carlsen would remain tied for first. I would like to see a tournament experiment with this formula.

Posted by: kpower at February 26, 2007 14:17

Can someone tell me what is BAP system? Please...

Posted by: Sicilian B66 at February 26, 2007 14:26

Yuriy,

Exactly! Also rdh had some points too in his 10:44 post. This whole draw thing is much ado about nothing.

Posted by: chesstraveler at February 26, 2007 14:40

Any "solution" to the "problem" of draws entails distorting the game of chess. You can force or coerce players to play a minimum of 40-50 moves, but you can't force them to be earnest about it. Players intent on drawing will simply find a way to liquidate down to bare Kings on move 51, or shuffle their pieces around for the last 20 or so moves. Spectators will have the appearance of a long, hard fought game, but the draw will have been tacitly agreed way back on move 20-something. If you demand that players play for "appearance sake", that's just what the players will do. Only it will just be an exhibition, and not a real game. Banning the Draw Offer makes sense, since then the players would need to resort to other rules for obtaining a draw. Thus the game is liable to be extended somewhat.

Posted by: DOug at February 26, 2007 15:28

Something about draws:

http://members.lycos.nl/pjwlscht/Advice.gif

Posted by: Linux fan at February 26, 2007 15:57

it is interesting that both Leko and Svidler are similar draw masters. If you analyse past tournament results carefully, everybody could long ago have seen, that also Svidler is very often drawish.

But Svidler does not stand for dull draw, Leko does. Why that? If we can answer this, we would understand the problem of draws better.

Svidler has a lot of fans, I think due to his visibly deep chess understanding. Leko seems to move like: you go here, I go there. Is that the reason for the different image?

Posted by: Ellrond at February 26, 2007 17:09

stringMan: People believe in anything... [...] Winning a single game without D* is hardly proof of Topalov's innocence

You're right, actually. I thought that after Corus when Danailov was out of the picture and Topalov did quite well, inquisitive and reasonable people will put the issue to rest.

Apparently, this is just a fan talk -- it's not supposed to be logical, or even informed. Even the highly acclaimed English gent, rdh, I think, was going off on "Morozevich said this, Moriozevich said that" afer g.9 in Elista. When Topalov loses it will be low-class taunting, when he wins, cheating talk. Therefore it is not unjustified from time to time to tell off in straight language some of the more obnoxious flies.

stringMan: Proof of innocence would be something like repeating a San Luisian performance without D*lov around and without getting to sit in the same seat for the entire tournament...

That's not enough stringMan -- one time only could be a fluke. He needs to repeat San Luis type performance 3 times at least! With Danailov/Cheparinov out of town, preferrably deceased...

Now speaking if uninformed...

Frank H: Anyway Dimi I am glad to see you think a tpr of 2680 is right where you think a non cheating Topalov should be.

Frank H, by now your droppings are a regular site here. You can take a snapshot of any tournament and see these huge +/- performance trend numbers. You can see extremely gratifying/alarming numbers for any player!! They mean ~nothing. Now, I know it is hard for you, but still try to control your instincts from time to time for your own good.

D.


Posted by: Dimi at February 26, 2007 17:23

Didi,
I guess, during Corus Danailov brought us some hot pictures where he was in focus, and not quite out of the picture as you say ;-)

Posted by: Vlad Kosulin at February 26, 2007 19:16

It's Feb 26... and the latest main post on this blog was Feb 24? Hell-o?

Posted by: ComputoJon at February 26, 2007 19:51

I sort of remember this being raised before, but football changed from win 2, draw 1, loss 0 to win 3, draw 1, loss 0.

Will this be applicable to improve win rate in chess as well?

Although come to think of it, chess has "theoretically drawn" position, whereas football doesn't have such thing, e.g. compare having two kings on a chessboard vs two goalies on the pitch. One can still win a game in the latter.

Posted by: tsn at February 26, 2007 23:22

Svidler has a lot of fans, I think due to his visibly deep chess understanding. Leko seems to move like: you go here, I go there. Is that the reason for the different image?

My guess is that Leko gets tagged simply because he's more prominent, thanks to the world championship match with Kramnik and the short draws from it.

Posted by: Ernest Tomlinson at February 26, 2007 23:26

"
Why does Svidler get invited???

