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February 14, 2007
The Cable Guy
I'll preempt ChessBase caving in to the onslaught of Danailov spam and at last publishing his beloved photos of holes in bathroom ceilings and the cables that lurk therein. They are going to run them in the morning, with comments from Danailov and remarks from Ilyumzhinov and a few others willing to humor them. This silliness has been going on in the comments here for a few days now and, as is usually the case, common sense missed the train long ago.
The Topailov argument is 1) Kramnik went to the bathroom a lot. 2) That when the Bulgarian team ripped up the bathrooms in Elista during the Kramnik-Topalov world championship match, they found cables inside the ceilings. No really, that's it. Seriously. They took pictures, one of which looks like they brought in another cable just for the photo, as if that would matter.
Of course the unusual thing would be to break open the ceiling of any room in any modern building and not find cables. But that's too easy. Next, how does Kramnik get to a cable inside the ceiling? Still too obvious. How about that the same cables ran through both bathrooms and the players alternated loos in the early rounds anyway? If by some supernatural act you could cheat with a cable inside your ceiling, does that mean Kramnik's frequent visits to the WC only mean he cheated more often than Topalov? If Kramnik had lost would he be sending out the same photos accusing Topalov of cheating? Hmm, that doesn't sound right. No, I'll stick with the really low-hanging fruit: How do you cheat with a cable? I'll give you all the cable you want and you can connect the other end to Deeper Hydra Junior or anything else you like. And? If you have a device to connect to it, the device is the problem. No pictures of any device have surfaced, sadly, and every area was searched, players included. End of a very short, very stupid, fabricated story.
It's hard not to just laugh at this stuff, but apparently this attempt to deflect attention from the signaling allegations about Topailov is their main strategy. Since there is no proof of signaling, what matters is to make sure the possibility is eliminated. Unlike magic ceiling cables, detector-proof devices, and disappearing computers, signaling is a clear and present danger. It's not just about Topalov, it's about preserving the integrity of the sport in the face of all these stories and rumors.
As I said in the item on it, the video of Danailov proved nothing at all. It was a waste of time. (Except this must-see vastly superior version.) Others seem to disagree. But it was related to a very important potential problem and appeared in a mainstream publication that also included comments from other players and the ACP. It would be bizarre for any chess news source to ignore such a story. (It's never been proven that Barry Bonds took steroids, but the allegations and rumors are the top story in baseball.) Süddeutsche Zeitung and Kommersant ran extensive stories on Topalov and the signaling accusations. It's hard to imagine why the chess community would black out such incredible allegations about the world's #1 player.
Topailov seems to think that anyone who doesn't agree with them that ceiling cables are the same risk as signaling is biased against them. I sincerely don't understand this. If the New York Times ran an investigative report on how Kramnik might have cheated with magic ceiling cables and quoted a GM suggesting as much, I sure as hell would report that. This seems unlikely, however.
I'm not accusing Topalov of anything (though some top players are, which is news); I'm saying signaling is a danger. Meanwhile, Topailov are accusing Kramnik of cheating and saying, without any non-magical explanation of how this is possible, that common ceiling cables are in some way proof of this. Indeed, they have been calling Kramnik a cheater for months now. Like most (including ChessBase), I have reported these accusations steadily. I even translated the entire Topalov interview in which he flatly accused Kramnik of cheating in Elista. But now they are angry when we report other people making accusations about Topalov? And major newspapers and GMs, not his defeated opponent.
Again repeating myself, I don't think there is any point in investigating or accusing Topalov, but measures must be taken to eliminate all doubts for everyone. Of course FIDE will do nothing, and if the players don't speak up the organizers won't do anything either. But if anyone, especially someone affiliated with a player, starts going in and out making cell calls and making mutual googly eyes at a player, one hopes he gets ejected from the hall.
[Note to those who missed this explanation in the comments awhile back. I use the term "Topailov" not to insult anyone but for practical reasons. Both Veselin Topalov and his manager Silvio Danailov have said that they speak with one voice and once that they are "the same person." I don't want to credit Topalov with everything Danailov says and does and I don't want to free Topalov from the responsibility for the actions and statements his manager makes on his behalf. With Danailov becoming an organizer and influence on his own, this is going to be an issue. But in matters related to attacks on Kramnik and such, "Topailov" seems accurate enough.]
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Anyone who has seen The Matrix knows exactly how Kramnik used the cable to recieve information.
Posted by: Tassie Devil at February 14, 2007 01:52Mig,
I agree that for the best of everyone we should take some precautions, EVEN if we believe that nothing has happened (i.e. Topalov did not cheated)
I would like to say, that the rational behind the appeal comitee decision, in Elista was exactly the same. They knew that Kramnink has done nothing, but in order to erase any possible doubts they chose to close the toilets. Even if the incedents are not identical, you must realise that the idea of removing doubts is the same.
Kramninks reaction was not to play. The publics reaction was that the appeal comitee should resign.. But they just did, what you ask FIDE (and organisors) to do now. Remove doubts.
I would also like to remind to people, that Topalov acccepted to have the glass between him and the audience at the match in Elista EVEN IF IT WAS NOT IN THE CONTRACT.
So comparing these two cases, I deduce that Topalov was more willing to remove doubts about cheating allegations that Kramnink was.
Ah, by the way, I personally believe that none of them cheated.
Posted by: derida at February 14, 2007 01:59I disagree with that logic. There is a vast difference is between someone's opponent accusing him of cheating during a match and demanding changes and the community recognizing the need to make changes to avoid further damage.
That is, if Topalov had never said anything about toilets in Elista there would never have been the slightest thought of Kramnik cheating. Even now nobody is going to move to ban trips to the bathroom or cables inside the ceilings of chess halls. The entire concept is ridiculous. In start contrast, the signaling issue has been going around Topalov for a while and has now hit the surface in the mainstream press with several top players going on the record. And even if you take the world #1 out of the equation, we all recognize now that signaling is a danger and measures should be taken.
Kramnik has nothing to do with anything, for one. He was accused of impossible crimes by his opponent in one case and hasn't spoken on the other. Topalov has been accused of possible crimes by many people but no proof has come up and it never will. So we need to stop making it about those individuals and deal with the problem. And that's not ceiling cables!
Posted by: Mig at February 14, 2007 02:20Another interesting thing to say to those accusing Topalov's performance in San Luis and his jump in rating after 2005 as proofs for computer aid, is the following:
In Elista there was a glass between the players. Topalov could not have cheated in this match. He still lost marginally (-1 in slow play. I do not count rapid since this is different). He had better positions and lost probably because of lack of nerves/match experience (or class if you prefer).
Kramnink is supposed to be excellent match player. So anyone coming so close to beat Kramnink in a match cannot possibly be a bad player. This match showed Kramnink being marginally better match player, which means that Topalov (being more risky) is likely to be better tournament player (on this his recent success was based).
Also, Topalov, before and during the first couple of games, he was obviously very confident (overpressing in drawn position in 1st game). That would not be the case if his success the last 2 years was the outcome of using computer aid, since he knew that there was a glass and he could not use the hypothetical computer aid...
Posted by: derida at February 14, 2007 02:23Well, if you're going to get into the ultra-circumstantial performance analysis aspect, consider whether or not Kramnik would have lost those two games without the bladdergate distraction. But that's not really the point. Everyone knows Topalov is very, very strong. He had results at the very highest level long ago.
Posted by: Mig at February 14, 2007 02:29Mig,
very good summary. I totally agree with your conclusions except on one point:
I do think that the video proves something. It shows quite clearly that signalling is very *possible* and *could* be happening right there.
Not ever having visited any events myself I was really shocked to see how easy it would be and that Topailov make no effort to disperse any doubt of assistance.
The equivalent to athletics would be something like this: Say there is a performance enhancing drug (=computer assistance) which is impossible to detect, once applied. And say that syringes of this stuff are found with the trainer of the world champion (that would be the cell phone and the direct line of sight). What good would it do for them to say "Oh, but we never!"?
I am not saying Topalov cheated - but I think that a player of this level and his trainer must be aware of the damage that their suspicious behaviour does to the sport. And why oh why are they so damnably callous about it? This is no laughing matter (as their response to journalists questions seems to suggest), this seriously damages the image of the sport. And this is what they can be blamed for.
And to make things even worse, their reply to this (to go back to my athletics analogy) is not to throw away the bloody syringes but to point at the colour of their opponents track - as if that would make him run faster or as if their own track had another colour. Simpy horrible.
Posted by: Chuenthe at February 14, 2007 04:41I would like to say, that the rational behind the appeal comitee decision, in Elista was exactly the same. They knew that Kramnink has done nothing, but in order to erase any possible doubts they chose to close the toilets. Even if the incedents are not identical, you must realise that the idea of removing doubts is the same.
Kramninks reaction was not to play. The publics reaction was that the appeal comitee should resign.. But they just did, what you ask FIDE (and organisors) to do now. Remove doubts.
...
Posted by: derida at February 14, 2007 01:59
But as you say yourself, there was no doubt whatsoever ("they knew that Kramnik had done nothing wrong"). The players & rooms were checked for metal devices, so it makes no difference where Kramnik spent his time - the only thing I get from those photos is that the toilet seems a pleasant enough place to spend some time ;)
The appeals committee should simply have rejected the complaint out of hand. No doubt Topailov would then have come up with some other trick, but the match might have lasted longer under normal conditions.
Re: Topalov cheating - I'd have dismissed it out of hand until this "we're all as bad as each other" campaign, trying to drag Kramnik down into the mud. Given e.g. Danailov quoting Fritz statistics you either have to acknowledge that as a malicious attempt to distract Kramnik, or an admission that his own charge cheated (Topalov's stats are of course more damning, if you're taking that as proof of cheating). I'd go with the malicious attempt, for what it's worth.