Based on chessgames.com, here are the stats for percentage of draws in all played games by some top players:

DRAW Masters

Leko: 49% <--- we knew that one
Svidler: 47% <--- !!!! (who wants to see this?)

Regulars:

Kramnik: 43% <--- one would think it was worse
Pono: 42%
Chucky: 42%
Anand: 41%
Aronian: 41%

Fighters:

Topa: 38% <--- sharp & solid
Shirov: 38% <--- sharp, somewhat unsound
Moro: 28% <--- ultra sharp, unsound frequently

Magnus: 34% <--- good but against weaker players

I say replace Svidler with Chucky until Svidler shows some fighting spirit. Leko is a special case...useful for testing unsound players :)
"

Good analysis!!

Posted by: anonymous at February 26, 2007 23:45

Well, again, let's try a real thought exercise. I call it "In praise of Draws."

A pair of grandmasters who want to draw their game can do so easily. My favorite example is a Gelfand-somebody game from Corus a couple of years back, where all the spectators were amazed and wanted to give the game a brilliancy prize... when in fact the players had simply followed one of their own previous games exactly all the way to the -exact point it had been agreed drawn the last time-

So if I'm Anand, and I can draw out and win the tournament, and Leko is playing me and I think he'd love to split the point, I just play a known drawing line. Leko knows the line as well as I do, there's no need to coordinate in advance. Peter trots down and I shake my head sadly and offer the draw, which he accepts, also sadly, feigning annoyance that I showed so little fighting spirit.

This is basically what happened in Carlsen-Leko. Leko even refused to claim the draw when he could, because lord forbid he wanted a half point!

Draws are part of chess. The situation has gotten better, not worse, in the past 20 years or so. You guys do remember Portisch right? So quit whining. Leko plays chess because he enjoys it, and because people pay him. Not to make you happy.

Posted by: gmc at February 27, 2007 01:17

And then there was Ulf Andersson, who played more than four hundred short draws (which I arbitrarily define as being 20 moves or fewer) out of about two thousand games in Chessgames's database. Neither Kramnik nor Leko come anywhere close to that ratio.

Posted by: Ernest Tomlinson at February 27, 2007 01:25

"It's Feb 26... and the latest main post on this blog was Feb 24? Hell-o?

Posted by: ComputoJon at February 26, 2007 19:51 "

The guy has got a wife now. You should be thankful she allows him to run the blog.

Posted by: dirtbag at February 27, 2007 01:32

Yuriy, as tsn said: football (soccer) has actively been changing the rules to avoid draws.

In addition to modifiying the number of points awarded, they also introduced a rule disallowing the goalkeeper to pick up the ball if it was passed from a teammate (in order to discourage passive play). This rule was actually a huge improvement to the game of football.

I don't know if similar change is achievable in chess. But at least it shows that there has been a willingness in other arenas to make games more exciting. I like the Sofia rule (as a start).

Posted by: simsan at February 27, 2007 03:44

I see no evidence for the fact that

A) Yuriy Kleyner sees any evidence, and that
B) Anybody would deny this, and that
C) Some fans might disagree and abandon chess.

Posted by: Antunes at February 27, 2007 04:00

But Leko had the image of a dull draw master long before his WC match. There must be something boring in his play, unlike svidler who often plays more interesting, which surprisingly leads to the same draw rate.

Posted by: Ellrond at February 27, 2007 05:11

Hi guys!

Did anybody calculate the chicken factors for the games of round 6?

regards
Axel

Posted by: Axel EP at February 27, 2007 06:14

A) if you are gonna say that millions of chess players have left chess because of super-GM draws, you might want to have some evidence to back that up. Should be fairly easy for that kind of mass exodus.
B) if you are gonna say that casual fans have left chess because of draws, and all that's left is hardcore fans, you also might want to have some (or any) evidence to back that up. A story about your buddy from the park who threw away his pocket set after watching Svidler-Leko will do.

So far the only effect of draws seems to be anti-draw discussions. For a day. The good thing about chess is you don't have to commit yourself to two hours to see a boring game happen. You don't like round 6, go analyze Aeroflot Open, or wait a day till round 7.

simsan,

I agree that there can be improvements made (purse penalty for early draws would be my favorite). None of the soccer rules you mention however drastically alter the game and most would be a good idea even if there was no passive play problem. In spite of the new rules, lots of soccer games still suffer from lack of activity. When you acknowledge that no reform is going to be a panacea, you can rationally consider the pluses and minuses of each proposal. For example, Mtel rules generally have an effect of dropping the players chess level by about 100 by the time the late rounds and most endgames come about. If you really want to see chess on that level, might as well watch one of the many lesser tournaments that are out there.