In any case, there clearly needs to be some segregation of players and coaches. Even without signalling a Danailov who's always up-to-date with the computer assessment of a position & in line-of-sight with his player is likely to convey an idea of the assessment, whether deliberate or not.
Posted by: mishanp at February 14, 2007 05:18Mig,
"Topailov" should be short for Topalov and Danilov? Fine, but why don't you simply put Topalov and Danilov or a similar combination instead of using "Topailov"? It's just childish and tasteless. It also gives the impression that you have smth against them. If you are worried that it would take too long to spell out their names in full, maybe you should make sure to copy it so you can paste it?!
>you must realise that the idea of removing doubts is the same.>
Precisely !
Many arguments can be now given against Topalov cheating by signaling, and could have given against Kramnik cheating during his too often trips the bathroom in Elista (he may have had health problems or whatever) but the point is
the same : not "proving" since such situations can can not be proved, the point is "remove uncertainty", doubts, and the need for arguments altogether.
>I would also like to remind to people, that Topalov acccepted to have the glass between him and the audience at the match in Elista EVEN IF IT WAS NOT IN THE CONTRACT.>
YES. Topalov did what was rational to do so as to end the problem and suspicions rather than try to "prove" that he was not cheating, you don't need "regulations" and FIDE committe decisions with both people willing to solve a problem.
Wot's with the whole "Topailov" name-calling, Mig? No matter how many "I'm not insulting anyone" excuses you come up with, ie., practical; Topalov and Danailov said they're one; I don't want to free Topalov from responcibility; but Danailov is a force unto himself - very tricky; so they insult Kramnik and this makes "Topailov" ok, I mean, accurate - did I paraphrase you correctly?
However, why do I still feel you're being insulting? I mean, it just sounds like you wanna have your cake and eat it too! Like, blog somewhat journalistic but have a clever way to vent with a good, legalized insult - hey, we all like to call someone whose pissed us off a "beeping beep!"
But why don't you just be honest? Or if you are, I apologize - seriously!
Posted by: Tomish at February 14, 2007 07:03This stuff about Topalov agreeing to glass when it wasn't in the contract is all very well, but nothing was in the contract about playing conditions. It was specified that these should be agreed before the match (UK contractual lawyers will perceive that this is nonsensical, but maybe Elista/Swiss/whatever law is different), including all the other anti-cheating measures that were agreed to.
It is certainly a point in Topalov's favour that he agreed to it, but "EVEN THOUGH IT WASN'T IN THE CONTRACT" is misleading.
Posted by: rdh at February 14, 2007 07:45I hope this all dies down.
But for now, a few tournaments with good security will help calm things. Hopefully!
Interestingly, I went over to Kramnik's website yesterday, and there is nothing about all this controversey. Or at least not a discussion. Very calm over there.
Posted by: Kenny Foster at February 14, 2007 07:46I find the Kramnik cheating allegations based on the cable evidence prima facie ridiculous. After realising the basis of the allegations against Topalov, namely that Danailov used a hand gesture to signal information of a binary nature, I find the cheating allegations against Topalov also to be prima facie ridiculous. Both theories, whether its the one based on the cable, or the other one based on a hitherto as yet mystical signalling protocol implemented by facial twitches and hand movements whose only damning property is resemblance to normal human movement, belong in cloud cuckoo land. As an aside, I have to say I remain completely unconvinced by the supposed strength of this "binary" signalling scheme. You need to have the move, and having the first move in a computer combination without knowing the rest is a sure way of self destruction. The chances that a situation arises in a game where a "danger" signal or a "take action" signal would be useful given the strength of the protagonists is frankly ludicrous. This is as ridiculous as saying that somebody signalled Kramnik in Elista by the absence or presence of a cable in his bathroom.
Posted by: d at February 14, 2007 07:59>>Topailov seems to think that anyone who doesn't agree with them that ceiling cables are the same risk as signaling is biased against them. I sincerely don't understand this. >>
Ceiling cables are one thing, but he could never have accessed them if they hadn't let Kramnik take that ladder into the bathroom with him. Would it have been asking too much to have the referee confiscate that?
Mig, what about of the paper signed for VEGA and KUTIN? don't think is a good idea question them about the authenticity of that paper?
Posted by: Calogero at February 14, 2007 08:47Graeme, you are completely right. I always thought Kramnik was innocent, but the ladder convinced me in the end. Come on! A country struck by poverty, and then they put the only web cable and the only ladder of the country in Kramnik's toilet? A coincidence?
I think not! This proves once more the Russian bias against our Vesko; he did not receive the same generous treatment as the local hero. No ladder for him. No wonder he lost!
Posted by: Oscar at February 14, 2007 09:03I can't wait for the candidates matches to start. This drivel about hand signals and cables is wearing thin.
Mig, is there any talk about restricting the playing hall to players and arbiters at these big-cheese events? Perhaps using curtains to cordon off the playing area? In this modern world of technology, it seems that it is likely these big events have the games displayed on overhead chess boards for all to see. I'd like to see the defacto 'playing area' cordoned off with curtains or non-players removed from the playing halls to avoid any of these signalling issues in the future.
What do you think the short-term, tournament setting solution is?
Posted by: Mark at February 14, 2007 09:51It's very easy to cheat if a cable is available, and your failure too see that tells very much. BTW, what about the letter? Any official explanations?
Posted by: cheater at February 14, 2007 09:52Mig, let's forget the picture of the cable, Topalov can not prove something with that,but now we can concentrate in the letter signed by VEGA-KUTIN.Can somebody ask those two guys about the authenticity of that paper?
Posted by: Calogero at February 14, 2007 10:01"Of course the unusual thing would be to break open the ceiling of any room in any modern building and not find cables."
Yeah, there are netcables everywhere, sure. Including anti-cheating made rooms. Accept it: Topalov was right, there was real reason to believe in cheating. BTW, what about the letter? Any official explanations?
Posted by: cheater at February 14, 2007 10:01One can't help but get the feeling that Topailov's team is spamming the comments section... someone did remark earlier on how Topailov's team seems to treat everyone else as idiots who'll fall for their lines by insistent repetition.
Posted by: SH at February 14, 2007 10:32Give this "Topailov" stuff a break - really its distasteful and does your argument no good. Mig seems to have missed the point about the computer cables - of course we know about the pictures before, but we did not know that the 2nd appeals committee resigned because the we were NOT TOLD COMPUTER CABLES WERE FOUND EARLIER. Lets assume for a minute there was nothing suspicious happening, why did chessbase.com not publish this letter - the point is not the computer cables but that they were not told of their discovery. Everything coming out of chessbase.com is completely one-sided.
Posted by: Roy Keane at February 14, 2007 10:38"Lets assume for a minute there was nothing suspicious happening, why did chessbase.com not publish this letter - the point is not the computer cables but that they were not told of their discovery."
Did ANYBODY ELSE publish this letter until Topalov's site did? Did Chessbase KNOW about the letter?
Posted by: acirce at February 14, 2007 10:54Hi Roy! Are you somehow related to the famous football player? Didn't see you here before!
Mig, would it be possible somehow to show the country (or the first part of the IP-address) of a poster? From time to time I have the impression your blog is visited by somebody suffering from schizophrenia, which causes him/her to post under many different names.
As about the letter of Vega and Kutin, probably it is real. So? What does that prove? If I'd know how Kramnik could smuggle a computer and a ladder (both not containing any metal) past the security check, I'd be very suspicious. But now?
Posted by: Oscar at February 14, 2007 10:55Yes, this letter was published before, by ChessToday if no-one else.
One plausible explanation of why Vega and Kutin were not told about the cables is that no-one thought they were interesting or important. So the Bulgarians want to rip the ceiling open and tear the cables out; so what? Then Azmai and Makro got booted and their mates Vega and Kutin didn't like it, the Bulgarians asked them to sign such a letter, and they did.
I mean, Vega at least is obviously an idiot since he went along with the initial Appeals Committee decision, which all reasonable people agree was fatuous. I know nothing of this Kutin, which is why I've been asking people to post who he is. Sounds like no-one knows.
Posted by: rdh at February 14, 2007 11:04Just a clarification question: was it impossible
for Kramnik to have a mini-computer then flush
it down the toilet after use (with the cable)?
Oscar,the letter it could be irrelevant even if VEGA-KUTIN accept they signed it.The most relevant is the information behind the letter that they can provide to the chess media.I think they know more about this matter.It is a big
shame chessbase.com is avoiding publish this
letter.
Good reason for the chess community to black out both this and the signaling accusations--both are stupid unsupported pieces of yellow journalism that are not worthy of being acknowledged until somebody comes up with evidence that supports either allegation. If Woodward and Bernstein came to Bradlee with either this or Breutigam's piece, he would laugh them out of his office.
Posted by: Yuriy Kleyner at February 14, 2007 11:18Vega was on the first appeals committee. He must have known about the cables. If he didn't, put the blame on Danailov.
Danailov just wants to be as popular as Topalov, but he doesn't have the chess talent to do it, so he is using the press to make himself a household word in the chess community.
Posted by: inky at February 14, 2007 11:37Boris Kutin is the president of the European Chess Union (ECU): http://www.eurochess.org/content/view/38/43/
He openly supported Ilyumzhinov, although the ECU supported Kok.
It is just another one of those wild guesses that he or Vega would have important information. However, that is quite unlikely. In their letter they complain they were not informed about the presence of the cables (you know, cables, Russia, Fritz & Kramnik) and only found out far later. Doesn't sound to me that they know much.
And surely veselintopalov.net would publish that important information if it existed, right?
Posted by: Oscar at February 14, 2007 11:41Freddy's traveling to Morelia so I put up the cable item at ChessBase just now. I even corrected a bunch of Danailov typos in the original just to show what a spiffy fellow I am.
http://www.chessbase.com/newsdetail.asp?newsid=3670
By the way, there is a much better version of the Topailov video available now. The audio is entirely convincing.
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=utfJDtRannc
Posted by: Mig at February 14, 2007 12:54Thanks for posting the cable item at CB Mig. This was the fair thing to do. I am also of the opinion none of them cheated. However I do believe that people connected to Kramnik innitiated this controversy after Topalov won San Luis and that Topa felt obliged to react in his own way. Tit for tat.
Posted by: ed at February 14, 2007 13:15rdh: I mean, Vega at least is obviously an idiot since he went along with the initial Appeals Committee decision, which all reasonable people agree was fatuous.
--------------------
Closing the private, unobserved, not to mention cable laden restroom was as reasonable as requesting screens and all of the other reasonable security measures that were discussed so far. The ‘fatuous’ part is how the Appeals Committee got blown out of the water and asked to leave town…
D.
P.S. Prolonged exposure to “group think” creates a very skewed notion of what ‘public opinion’ means and the benchmark for ‘reasonable’...
Posted by: Dimi at February 14, 2007 13:28
I know that Kramnik is tall, but even standing on the toilet would not get him reaching the ceiling, I think. Did he climb on the fountain?
Posted by: Oscar at February 14, 2007 13:31Dimi wrote
Closing the private, unobserved ...was as reasonable as requesting screens and all of the other reasonable security measures that were discussed so far.
...
That's correct but it has taken to some people few months of, passionately, talking nonsense and trashing Topalov to get here.
Posted by: Ovidiu at February 14, 2007 13:58The bitter acrimony of the first two K-K matches occured just before I began to follow chess, but I still vividly remember their frosty relations in the late 1980's and 1990's (a bit less so now). But man o' man has Topalov & Co. created one of the most hostile feuds I can remember in recent times. Read this line regarding Corus 2007 from the Topalov website:
"It was obvious how Topalov won a shared first place with style, and Kramnik had to struggle every move to achieve a fourth place."
Every move, huh? Did Kramnik almost resign before playing 1. Nf3 or 1. d4? Poor undefeated Kramnik. I like Topalov's chess, but if he allows drivel like this, the cables, etc., to continue coming forth from his own website, then it appears he lacks as much intelligence and class away from the chessboard as he possesses on it.
Then again, who doesn't love a good chess feud, however one-sided this one may be.
Posted by: RS at February 14, 2007 15:22Bravo, Mig, bravo!!
It was high time somebody cut through the BS.
Bravo MIG!Your comentary about the article in Chessbase are patetic like always.Keep it like this,your future is great.If you want to learn how to write,check from time to time veselintopalov.net.This guys have a class,they are not ignorant like you.
Posted by: loopus at February 14, 2007 16:37Yes Ovidiu and that proves the old adage: he who controls the media controls everything. [In that respect think of Gary Kasparov and his uphill fight.]
Now reading how the appeals committee got chased out of town and these guys “claiming that they signed a document that was not supposed to exist” – Jesus, Holy Lord, the whole thing stinks to High Heaven. I’ve never seen something like that… This is way out there… This is not something that Danailov wrote, don’t blame it on him. Having read all that I’m starting to get interested in the book actually.
I blamed Topalov for his reckless rhetoric. I was amazed to see it coming from a mellow and soft-spoken guy like him who is not new to losing. But now I imagine myself having endured something like this. Ethics investigation, baloney – they should start by fixing the house first.
In the meantime I hope we can watch some good chess in Linares. Away from all this…
D.
Posted by: Dimi at February 14, 2007 16:40
"Note to those who missed this explanation in the comments awhile back. I use the term "Topailov" not to insult anyone but for practical reasons."
you are an idiot.
Posted by: 78 at February 14, 2007 17:02"If you want to learn how to write,check from time to time veselintopalov.net.This guys have a class,they are not ignorant like you.
Posted by: loopus at February 14, 2007 16:37"
They could sure do with a class or two ;)
Re: phase two of the spam war - "The Letter".
Danailov/veselintopalov.net, why don't you provide a full English translation of the toilet inspection "protocol" on your site? Your readers are missing out on some comic moments, as the "Bulgarian experts with their special equipment" go on the rampage with a tube of polyfilla (the detail is great).
The inspection was on the 1 October and after filling in holes and removing a few cables, the toilet was declared fit to use.
Why exactly does it matter if Vega (privy to the original ludicrous decision of the Appeals Committee) says he didn't know about the inspection? (Bovaev and Nikolopulos were there from among the organisers - oddly Kramnik's team weren't invited or declined to attend the party)
If there was anything truly significant found there I suspect we'd have heard about it from another member of the toilet inspection crew - our friend Danailov (no, ceiling cables don't count). Trying to rustle up some unspecified conspiracy for an event you witnessed directly smacks of real desperation.
Posted by: mishanp at February 14, 2007 17:11You use topailov in a derogatory way... showing your bias.
Posted by: zaur at February 14, 2007 17:13Haven't any of you guys heard about Fiberglass ladders?
He had the ladder in his lunch box that is why the metal detector did not pick it up.
oops, should have read the Chessbase article first! Nevermind - good to see the inspection protocol translation made the light of day ;)
Posted by: mishanp at February 14, 2007 17:20>>Now reading how the appeals committee got chased out of town and these guys “claiming that they signed a document that was not supposed to exist” – Jesus, Holy Lord, the whole thing stinks to High Heaven. I’ve never seen something like that… This is way out there… >>
Look out Mig does not want us to discuss Religion and Politics. That is why no one ever mentions Russian and Bulgarian interests.
Dimi, I would never guess you were such a Holy Roller. Do you vote as a Conservative Christian for Bush? Look out the Liberal Democrates might get back into power. Americans are fed up with the RD and TK arguments.
note below: you might guess correctly that RD is Republican Democrat. and TK is Topalov Kramnik.
I estimate there are less than 100 people who argue on these blogs about TK. There are 7 billion other people in the world who are getting on with their life and don't even know about this argument. Is there a mathematician who can come up with a percentage?
I want everyone to raise their hands who can tell me that they will lose sleep tonight over who wins this argument. LOL. WOW 6 billion hands just shot up.
Now there are 3 things not to talk about in polite company. Religion and Politics and Chess.
I must be sick. I have to admit I kind of enjoy reading almost all of the comments. A few comments are a bit hard to believe. Keep having fun guys. I know Dimi will. Who else is having fun arguing?
Posted by: Kenny Foster at February 14, 2007 17:37"If you want to learn how to write,check from time to time veselintopalov.net.This guys have a class,they are not ignorant like you.
Posted by: loopus at February 14, 2007 16:37"
If having "class" means "to distort", "to slander", "to tell partial truths", and "to mislead", or even "to lie", then yes, they certainly do have class.
Posted by: Daniel J Andrews at February 14, 2007 17:40Hmmm...flushable computer, interesting idea. Hopefully when he logged on it was microsoft.
But wait! This just in: electrical outlets were found in Kramnik's Elista toilet! We'll that clinches it, he must have cheated!
Posted by: Zinger at February 14, 2007 18:18Kenny, if you feel somewhat jaded and wanna talk about gun control, women's issues and the minimum wage you can shoot me an e-mail: dimitar@pontix.com
Here, I stick to chess and related issues.
D.
Posted by: Dimi at February 14, 2007 18:53
Dimi
>>Kenny, if you feel somewhat jaded and wanna talk about gun control, women's issues and the minimum wage you can shoot me an e-mail>>
If I had a gun I would shoot myself. No women issues thank goodness. All the women have left me and I finally have happiness. Minimum wage no one wants to pay me that much.
I like you and I enjoy reading your opinion. I actually feel you are one of the better people at working logically through this mess. You are doing a good job. I just like to tease people sometimes. So I pick on those who I feel are more solid. I call it a little male bonding. LOL.
Anyway I came to say that NASCAR is having cheating problems at the top. Very interesting write up on ABC News.
http://abcnews.go.com/Sports/story?id=2874645&page=1
The articles seems to have parallels to our problems in chess.
My ride to the sanitarium just arrived. They want me there for observations. See you later alligator.
Posted by: Kenny Foster at February 14, 2007 19:25This is really pathetic Mig. For over two month you were hiding PHYSICAL evidence of Kramnik cheating (or backfired attempted of cheating) in Elista and at the same time you devoted many post to ALLEGATION about Topalov's foul play. Now you say that you never believed that either was true. What a surprise! And how strange that your post (as well as the one on the Chessbase site) appeared only after Danailov published copy of documents showing that members of Appeal Committee were ready to resign after they discovered FIDE organized cover up operations. Let's make it clear, nobody wanted to resign when UTF cable was found in Kramnik's bathroom; Appeal Committee wanted to resign after learning that information about that UTF cable was hidden from them. So, what was your comment about Nixon and cover up operations a few days ago, I forgot it ...?
Posted by: widowmaker at February 14, 2007 19:48Hi, Mig! I've changed my mind and you know what - I love the "Topailov" thing! But you should have one for Kramnik too? It's only fair. You claim to be balanced; well, how about... um, I've heard people say "Drawnik" - because of Vladimir's style of play. Distasteful? Ok... how about "Kramsel" - it's just like your "Topailov" Player-Manager merge; Kram(nik) + Hen(sel), get it! It's a lot better trippingly on the tongue too. And I bet if you think real hard you could roll out some good excuses: like, that Hensel "speaks in the name of Kramnik"; umm, oh, that one about crediting the actions and words of the player with the manager could work; what else, um... influence; responcibility; practicality (my personal fave!); accuracy - but that dosn't really work in your excuse either, so well scrub that ... whoa, whoa! - can I hear you murmur that it's still not the same as your crafty nameplay?