Posted by: Yuriy Kleyner at February 27, 2007 09:59

"A story about your buddy from the park who threw away his pocket set after watching Svidler-Leko will do."

I have a buddy in the green lilac park that recently did exactly that same thing. What now?

Posted by: Antunes at February 27, 2007 13:30

Yuriy,

Your objection to the MTel scheme seems legitimate. But wouldn't additional rest days be sufficient to make sure that the players didn't get exhausted?

If the tight tournament schedule is the reason why short non-repeticious draws are necessary, then maybe the tournament schedule should be adressed.

Even though rumor has it that Topalov and Fritz have been experimenting with the idea, I don't think that the football rule which was adopted in 1965 - to allow substitutes - will ever get much support amongs chess fans. :-)

Posted by: simsan at February 27, 2007 13:34

"For example, Mtel rules generally have an effect of dropping the players chess level by about 100 by the time the late rounds and most endgames come about. If you really want to see chess on that level, might as well watch one of the many lesser tournaments that are out there."

Yeah. Besides Sofia rules, let's also abandon the chess clock, as players' chess level drops by about 200 points in time trouble.

Fatigue is a much more natural part of the game then artificially added time limits. If a player can't draw a supposedly "drawn" game then maybe, this game was worth playing till the very end. After all, chess is a sport and not a tool to accurately measure pure chess-playing ability.

Posted by: d at February 27, 2007 14:33

Just one point I haven't read here. The short draws have become a problem because you can watch the games live in the web. Yesterday you only read about it weeks later in a chess magazine and it didn't concern you.
The WC match Karpov vs. Kasparov 1985/86 was the most boring event I remember.

Posted by: freitag at February 27, 2007 14:44

simsan,

I don't know--it may be that they are tired (that's the impression I get from the games) it may be simply that when you are asked to play out a position you don't want to play out, you don't play well. Kind of like Kasparov playing worse with the queens off the board--maybe he would rather just draw than play on, and if both players don't like the kind of game that's developing, why force them to play on?

But yeah, I do think more rest days would be beneficial for tournaments and matches. The very man I mention in the previous paragraph admitted that some of the shorter games in London 2000 were due to him needing more rest. So for big matches, more rest days would definitely be the way to go, but of course you run into cost issues that way.

"Besides Sofia rules, let's also abandon the chess clock, as players' chess level drops by about 200 points in time trouble."

Yeah, which is why blitz and rapids are not generally viewed as being as good. Time trouble and fatigue certainly matter in evaluation of one's skill as a competitive chess player. The problem is when the schedule and/or time control makes them a much bigger factor than chess playing ability. I think it would have sucked if Karpov lost his crown because his health was weaker than Korchnoi and Kasparov and he didn't perform well after 2 months of playing. In a match of reasonable length and schedule, one of course should ask that the champion be able to perform at expected level and any fatigue he feels is his problem.

But that is actually not the point I was making. I presume that the interest in seeing the short draws play out is the interest in seeing more top-level chess. If it is merely to see decisive chess played, then there are many other tournaments for you.

Posted by: Yuriy Kleyner at February 27, 2007 15:30

http://www.u2faqs.com/band/#11

Bono probably gave up chess because of the prevalence of grandmaster draws.

Posted by: r at February 27, 2007 15:37

"I presume that the interest in seeing the short draws play out is the interest in seeing more top-level chess. If it is merely to see decisive chess played, then there are many other tournaments for you."

If the only reason is to see more top-level chess then, indeed, we should abandon the chess clock. The level of many games in supertournaments nose dives in the last 5-10 moves before the time control.

I'd argue that a player in good physical shape should be able to deal with the fatigue of playing for 4-6 hours a day with some rest days during the tournament. The fact that unfit players break down under the pressure of Sofia rules is not a good argument against them. Just as the fact that some players mismanage their time at the board is not the reason to abandon the chess clock.

Posted by: d at February 27, 2007 15:53

The clock is very important. It helps to discipline yourself. I myself wouldn't have a problem to think about a position one hour or more, but (as in real life) you have to make a decision one time. And the clock helps you to do it.
Time management is part of the game.

Posted by: freitag at February 27, 2007 16:01

d, the problem is not that unfit players break down under Sofia rules. The problem is that nearly all or all players seem to. Using your time control analogy, if nearly every game in a tournament ended in time trouble that would be a good indication that the tournament has too short a time control and while abandoning time control is too drastic, extending it would be the right move. (TM Bernard Kok)

Posted by: Yuriy Kleyner at February 27, 2007 16:17

"d, the problem is not that unfit players break down under Sofia rules. The problem is that nearly all or all players seem to. Using your time control analogy, if nearly every game in a tournament ended in time trouble that would be a good indication that the tournament has too short a time control and while abandoning time control is too drastic, extending it would be the right move."

I may not remember exactly how Sofia played out last year but my impression was not that "nearly all or all players" break down under Sofia rules.

Consider regular, non-Sofia rules supertournament. I guess, about 50-70% games end up in a win or a fighting long draw. Thus, Sofia rules wouldn't affect these games at all. In the remaining 30-50% of games some players break down, others can play on without missing a bit. My guess is that the percentage of games that suffer in quality due to Sofia rules is no larger than that affected by time trouble.

Considering that Sofia rules are natural; make chess a war/sport that chess is supposed to be; provide excitement, instruction and better understanding of the game for amateurs who currently have little idea why games are suddenly aborted midflight, -- these rules have a very positive affect on chess and its appeal.

Posted by: d at February 27, 2007 17:10

I just got off the phone with Bobby from Iceland and he told me incredible news: all these years, Bobby was planning on a big comeback to return to the chess world. He was about to announce his comeback in the next weeks and made all preparations. But Bobby blew it all off last Thursday when he saw the Svidler-Leko game. Appalled by the drawish character of this game, Bobby threw his pocket set out of the window of his Reykjavik apartment.

This shows once again, grandmaster draws can have dramatic impact on the way the chess world is perceived by the outside world.

Posted by: Antunes at February 27, 2007 18:30

I haven't really thoguht this through but here is an idea to toy with regarding drawn games. After players accept a draw offer a computer analysis is done on the final posistion, if the computer finds winning opportunies the players are made to continue. Of course the players are not privvy to the moves found by the computer. It would also encourage them to try to find the winning moves.

Posted by: Guest at February 27, 2007 18:46

Hi everyone,

I just returned from Reykjavik, Iceland and the strangest thing happened while I was over there. I was walking by an apartment building when out of nowhere, a pocket chess set hit me on the head? I heard some swearing coming from one of the upper apartments and then something about "draws make no difference anyway?" and the voice tailed off with "chess is dead"..."chess is dead." I would have returned the set but the person sounded so disgusted about it, I thought what does this idiot know about chess anyway?

Posted by: chesstraveler at February 27, 2007 19:37

I agree that Sofia rules are natural. If players play them for some time they'll get used to them - just as they got used to the new classic time controls for instance.

Posted by: Miguel at February 27, 2007 19:55

BAP system is 3 points for a black win, 2 points for a white win and 1 point for a black draw. 0 points for all other results.

Extensive data is on www.slugfest7.com in the BAP section

Clint

Posted by: Clint Ballard at February 27, 2007 21:11

How about his approach, after a draw is offered and accepted a computer analysis of the position is done.

if the computer agrees position is drawn then both players get 1/2 point

If the computer finds winning opportunities both players get 0 points.

Posted by: Guest at February 27, 2007 22:28

I think a simple solution to decrease the number of draws is to award wins monetarily. Split the money into two parts. Use the first part the usual way, i.e., to give prizes. Use the second part to award wins.

Posted by: pingu at February 27, 2007 23:51

Yes, monetary awards will work nicely too. Why don't they give 80% of the prize money to desive games only?

Posted by: Miguel at February 28, 2007 01:50

I meant decisive games

Posted by: Miguel at February 28, 2007 01:52

Compared to other sports chess is not requiring so much energy.

If players are tired at 4th hour and make mistakes, even, if "pressure" is very high it can't be an argument against Sofia rules.

I wonder, how in old, good times chess tournaments could last for several months. Just to mention the famous ones like Hastings 1895 (21 rounds in less than a month). Or candidate tournaments in middle of past century...

If this is true that players nowadays make blunder s at 5th hour of a 3rd round game... How would they play at round 19?