Gee-whiz! And I thought it was!
Dude, seriously, I being totally moronic. However, no less than your silly, I-don't-mean-to-offend insult! You should really rethink that insult. Cause it is, dude, no matter how many coats of paint you apply over it.
Posted by: Tomish at February 14, 2007 21:52"Mig" is honorifically collapsed from (Mi)chael (G)reengard, in the same way "Topailov" is honorifically collapsed.
Posted by: zero@ego.com at February 14, 2007 22:11Yeah, cool. "Mig" is a very cool name. But there's no coolness attached to "Topailov" in any form, shape, meaning, or honorific excuse, no matter how you spin it - paalease!
Posted by: Tomish at February 14, 2007 22:27@Tomish
What is so insulting about this? Who is being insulted? Topalov by being associated with his manager or vice versa? They say they speak with one voice, that they are one person even - so?
I think the term "Topailov" signifies that they are both responsible for all the BS - as they are. And "Topailoopus" or "Topailovomish" are, although definately cooler, a bit cumbersome.
Posted by: Chuenthe at February 14, 2007 23:36Yeah, Topialov is not cool. Its just petty and childish. If you want to hold Topalov responsible for everything Danailov says, that's fine, in the same way that when a company spokesperson says something, it's fair to attribute it to the company. But if you're going to use Topialov I won't blame others if they start using Migasparobase.
Posted by: zhorik at February 15, 2007 00:13Every time Mug uses Topailov he should get a new name himself. Greentard, for example.
Posted by: ggg at February 15, 2007 00:14Are you kidding! I mean, you just okayed the name "Kramsel." Do you think Vladimir would enjoy reading that in a high-profile chess blog?
Whoa, dude! That argument is so wrong! Look, I may have got you wrong, and upfront apologies if I have - but what I glean from your name-calling acceptance is: if a celebrity, sportsperson, etc., within the public sphere does something wrong, this gives a social commentator who (and this is the crux) purports to neutrally observe the public sphere sudden license to be insulting. Right? (I mean, it's not as if Mig isn't aware that "Topailov" maybe insulting, or else he wouldn't have tacked the excusitory footnote).
"And "Topailoopus" or "Topailovomish" are, although definately cooler, a bit cumbersome."
Gesh...
Posted by: Tomish at February 15, 2007 00:25Ok, I see your point if the word "Topailov" has any insulting meaning (in Bulgarian) that I am not aware of. As for the "Kramsel"...hmmm. They never said that they are one, which is the whole point of "Topailov".
As for objective journalism - this is not what a blog is for. Mig has always said that he is voicing his subjective view.
Sorry, about the "Topailovomish" thing. I am aware it is completely beside the point. I just couldn't resist the sound of the word. No insult intended. Neither by associating you with Topailov or with loopus (whose trolling above just got on my nerves).
Posted by: Chuenthe at February 15, 2007 01:26"Ok, I see your point if the word "Topailov" has any insulting meaning (in Bulgarian) that I am not aware of. As for the "Kramsel"...hmmm. They never said that they are one, which is the whole point of "Topailov"
So "Topailov" is okay? But you don't like "Kramsel?" That's so unbalanced, it's gross! If a manager says he speaks "as one" with his or her client he represents, it's a way of saying they agree. Not the sudden right to read or warp what they said as something more than that.
I could warp that same logic with Hensel's "I speak in the name of Kramnik," - and say, read into it as a weird wedding vow! Hence, "Kramsel." Or warp it into a political alliance between Russia and Germany, called the "Kramsel Treaty." Dude, I could go on...
It's still an insult!
Posted by: Tomish at February 15, 2007 01:55Considering that Danailov raised Topalov, the ties between Topalov and Danailov seems to be permanent, and the term Topailov seems therefore to be quite durable too.
Hensel is just Kramnik's agent, albeit a very capable one. But Kramnik could easily appoint an equally capable agent Johnson, and we would have to change Kramsel to Kramson or whatever.
Posted by: zero@ego.com at February 15, 2007 02:13I'm not saying "Kramsel" is any more of an insult than "Topailov". As far as I am concerned, you can "Kramsel" all you like. You have to admit though, that Topailov's behaviour credits the name a lot better than Kramsel's.
I still don't see the insult. I think plays on words like that are quite common, even in neutral media. In Germany they are, anyway. They can be used to illustrate things. I can remember that the German Minister for family, Ms. van der Leyen, was referred to as Ms. "van der Leiden" (as in suffering) in a German newspaper. I am not saying that this (or "Topailov", for that matter) is particularly brilliant but I can't see how it hurts anyone. Especially when refering to someone who is dealing in real insults (see topalovnet).
Posted by: Chuenthe at February 15, 2007 02:17Now that's reeeally stretching the excuse!
Posted by: Tomish at February 15, 2007 02:21I was not trying to make an excuse as I think none is required. Some people, of course, are willing (even eager) to be insulted by anything.
But we digress.
Why are we talking about the pc way to refer to people who do not care to show the slightest correctness themselves but continue to slander and insult, doing great damage to the sport?
the name "Topailov" is not for the convenience of the writer but for the reader.
it makes reading easier, since you do not have to read everytime the phrase: "Topalov and Danailov, which say they are one person," instead.
Just Topailov. its ok.
"I was not trying to make an excuse as I think none is required."
Dude, then why on earth do you keep coming up with so many, er, explanations - is that a better term?
"Some people, of course, are willing (even eager) to be insulted by anything."
Huh?
"Why are we talking about the pc way to refer to people who do not care to show the slightest correctness themselves but continue to slander and insult, doing great damage to the sport?"
Because this makes you just as bad, if not worse than them. Why should we take anyone seriously if they refer to the person in a serious conversation without regard? Does this make you in anyway better? Should I take you more seriously than the person you just offended?
"the name "Topailov" is not for the convenience of the writer but for the reader."
Please, don't treat the reader like an idiot. There's no convenience in name-calling - no matter which, how, when, and why you dress it.
Posted by: Tomish at February 15, 2007 03:35The cables' plastic housing was coated with tiny platinum iridium spheres with top secret new poison unknown to the bulgarians, and Kramnik was busy in the toilet rubbing his hands on them. At the end of the game, would shake topalov's hands and impregnate him with the pellets, thereby poisoning him. Kramnik has spent years developing an immunity to the poison during secret kgb spy training.
This is the plot on Topalov's life! DON'T YOU SEE. THE RUSSIANS ARE OUT TO GET YOU!
Tomish
Yes, I think "explanations" is a better term, as you (and others) seem to require one.
And again my question to you in the waning hope of an answer: What exactly is so offensive about "Topailov"? Does one of the two, here amalgamated for the sake of brevity and wit, not want to be associated with the other? Is one so much baser or better than the other?
It makes me just as bad or worse? Whoa! I think what you mean to say is that you feel that it discredits the argumentation. I feel different - ok. Anything beyond that, let alone being as "bad" as these two - I should hope not.
Btw, careful there, I might find the "Dude" offensive. I have a name, you know.
Ok....
Posted by: Tomish at February 15, 2007 04:30:-)
Posted by: Chuenthe at February 15, 2007 05:09Chuenthe, I apologise if calling u "dude" offended u (but I hav a wee inkling it didn't...) Howeva, if I causd offence, a rich heart-felt sorry, my friend (I hope!) I loathe insults and I didn't intend to cause any offense!
"Yes, I think "explanations" is a better term, as you (and others) seem to require one."
Er, no I don't. An insult is an insult, no matter how many excuses or explanations for it you invent. We all know she wouldn't, but let me put it this way: what if Susan Polgar referred to Kramnik as "Kramsel" in her blogs, with the same little excusitory footnote as I used? Is that ok?
"And again my question to you in the waning hope of an answer: What exactly is so offensive about "Topailov?"
Gesh, this is getting circular and boring (on my behalf, coz I've said this in so many forms as to why, so maybe it's my fault) - ok, "Topailov" is offensive because, simply: would Topa and Danailov be offended reading their family names distorted on the the world stage? In a high-profile chess article? And from a respected commentator?
Warm and fuzzy?
Posted by: Tomish at February 15, 2007 05:13Surely the point is that Topalov and Danailov need a bit of ridicule? Insulting isn't the right word. Of course the nickname pokes fun at them. They need it.
Dimi, no commentator in the Western world thinks the Appeals Committee was anything other than crazy. If you think I'm wrong, post a link.
Posted by: rdh at February 15, 2007 05:41Ok, lets agree to disagree.
I personally would not be offended to have my family name mangled up
- even if this was world stage (it's a blog).
- even if this was a high profile chess article (it is a blog).
- even if Mig was a respected commentator (and not a bald blog writer, albeit a very good one).
And of course, you can call me "Dude", friend. Not Susan Polgar, though - she can't.
Gotta run now. Have a good one.
Posted by: Chuenthe at February 15, 2007 05:51I could not have said it better, rdh.
(and, in fact, I didn't)
Thanks.
>But wait! This just in: electrical outlets were found in Kramnik's Elista toilet! We'll that clinches it, he must have cheated!
Not entirely far-fetched ;) http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Power_line_communication
It's not only the fact that Kramnik theoretically might have had the possibility for network access in his private unsurveilled room, but this in combination with his behaviour that - after neutral arbiters and the original members of the Appeals Committee had studied the video tapes - led to his room being locked up. Plus the attempted cover-up of the findings that we have come to know now.
Posted by: poisoned pawn at February 15, 2007 06:25"And there assume some other horrible form,
Which might deprive your sovereignty of reason
And draw you into madness? think of it:
The very place puts toys of desperation,
Without more motive, into every brain
That looks so many fathoms to the sea
And hears it roar beneath."