Posted by: Alfil del Rey at February 28, 2007 05:44

omigawd, somebody else is posting under the acronym "d". I guess I should pick another handle. Hope Mig wont bar me for having multiple handles.

tal_d -- The artist formerly known as d

Posted by: d at February 28, 2007 06:21

thx Clint!

Posted by: Sicilian B66 at February 28, 2007 06:28

d, or not d

My recollection of last year's Sofia is that it the games were very blunderful, much more so than the other tournaments of similar level players: Corus, Linares and Dortmund. Of course number of blunders is something that's hard to put in statistical objective terms, and I can't even prove that that it was the Sofia rules themselves that were causing it (and not say, scheduling or playing conditions) but that's what made me think Sofia rules is not such a good idea. That and I don't like the idea of forcing players to play out a position they don't want to play. If both players in a situation that they don't feel any move will make their position better, forcing them to play on seems to go against the idea of the game.

Alfil,

Chess does not require as much physical energy but as any player will tell you mentally it takes a lot out of you. And as people who work with their minds and/or play chess at high level will tell you that can be equally exhausting.

In the old candidates days you mention the scheduling of games was farther apart and you had things like adjournment and short games. 1895 is probably too far away to compare--chess was a completely different game back then. But 21 rounds in a month back then is still much better than 10 no-adjournment no draw by agreement games in 11 days.

Posted by: Yuriy Kleyner at February 28, 2007 09:25

Congratulations on the marriage Mig I hope it works out just be sure to DEFINE LIMITS that's my advice from a bitter divorce unfortunately I'm sulky because there is no more daily dirt blog poor me

Posted by: liarpants at February 28, 2007 09:56


"That and I don't like the idea of forcing players to play out a position they don't want to play. If both players in a situation that they don't feel any move will make their position better, forcing them to play on seems to go against the idea of the game."

Well suppose the players really don't feel playing at all. Maybe the game should just be declared a draw without making any moves at all ! I mean really why go through motions and the facade of "playing a game" if its the intentions of both players to draw.

The point of the matter is that if players are determined to draw each other they are going to do so no matter if Sofia rules are in place or not. The Sofia rules though do serve to get rid of the cheap stuff ie; 6 move draws etc and should be in place for all major tournaments.

Posted by: Gerry Goetzee at February 28, 2007 10:50

Well, to be fair, Ulf Anderssen
has also played many LONG draws as well. When he is interested in an endgame, and has even a slight edge, he'll play on for 100 moves. Indeed, I wonder how many 100+ move games he has played inhis career?

Posted by: DOug at February 28, 2007 11:30

Theoretically, players can still draw in 3 moves even with Sofia rules. Move knights back and forth and claim triple repetition.

I think it was Seirawan who a couple of years ago described the psychology behind draws in supertournaments. I don't remember all details but the point that I do remember is this. Players rarely agree to a draw before the game. Often times they play out the opening and then agree to a draw for reasons that don't have much to do with the position on the board. Lower rated player may not want to press his small advantage against higher rated player. Similarly, black tends to accept a draw offer just because he is black. Other factors, like fatigue from previous games, whether this is the last game of the tournament, current standings and player's mood may also contribute to the decision to offer a draw. From the player's perspective these are all fine and good reasons but they are not from the spectators' and fans' point of view.

The standard rules allow a draw way too easily. After all, there is no punishment for offering a draw, no risk at all. If the opponent doesn't want a draw, he'll just decline. It's not so easy with Sofia rules. Even if both players want a draw they can't be 100% sure that the opponent wants the same. You may give a hint by making two moves with one piece back and forth. However, the risk may be significant that even if the opponent didn't mind a draw two moves back, now he spots the opportunity to capitalize on the fact that you just wasted two tempi. The rules make players fight and make good moves instead of coping out with a draw offer whenever the mood strikes them.

Posted by: ds (formerly d in this thread) at February 28, 2007 11:56

Yuri, it would be more sensible if the rules of the game made players play on. Otherwise, as suggetsed above, they might as well draw before making any moves. Why should that not be allowed if draws are allowed? In fact, if accepting the analogy of some other people on this blog that chess is a war where a peace treaty is a reasonable outcome, then logic of war dictates that players should be able to simply avoid war by deciding to not play the game at all and draw beforehand.