In 2005, Topalov was walking, lending his mind to God when he had a vision. It transformed him…
In 2005, Topalov became the greatest player in the world. The spirit of Tal and the opening professionalism of Botnovick communed spiritually into his soul and he became a bishop wielding king-killer, in the name of the the one true King. Topalov ascended to the heights of the chess scene and took the world by storm as Kasparov fled in pursuit of blunders political. A real chess player! a risk taker with aspirations from the top! skyrocketed to an amazing 6/7 performance in the first half of the World Championship in San Luis and went on to easily clinch victory from the lesser chess players. Kramnik, finally out of excuses (his back hurting, too tired to play, etc) existentially gulped. Something would have to be done to stop the burgeoning whirlwind of chess wizardry sweeping the chessdom. A challenge! Negotiation! Rejection? Nay, a reunification match at last! No more excuses, Kramnik secured his half a million and now needed something to stop the phenomenon, hallowed be his name--Topalov.
The jig was up. Kramnik could no longer rest on his laurels. He thought of retirement, living with his beautiful fiance, enjoying a peaceful married life reading literature, drinking fine wine and hobnobbing with artists; but he was restless in his soul. He was not ready to step down. He tried coming up with new, cutting edge openings with his seconds, but after awhile he put it all aside in a fury of frustration, dramatically sweeping the pieces off his analysis set. His improvements were paltry compared to the perpetual fount of brilliance Topalov and Cheparinov's collaboration so effortlessly yielded. Kramnik's pride burned in search of a solution, of some kryptonite. The days of trekking in the enchanted wilderness for days looking for the chessmaster's stone were over. He lacked the energy of his youth. He cut his off his mane long ago and settled down into a groove, which soon became a rut. His girlfriend gave him the energy and inspiration crucial to his current status, but the truth was Kramnik was never capable of outshining a star like Topalov and he knew it, no matter how inspired. But what did his wife or anyone understand of such matters as the pride and joy of winning? Of the glory of inflicting an impending checkmate or securing the crucial draw to establish oneself as champion of the world, undisputed king of chess itself. No, having reached such a height he would not let Topalov take it from him, no matter what it would take.
And so it was that Kramnik let darkness into his heart.
Kramnik made a deal with the FSB, which was done easily enough and the necessary arrangements were secured. Of course, Kramnik and Topalov made considerable concessions to enforce security, but Kramnik knew his method was failsafe, having gone over it with the FSB many times. It hurt his pride a bit that he was going to win by trickery, but one look at Topalov’s manly confidence and he was filled with disgust. How could this man be favored by the chess God’s, he thought? Kramnik, now filled with envy, focused it on his task The wire had been laid, victory was only hundreds of bathroom breaks away, he could taste it...
Everyone was searched, the bathrooms were swept clean and checked, but right above the ceiling, where no one suspected, there was placed a UTP-5 wire, waiting for Kramnik…The method was simple, Kramnik, after the usual opening blitz, would get up from his chair when he needed assistance. He would walk into the bathroom where a few moments earlier by means of new technology an FSB team of agents in a van across the street (marked Cleaning Van) had jammed the video feed and replaced it with prerecorded video of Kramnik using the restroom. But Kramnik only had a few minutes to act before the film looped. He climbed from the toilet, to the sink, to the support bars and reached the ceiling panel. Sweat condensed upon his brow. He slid the ceiling tile and removed the wire, bringing it down. He took off his glasses and took out the screw, which contained a customized Rybka computer and then took a paper clip, connecting the mini computer to the screw. Soon, after a few minutes, he had to get back. He put the wire back, stepped down from the sink and the toilet and then put on his glasses, looking into the microscopic LED screen for the reading. He then quickly screwed his glasses back in, flushed the toilet and hurried back…
Kramnik had only planned to do this procedure a few times in a match, but over the board Topalov’s resilience was so immensely powerful that even with a few powerful computer moves Kramnik found himself overwhelmed. He no longer trusted his judgment and began to rely more and more on the computer analysis. He learned how to hop strait onto the bar after going into the bathroom and going through the procedure in a couple of minutes, so desperate was he. But, it paid. Kramnik won the first two games. Topalov prayed for chess kids in inner city schools and for grace in his own life, confessed his sins and let free his heart, unconcerned with the game. He knew if he played his best and gave his heart to God, God would be pleased and His will would be great even if Kramnik ultimately won. But Danailov could not understand it. He became suspicious of Kramnik, who made much noise going to the bathroom and would come back out of breath, playing his move as soon as he returned. Finally, it became too much after four games and he protested, eventually finding the wire…
Mig,
>Both Veselin Topalov and his manager Silvio Danailov have said that they speak with one voice and once that they are "the same person."
It's not Topa's fault that there where attempts to separate the team and he had to state the obvious: that his managers statements reflect of course his own views. Him not being a native English speaker, I think you could give him some slack whith regard to the wording "the same person". In the given context it is quite clear what was meant.
>I don't want to credit Topalov with everything Danailov says [...]
You absolutely don't have to. It is really simple and not at all uncommon: Mr. Danailov represents world #1 Topalov.
I think - and forgive me for saying this - your explanation is rather tricksy. Given the obvious fact that your neologism is very likely to be perceived as an insult, it would be more interesting if you put the cards on the table and explain why you might want to do that to a team, which during the last years has enriched the chess world whith exciting games, powerful concepts (Sofia rules) and a successful new tournament (M-Tel Masters).
‘there where attempts to separate the team’.
Jeez, you people are thick! Can’t you understand? Many people really liked Topalov before this happened. They liked his play and his openness. Then Danailov started his ridiculous behaviour and many of those same people found it repellent. But they wanted to keep on liking Topalov. So they hoped – against hope, as it turned out – that Topalov didn’t know what Danailov was doing in his name and would come out after the match and say something sensible.
There weren’t ‘attempts to separate the team’. There were attempts to be as fair as possible to Topalov. Not everything is a conspiracy.
You remind me of the dwarves in the Narnia book – the one with Puzzle the donkey; is it The Last Battle? The ones whom Aslan can’t help because they won’t eat his food, but who understand that ‘the dwarves are for the dwarves’.
As to enriching chess by wonderful new concepts like the Sofia rules, you do know that these same rules were in force in tournaments forty years ago run by wicked Soviet Union, I take it?
As to the rest, if you can’t see why Topalov/Danailov have made themselves ridiculous, there’s probably nothing anyone can say to explain it to you.
>I don't want to credit Topalov with everything Danailov says [...]
You absolutely don't have to. It is really simple and not at all uncommon: Mr. Danailov represents world #1 Topalov.
[...]
Posted by: poisoned pawn at February 15, 2007 07:35
----------
Actually it's extremely uncommon for a manager in chess, or any other sport, to spend much more time talking to the media and boasting about his/her own activities than the player does - e.g. it's not really clear if the veselintopalov.net website is there to promote the player or the manager.
For what it's worth - not taking Danailov's words as representative of Topalov was a case of giving the player the benefit of the doubt. Mistakenly, it turns out.
p.s. I see rdh just beat me to saying the same thing
p.p.s. nice, straw_in_wind!
Posted by: mishanp at February 15, 2007 08:07Believe in the impossible
Lewis Carroll
"I can't believe that!" said Alice.
"Can't you?" the queen said in a pitying tone. "Try again, draw a long breath, and shut your eyes."
Alice laughed. "There's no use trying," she said. "One can't believe impossible things."
"I dare say you haven't had much practice," said the queen. "When I was your age, I always did it for half an hour a day. Why, sometimes I've believed as many as six impossible things before breakfast."
The foundation of the Topalov Danailov Controversey
Lewis Carroll / The Queen would be so proud of Danailov. Nixon says stonewalling only works for so long then it collapses. The Ancient Greeks said the Truth shall set you free.
Posted by: Kenny Foster at February 15, 2007 08:57In the US, celebrity gossip reporters sometimes make up cute nicknames to refer to a famous couple. Like "Tomkat", to refer to Tom Cruise and Katie Holmes.
I've always assumed that "Topailov" was a chessical riff on this, and never imagined it to be an attempt to mock Topalov and Danailov.
Posted by: Puzzled Pawn at February 15, 2007 09:44NIC referred to them as the Two Toppys, or just the Toppys. It seemed an affectionate nickname given to them by other players before this whole Elista thing broke out. Or half affectionate anyway as most liked Topalov but Danailov didn't exactly inspire warm fuzzy feelings in others.
I really hoped Topalov was going to disavow the words and actions of his manager. We Topalov fans couldn't believe Topalov would stoop to such dirty tricks and that Topalov was going to tell Danailov to stop the public slandering of Kramnik. We were wrong.
Posted by: Daniel J Andrews at February 15, 2007 11:21rdh: Dimi, no commentator in the Western world thinks the Appeals Committee was anything other than crazy. If you think I'm wrong, post a link.
1) Brilliant idea -- who needs referees, committees, courts, etc. Let the commentators decide.
2) On the merits -- was it so unreasonable to close an inexplicably frequently attended room outside of camera surveillance? A toilet, mind you, one of several... You mentioned that Danailov is ill advised to walk the halls of any Tournament. I agree. Now, invite yourself to apply the same critical thinking.
3) The commentators -- the view will shift. I predict it here. People sympathize (rightfully) with the plight of the victim. Kramnik did well in that role. With the filtered news we got from Elista that sense was amplified dramatically. Now with the unprecedented campaign against Topalov taking place, and one so devoid of any merit, you will see a shift. Probably even a quick one. Even the avid Topalov-haters perceive that the strategy is wrong.
Recently I scolded a man from Eastern Europe (from a rather limited background) about applying his own critical thinking instead of turning into a zombie of commentators and journalists. If what the commentators said gives you comfort, dear rdh, then I suspect you're quite far from the pinnacles of Western thought.
D.
Regarding 'topailov' -- I've always believed that no one can dissuade a fool from showing who he is. Playing name games? I mean, just how stupid can that be? It puts a tag on the person using such: (1) attitude, (2) low class, (3) not very smart.
I must admit, I've had the impure thoughts of concocting quite a few such names, but can't force myself to go that low. It would be remedied somewhat by a creative and catchy name, but this is not. It's just dumb.
D.
>[ChessBase publishing the photos]
No kidding. And guess what: all of a sudden they have switched their style to a thoroughly critical journalism with all kinds of attenuation ("Well, here, for what they are worth, are The Pictures."). There is even some attempted fact-checking, although they fall short of explaining why somebody would sign and distribute a paper which is meant to be a "draft" (was it perhaps "you better take a couple of K $ than mol Po"). By contrast for example not long ago they coolly cited - without further comment - Bareev in Kommersant word by word except for the part that immediately exposes that he is talking nonsense (namely when he attributes Topa's 0/2 in the first two games to the screen). So much for quoting GM's accusing Topalov of cheating.
>I'm saying signaling is a danger.
Yes, you keep saying that. Have you tested it, come up with a feasible encoding ? What exactly do you want to signal ? In order to not raise any suspicion you have an extremely limited transfer rate at your disposal. No way you can signal whole computer lines, at most 2-3 (half) moves per game and of what use is that if he doesn't see the right continuation ? What you could signal is very rudimentary information (e.g. the opponent has blundered), but of what use is that at that level compared to the distracion to the player ? I think the only danger here is uninformed media blowing up a non-issue that could cause organizers all kind of problems. Not only to separate the audience from the players but think also of players taking a stroll and looking at each others games in a World Championship with some plyers from the same nation.
[...] the video of Danailov proved nothing at all.
Yes it does. Contrary to what the ongoing smear campaign against world #1 Topalov is trying to accomplish, it absolves him 100% of any wrongdoing.
I'm sorry, have you people lost your minds? The highest rated player in the world is behaving like a loon, his manager is clearly off with the fairies too -- and you're whingeing because of the incredibly mild insult of "Topailov", a word that is "insulting" only to the extent that it actually captures something significant about this sad saga. Get a grip! Fight a battle that's worth fighting. The rehabilitation of your idol -- and this is really what you're attempting -- is going to take something more substantial than objecting to a little word.
I've always assumed that chess was a bastion of intelligence, attracting some of the very best minds of our species. Comments like some of those above in this thread make it clear that this couldn't be further from the truth. But, given the rubbish and drivel currently spouted by the highest rated player in the world, the real stupidity is that I'm surprised at all...
Posted by: Theorist at February 15, 2007 12:32>[...] and the players alternated loos in the early rounds anyway?
And what is that supposed to mean ? Well, if the conclusion one should draw from this were that Kramnik cheated "only" every other game and the match result of course nonetheless has to be annuled, I am fine, I would go with that. Remember: it was Kramnik - not Topalov - who went to his lavatory all the time.
Posted by: poisoned pawn at February 15, 2007 13:15Poisoned Pawn writes:
"And what is that supposed to mean ? Well, if the conclusion one should draw from this were that Kramnik cheated "only" every other game and the match result of course nonetheless has to be annuled, I am fine, I would go with that. Remember: it was Kramnik - not Topalov - who went to his lavatory all the time."
Well, if that is the conclusion one should draw, then one should probably leave conclusion-drawing to those with a better aptitude for it.
Posted by: Theorist at February 15, 2007 13:21Theorist, you missed the point entirely. I said that 'Topailov' puts a tag on those who use it. It says something about them. I'm sure Topalov/Danailov don't care. Personally, I'm fine -- it shows me immediately who is who and at what level I can expect them.
Enjoy your theories,
D.
Posted by: Dimi at February 15, 2007 13:36Theorist et al.: please don't embarrass yourselves by insulting and personal attacks - if you don't understand the argument you can always ask.
You still seem to be saying that going to the bathroom all the time means you are cheating. Or that a cable inside the bathroom ceiling means you are cheating. Or that a combination of these two things means you are cheating. Explain.
And no, I don't have to explain in very small words one of the thousands of ways signaling is feasible just to entertain the trolls. It hardly needs to be complex to be effective anyway. It could be two or three moves per tournament, not even per game, and have a major impact. Not even moves, just: [arm shift meaning "do I sacrifice here?"] [cell phone call] [one finger on neck meaning "yes, it's strong]. The perceived need to send many moves or even moves at all is a red herring. But even that would be easy enough and similar has been done before in other games, including the bridge scandal mentioned here many times.
Dimi, that only shows you aren't willing to do any critical thinking. There isn't a consistent point of view from those who use the term even if you say so. I think it's 1) funny and 2) easier than writing the silly "Topalov/Danailov" over and over. And it seemed a natural reaction to the goofy "we are the same person" comment by Danailov. Telling me it's a dire insult "just because" is mindless and confusing.
As for name games, as others have pointed out they are quite common and only occasionally derogatory. When they are, it's usually intrinsic, which in this case it is not. It's just a combination of their names. "Karjak," "Super-Mariov," "Moro," these are hardly insults and I use them all the time. "Drawnik," in contrast, is used as an insult to Kramnik by those who feel he draws too many games.
Posted by: Mig at February 15, 2007 13:58poisoned pawn said "Well, if the conclusion one should draw from this were that Kramnik cheated "only" every other game and the match result of course nonetheless has to be annuled, I am fine, I would go with that. Remember: it was Kramnik - not Topalov - who went to his lavatory all the time."
Certainly an interesting conclusion, poisoned pawn, not one that most would come up with either. I think the most usual conclusion would be if there was some way to use the cable for cheating, then both Kramnik and Topalov could have used that cable. Number of trips to the bathroom is irrelevant. Go 20 times, use the cable 3 times. Go 3 times, use the cable 3 times.
By your logic, it makes just as much sense to say Topalov cheated "only" every other game.
"I've always assumed that chess was a bastion of intelligence..."
Now I know you are trolling. :)
poisoned pawn,
You cannot have a cake and eat it too, sorry! If in your mind the discovery of the cables signifies *possibility* (however remote and ridiculous!) of Kramnik getting outside help and, therefore, is sufficient to demand an investigation (even though nothing concrete was ever found!), by the very same logic the video of Danailov indicates *possibility* of Topalov getting outside help and, therefore, is sufficient to demand an investigation - even though nothing concrete was ever found. And if you absolve Topalov and Danailov from any suspicion because the video is inconclusive - by the very same logic you must absolve Kramnik from any suspicion because the cable discovery is also inconclusive. It's both or none here.
Posted by: Amati at February 15, 2007 14:09Poisoned Pawn: thanks for the offer, but I feel I understand the "argument" quite well. Your tendentiousness is indeed breathtaking, and I compliment you on it. It appears that no obstacle -- practical or logical -- is large enough to be a real impediment to your conviction that Kramnik cheated. Such conviction is normally called faith (if one were being less charitable, zealotry), although you have chosen a somewhat unconventional outlet for it. In any case, I admire it and hope that it does indeed fulfil whatever function you would intend for it to have in your life.
Dimi: your point is a good one, and I apologise if I missed it. One need only observe, of course, that there's not a thing that can't tell someone something about about the "level" of another person and one's "expectations" for them. And while I'm happy you've found a signal to make your life less complicated in that respect, it's a truism that cuts both ways...
Posted by: Theorist at February 15, 2007 14:13Hi Mig,
a ‘dire insult’ it is not. But shows an attitude. People who like shortness use Topa. Again, I personally don’t care and you’re certainly not obliged to appear impartial. Still, if I was a close friend of yours I might insist in private that you drop it.
As far as the frequent toilet visits – the reasonable precaution of closing that unobserved room was what the Appeals Committee did. Or you don’t agree it’s reasonable? Them being run out of town as a consequence is where the strange part started. Then the second committee, etc. Very weird, something between incompetence and a coverup. BTW, did the match continue without a fully functioning Appeals Committee? I’m trying to find that out.
As far as the sign language and the allegation against Topalov/Danailov -- the avalanche is in full progress. You certainly know that it was on Channel 1 in Russia sport’s emission and the usual characters Bareev/Short took part. Yurii Vasiliev had something to say to the contrary and so forth. We will see how that plays out.
Regards,
D.
P.S. I was tempted attimes to use Migbase, but (1) I think it’s low-class (for this forum) to do so, and (2) bad manners to come on your blog and say something less than positive about you, personally. If I have issues, I’ll excuse myself from here and use other forums. Or make my own, whatever.
Posted by: Dimi at February 15, 2007 14:21I agree with rdh with regard to poisoned pawn. It would appear that he's simply a troll playing devil's advocate for his own bizarre gratification.
Posted by: MrScary at February 15, 2007 14:42>Daniel Andrews: Certainly an interesting conclusion, poisoned pawn, not one that most would come up with either.
Daniel, please give yourself more credit -- if someone runs constantly to location X during an event of that magnitude, would you not investigate 'why' that is? Come on.
The same logic applies to Danailov, supposedly making phone calls and popping in and out of the hall. You're right to wonder what's going on.
Now the part that we need to find out –
(1) while we do know that Kramnik went N times to location ‘X’,
(2) we are yet to find out whether what has been alleged of Danailov is true indeed. I know Mig suggested that there are (unnamed) people who claim that to be the case, but I have seen (named) people who say that’s not the case.
As to (2), I am sure that more evidence will be presented and I eagerly anticipate to see how the Breutgam affair will complete.