Posted by: Miguel at February 28, 2007 12:16

Well, if you want to get extremist with examples, why then not make the players play over and over again till the fans are satisfied with the quality and length of the game?

I actually don't think players should be penalized chess rating-wise for not wanting to play. Pursewise, yes, since they are being paid to put on a game.

Lackluster pre-agreed draws are exactly what happens in late stages of the tournament when both players have nothing to play for. If players do decide to play it's because of their own desire to play (due to personal animosity or to redeem earlier results or try a novelty or anything else). If you don't like the idea, put the tournament in a format where there is more to play for in the final round.

ds,

Nobody will risk a setback like that in trying for a draw by repetition. The opponent would be a fool not to seize on it if he wanted a draw originally. Which is why if you are going to repeat moves, you are going to repeat moves that don't weaken your position and if, in an extreme scenario, opponent is not repeating his position but rather doing something active, you of course stop immediately and not wait for two moves later. I am not sure that in Sofia rules the draw offer would not be obvious, since you have to make it through an arbiter. Doesn't the arbiter have to talk to the other player prior to making the decision? Isn't it obvious that you are approaching the arbiter?

Posted by: Yuriy Kleyner at February 28, 2007 15:41

I thought this was the Daily Dirt. Haven't had dirt since 2/24

What's up with that senor G.

Posted by: jason at February 28, 2007 16:09

Mig is less dirty these days with the wife and all.

Posted by: DP at February 28, 2007 16:18

Of course there are going to be more blunders under Sofia rules as the players have more moves to make and therefore a greater scope for errors. When you draw in 22 moves, you're not going to get in time trouble and make some trivial oversight at move 39.

Who wants blunder-free chess anyway?

These days computer chess is virtually free of tactical blunders, but how many of us actually find it entertaining to watch engine-versus-engine matches. Most of us could pit Rybka and Fritz against each another on our own computers and watch them play blitz games with fewer serious errors than in Carlsen-Topalov at standard time control. But where's the fun in that?

On top of that, most chess fans wouldn't notice 95 percent of the blunders at super-GM level without computer assistance anyway.

Posted by: Molby at February 28, 2007 16:20

I'll be back in action tonight. I was in Seattle with the wife's family and was subsequently felled by a brutal ear infection (?) or something that has invited a cross-country ski team wearing sleigh bells into my left ear. Really horrible. Lots of doctors and scans and drugs with more tomorrow.

Posted by: Mig at February 28, 2007 16:23

"Nobody will risk a setback like that in trying for a draw by repetition. The opponent would be a fool not to seize on it if he wanted a draw originally. Which is why if you are going to repeat moves, you are going to repeat moves that don't weaken your position and if, in an extreme scenario, opponent is not repeating his position but rather doing something active, you of course stop immediately and not wait for two moves later. I am not sure that in Sofia rules the draw offer would not be obvious, since you have to make it through an arbiter. Doesn't the arbiter have to talk to the other player prior to making the decision? Isn't it obvious that you are approaching the arbiter?"

Well, if you have triple repetition, you can claim draw without any arbiters.

My understanding was that the primary function of the arbiter is to allow or ban draws, depending on the position. In Sofia arbiters only allow draws in very simple, almost endgame positions and players knows that, so, presumably, they don't bother arbiters if the only reason for a draw is that the position looks drawish after the opening.

Anyway, I guess one player may know that the other wants a draw because he went to talk to the arbiter. If the arbiter doesn't allow a draw then this player (if he wants a draw, too) may try to get a draw by hinting on triple repetition with his next two moves. There still is the risk that the player who talked to the arbiter may change his mind and capitalize on the other player's wasted tempi.

I guess as long as players are not allowed to openly talk and discuss draw offers and implement triple repetition to force the draw, Sofia rules will generally do just fine to keep players playing until the complete simplification of the position on the board.

However, if it were up to me, arbiters would play no role in draw decisions whatsoever. There is triple repetition, there is stalemate, there is 50 move rule. Even in trivial theoretical draws (say, king vs. king and pawn) you don't really need players to talk to each other. It takes exactly three seconds to make the triple repetition and be done with the game. Simple, really drawish positions with no chance for either side almost always allow players to go for triple repetition without any risk of losing the game.

Posted by: ds at February 28, 2007 18:18

Here is an idea how to make draws less likely - make players sit at the table till