Regards,
D.
Posted by: Dimi at February 15, 2007 14:57Daniel J Andrews,
If you don't accept the asymmetry due to the length/frequency of the lavatory visits (fumbling out, connecting and stashing a device) you must accept it due to the fact that team Topalov filed a complaint which led to the closure of the lavatories. Wouldn't make much sense if Topalov were depending on it for cheating, would it ?
Posted by: poisoned pawn at February 15, 2007 15:42Why, Poisoned Pawn, can't you see a classic double bluff when you see one?
Posted by: Theorist at February 15, 2007 15:46Amati,
Those are two entirely different situations: one is "only" a tournament (albeit supertournament), the other a World Championship. In the first case having the audience near the players was normal (until now) and every player would have had the same opportunity to cheat by signaling so to speak (we know Mr. Dainalov because he is prominent, but what friends from the other players where in the audience ?). World Championship is more important and should only by held in a sterile environment. So recapitulating, having Mr. Dainalov in the audience of Wijk was per se normal, but that in a World Championship one of the players has potential network access is unacceptable.
Posted by: poisoned pawn at February 15, 2007 16:08Sorry, Poisoned Pawn, can you correct that last sentence? As has already been pointed out, BOTH players had potential network access in at least the first 5 games (unless we are to assume that the construction of one of the bathrooms changed radically after game 5, when the players stopped swapping bathrooms each game -- and I would like to hear/see any evidence along those lines).
Posted by: Theorist at February 15, 2007 16:16rdh: As to the rest, if you can’t see why Topalov/Danailov have made themselves ridiculous, there’s probably nothing anyone can say to explain it to you.
Oh, I missed that jewel, let me indulge myself…
As far as ridiculous, the feelings are mutual perhaps. You did leave an impressions on me during my very first visit here by blurting the ‘Topalov cheats’ tune after Game 8/9 in Elista? Never mind screens, him staying at the table, not jumping to location ‘X’ after every move, etc. Topalov wins and ‘Bingo’, the cheat theory marches forth.
Obviously, being ‘fair & balanced’ is not you strong side and I accept that. Now, having said that, I should tell you also that I like discussions in a difficult, even hostile environment, better than around a bunch of one line ‘Yey-sayers’ who generally just vent. I find it very educational to see how people react and their minds wonder when presented with facts they do not like. As far as the cheating theory goes, you’re an interesting test vehicle to see what's next...
For which, I thank you.
D.
Theorist, was it not pointed out to you already that although both players migh have have visited the networked toilets:
1) Only one filed a complaint (T)
2) The other visited the area all too frequently (K)
Where is the difficulty in comprehension, here?
Sotty, if I sound too terse.
D.
Dimi, the issue presented was as structural one ("potential network access") not a practical one (who filed complaints, who used the bathroom more). Moreover, again, it simply wasn't accurate to say that ONE player had such "access", since the bathroom was available to BOTH players. We all have our own views on how plausible it might be for one player or the other to take advantage of the access (as construed: I, of course, don't believe the "access" to be there in the first place), but that doesn't affect this particular aspect of the debate, which, to reiterate, concerns simply the structure of poisoned pawn's argument.
No need for apologies, either!
Posted by: Theorist at February 15, 2007 16:47Following the story I have started to feel sympathy for poor Vesko. Just imagine him at the board watching Kramnik capturing the pieces confidently while the view to compassionate Danailov, the one who raised him, is blocked by a cold glass wall. It must still haunt him.
Posted by: Zombre at February 15, 2007 16:51Theorist,
>[...] BOTH players had potential network access in at least the first 5 games
Presumably you mean "rounds" instead of "games". Are you suggesting that Topa needs help from an engine even if his opponent insults him by not showing up ? Are you trying to by funny ? As I said, world #1 Topalov demonstrably didn't use the rooms as extensively as Kramnik and saw to it that they get locked (thx Dimi).
>[...] to your conviction that Kramnik cheated.
Never said that. To recap my standpoint:
1. the chance of Kramnik having cheated in Elista is strictly greater than 0 contrary to blogmeister's (and others) belief (due to looks or whatever irrrational arguments have come up so far)
2. when the thing with the cables surfaced in Elista it should have been sorted out instead of being brushed under the carpet - even if it meant to go back to square one
3. the baseless smear campaign against #1 Topalov unleashed by Breutigam/Bareev and many others is utmost disgusting
"What you could signal is very rudimentary information (e.g. the opponent has blundered), but of what use is that at that level compared to the distracion to the player?"
Erm, the odd extra point. If Topalov knew Kramnik had blundered in Elista I imagine he'd have found the mate-in-3.
"People who like shortness use Topa"
That's it! "TopaDan" ;) It'll add a touch of the exotic (Indian subcontinent/restaurant?) to this whole debate. "Topailov" strikes me as clumsy.
Posted by: mishanp at February 15, 2007 17:00Poisoned Pawn, I was going to construct for your edification an elaborate double bluff scenario, in which Topalov's move to close the toilets was simply an elaborate smokescreen to deflect attention from his own toiletty cheating, etc., but I can't be bothered.
I will offer this for you to chew on, though: I would regard the intelligence of a cheating strategy based on installing network access in a toilet, and then running off to the toilet 40 times a game, to be roughly as stupid as installing network access in a toilet, and then insisting that the toilet be shut.
Posted by: Theorist at February 15, 2007 17:12Theorist, the double/triple bluff scenarios are interesting, but purely academic.
The non-academic part is that the Appeals Committee got shafted out of town when they closed the frequently attended location ‘X’ by Kramnik. The Second Appeals Committee cleared the area soon thereafter… It seems that the Appeals Committees were not comfortable to perform their duties. Wonder why? Pressure, perhaps? Can you explain that part? Avoid esoteric theories, please.
Regards,
D.
Actually, I think the double/triple bluff scenarios are instructive in that they point out logical or practical absurdities. One needs to explain why situation X is possible but situation Y is not. The practical objections to Kramnik having cheated are so overwhelming (where does one even start enumerating them?) that only absurdity is left.
As for the Appeals Committee -- they seem to me to have been a complete joke anyway, ineffectual, cowardly -- in whichever incarnation. If they were in anyone's pocket, I would imagine it to have been FIDE's rather than the Mother Country's (remember the composition of the first committee; and didn't they forfeit Kramnik?...). I wouldn't take the discomfort of the Appeals Committee to be indicative of anything other than that of people out of their depth performing a job for which they were ill-equipped.
Posted by: Theorist at February 15, 2007 17:44Sorry Theorist, here you’re truly acting irresponsibly. You say that the Appeals Committee was “ineffectual”. Ok. I agree. I also say that extreme pressure was used on them – just look at this guy writing a resignation letter stating as a reason the cables found and then claiming that he never saw cables?!? Now, these guys are not some trash collected from the street, they are people with well established track record. These crazy things and wanting to leave, but the airport closed? You want to serve in these conditions Theorist – do you know just how quickly they’ll knock your theories out of your head? That goes to show you that extreme pressure was used against them. As a result of that they were ineffectual. Don’t you think that this calls for an investigation!
Well, if this match had occurred in normal state it would have been invalidated on the spot due to tempering with the officials. Anyway, I’m not calling for that because I firmly believe that Topalov should stay as far away as possible from this mess. He was a Champion once, his name is in the books. There are better things that he can do from here on. If they have any sense in their heads they should come looking for him, not the other way around.
D.
mishanp,
>>[...] but of what use is that at that level compared to the distracion to the player?"
>Erm, the odd extra point. If Topalov knew Kramnik had blundered in Elista I imagine he'd have found the mate-in-3.
Hmm, if you are talking game 2 I have to ask how closely do you follow chess ? Topa KNEW it was inferior but was surprised that his opponent played it. And having calculated all the Bg5 lines (which Kramnik didn't see, that's how you become WC nowadays) where the queen goes to the h-file he missed Qc7. This was a psychological problem, Mr. Danailov could have been signaling all day, and Topa would still have missed it. But thanks, this is a nice counter-example for all this signaling bs.
Posted by: poisoned pawn at February 15, 2007 19:21...I’ll excuse myself from here and use other forums. Or make my own, whatever.
Posted by: Dimi at February 15, 2007 14:21
please do it.
Posted by: livan at February 15, 2007 19:29poisoned pawn posted: Wouldn't make much sense if Topalov were depending on it for cheating, would it ?
True enough. I still don't believe Kramnik or Topalov have cheated, just not enough evidence for it.
Dimi posted: If someone runs constantly to location X during an event of that magnitude, would you not investigate 'why' that is? Come on.
Yes, I would. And they did investigate. And they increased security to rule out cheating by computer use. Likewise Topalov's manager was acting suspicious. And they investigated. And they will increase security to rule out cheating by signaling.
There is only so much security you can employ. No matter what is done, someone will come up with a scenario about how the other person might have cheated (or did cheat) despite all evidence to the contrary. If either of them cheated they will have to come up with a better way to cheat next time as security will be watching for cables, disappearing computers, and twitchy audiences. If they are cheaters they will eventually get caught even if they have implants. I emphasize again, I don't think either of them have cheated.
For the next K-T match we could force the participants to sit buck naked in a one-way glass electronically screened box for the entire match, and I'm sure someone would still say one of them cheated, and then proceed to show us all the circumstantial evidence, and explain how it was done.
Posted by: Daniel J Andrews at February 15, 2007 20:25"...I’ll excuse myself from here and use other forums. Or make my own, whatever.
Posted by: Dimi at February 15, 2007 14:21
please do it.
Posted by: livan at February 15, 2007 19:29"
veselintopalov.net doesn't have a forum yet?
Posted by: siron at February 15, 2007 20:45"veselintopalov.net doesn't have a forum yet?"
They wouldnt want their unique perspective on reality tainted by the opinions of outsiders.
Posted by: toppleover at February 15, 2007 21:07Hmm, if you are talking game 2 I have to ask how closely do you follow chess ? Topa KNEW it was inferior but was surprised that his opponent played it. And having calculated all the Bg5 lines (which Kramnik didn't see, that's how you become WC nowadays) where the queen goes to the h-file he missed Qc7. This was a psychological problem, Mr. Danailov could have been signaling all day, and Topa would still have missed it. But thanks, this is a nice counter-example for all this signaling bs.
Posted by: poisoned pawn at February 15, 2007 19:21
Yep, +2 and not losing a game against Kasparov in a match - it's so easy to become WC ;)
Again - yes, Kramnik and Topalov missing mate-in-3 is understandable psychologically in the given position. But give it to an 1800-rated player and say black's just made a horrible blunder and they'll probably find the mate. There's a huge difference to only suspecting your opponent might have made an "inferior" move.
Or going in for some reductio ad absurdum, do you really want to suggest that in e.g. the Carlsen/Navara game from Corus, Carlsen would still have missed the win if he'd been signalled that Navara had blundered with 31...g5?
Sure, state that Topalov didn't cheat - I even tend to agree with you - but to suggest that even crude signalling wouldn't help is ludicrous.
Posted by: mishanp at February 15, 2007 21:10It's wierd that there's some topalov fanbase that will go beyond common sense to argue things.
Shall we call them Patzelov from now on ? :p
siron: veselintopalov.net doesn't have a forum yet?
Not that I know of. But it ought to, I guess. Yet, that's a sensitive subject -- what kinds of topics are appropriate at such forums. I wouldn't go to Kramnik site and have the conversations we've had here recently. It's just not right.
-----------
gokuson: It's wierd that there's some topalov fanbase that will go beyond common sense to argue things. Shall we call them Patzelov from now on ? :p
We? Which fraternity do you represent? I suggest you start by saying something that makes sense first and then 'we' will see how common/uncommon it is.
----------------
toppleover: They wouldnt want their unique perspective on reality tainted by the opinions of outsiders.
Well, try! Offer some new perspective, if you can. As you've seen already, Topalov fans are very open minded people who neither run away from a pleasant conversation, nor hide in the safety of 'group think'.
Have fun,
D.
Posted by: Dimi at February 15, 2007 23:40Patzerlov spotted !! o.0
Posted by: kami at February 16, 2007 01:56dimi said "I suggest you start by saying something that makes sense first"
1) On the evidence we have, it cannot be proven that either player cheated in Elista.
2) On the basis of the evidence we have, it cannot be proven that Topalov cheated in San Luis or Corus.
(Everyone agreed up to this point? Topalistas? Patzalovs? Sane people of every stripe? mmmmmk...Cool!)
The more controversial stuff.
3) Elista is the only instance Kramnik has been directly accused of cheating.
4) The suspicion of Topalov receiving help has been levelled by GMs Rustam Khasim(spelling please), Bareev, Morozevich directly and GM Short says other people of similar standing agree with it privately.
5) The evidence which is presently in circulation doesnt prove Topalovs guilt to any reasonable person.
6) The protestations of innocence by Topalov in no way prove his innocence to any reasonable person, because of the range of people who independently level similar accusations.
7) The lack of accusations against Kramnik, and lack of evidence in Elista should convince any reasonable person of Kramniks innocence.
Posted by: toppleover at February 16, 2007 03:13Dimi
These things have been pointed out endlessly, but still:
1. The Appeals Committee were wrong to permit Topalov’s team to see the tapes of Kramnik in what he believed to be his private space. This was unthinkable. Surely you can see this?
2. The AC should not have considered a protest made out of time. Simple compliance with the regulations they were there to administer.
3. They should not have made a decision so close to game five. Again, simple compliance with their duties outlined in the regulations.
4. They should not have changed the playing conditions when the regulations laid down that they could not do this. Makropoulos’s semantic argument that they had not done this was unworthy even of him. Perhaps one can excuse him on the grounds that English is not his native language, but not otherwise.
Had they had the first idea of their duties, then when the request to see the tapes was first made it should have been denied and they should have promised to look at the tapes themselves. After that they could either have told Topalov there was nothing suspicious, or if they thought there was then they could have allowed an inspection of the lavatories. The cables could have been removed, as they were, and that would have been the end of the matter.
Makropoulos is a man I find difficult to work out. The idea that his ludicrous time control would make chess more marketable to TV is a good example. I always considered that no-one could be that stupid and that only an actual pathological hatred of the game and consequent intent, possibly subconscious, to destroy it, could account for his devotion to this idea. However, I have been assured by people who know him personally that he actually is that stupid. Similarly, on this occasion only an absolute moron, in the technical sense of someone who is literally incapable of forming a rational thought, could have imagined that Kramnik would play game five in the circumstances. I had therefore presumed that Makropoulos must have intended the destruction of the match, but again, I have been told that what happened came as a genuine surprise to him.
It may or may not be a bad idea for players to have private lavatories in world championship matches (although I’m not quite sure what people want. Hidden cameras in the toilet bowl?). But that is not the point: the point is that having agreed that at the start of the match it was entirely inconceivable to change the arrangements in the middle of a match.
As to going by referees' decisions, of course this is right. But when the referee ceases to abide by the rules he is meant to be administering, he loses this immunity.
And whether we should abide by referees’ decisions is a different question from whether a given decision is right or wrong. Your rhetoric about ‘shall we just let commentators decide’ ignores this point: commentators’ opinions are relevant to the latter, not to the former.
You must be thinking of someone else about games eight and nine in Elista. I never suggested Topalov was cheating during those.
Actually, I probbly did use the word 'cheating' in the sense that I considered Danailov's release of Fritz statistics during the match to be cheating. I stand by that comment. Not even Topa's most ardent supporter could be proud of that.
Posted by: rdh at February 16, 2007 06:50You may accuse Makropoulos for many things BUT, even his worst enemies (that actually know him) acknowledge he is very smart (which is not neseccarily a virtue). (Personally I was really amazed when I heard him speaking in a council meeting..)
How else could he be on power for so long? He has no money himself to offer, and no big interests support him. I also remind you that he was fide vice-president, even before Kirsan became president. (he was also 7 times champion of Greece, strong IM, and president of greek chess federation for 25 years)
I disagree with Makropoulos about the time control (and many other things), but I would not call someone stupid for that.
As for the decision in Elista...
you said:
"only an absolute moron,...,could have imagined that Kramnink would play game 5 under these circumstances"
I strongly disagree. (you honestly think that you are smarter? )
I personally think that the only reason Kramnink did not come to play game 5 was because he was sure that his opinion will pass due to the support of Zukhov. Ofcourse this backfired eventually, since he lost the game.
I remind you, that we ask from FIDE and organisors to make sure nobody (Topalov) cheats, by putting glass between players-audience etc. Now, even if the Elista case was different, the appeals comittee decision had this aim. Remove doubts. It is hard to imagine someone quiting the match for closing a toilet.. He may protest, but not appearing at all? A person could do that ONLY if he knows he has support, which was the case for Kramnink (Zukhov).
Note here that I am not personally supporting the decision. What I say is that it was not that irrational, and the most irrational thing was Kramnink not playing.
Also, I remind you that Topalov did accept to have glass between players-audience, and that was also no in the contract.
But say, Kramnink did not ask for this. And by round 5 we have Danailov doing continusly guestures. The appeal comittee decides to but a glass after Kramninks protest. Would you justify Topalov quiting the match? Or you would say, ah he was cheating.. (I suppose the appeal comittee wanted to avoid having people accusing Kramnink, even if they did not believe that he was cheating)
I do not want to say whether the decision was right or not, neither to support Makropoulos in general. BUT Kramnink not participating in game 5 was overeaction (most players that supported him said that this was a wrong move), therefore it is not a reaction somebody with rational thought would expect (I am sure if Topalov was in his place, he would file a complaint BUT play on).
Posted by: derida at February 16, 2007 08:22>>
"It was obvious how Topalov won a shared first place with style, and Kramnik had to struggle every move to achieve a fourth place."
Every move, huh? Did Kramnik almost resign before playing 1. Nf3 or 1. d4? Poor undefeated Kramnik.
>>
Reminiscent of some of the stuff Alekhine used to write about Capablanca.
What makes it funny is not that it's untrue, but that Kramnik is vulnerable to the exact OPPOSITE charge. Struggle every move?? It was more like he wasn't trying at all. GM draws left and right, Pettroff's everywhere. I wish he had struggled every move.
Derida, I don’t know how to say this any more clearly. It was not rational for the AC to disregard the regulations it was interpreting.
How has Makropolous stayed in power for so long? Easy: he’s a crook, a yesman and a power-hungry gangster. These are useful qualities in politics. Intelligence is not. So he’s an IM. So am I. So’s Danailov. I can assure you that doesn’t impress me.
It suits you of course to characterise Kramnik’s decision as ‘quitting the match for closing a toilet’. However, Kramnik had also discovered that the AC were prepared to release tapes of him to the other side without his knowledge, and to ride roughshod over the regulations. (and of course to give houseroom to deeply insulting and utterly fatuous allegations, although that they were arguably entitled to do).
I agree Topalov might well have played, but then he’s a monomaniac puppet and devoted to the acquisition of money. Kramnik isn’t. We could go on like this all day: all I can say is that if anyone expected Kramnik to play after the committee’s decision their judgment turned out to be seriously wrong.
After all, if Karpov and Korchnoi both say they wouldn’t have played, it’s a fair bet there’s a wide spectrum of personalities who wouldn’t have done.
What’s beyond me is why anyone should have thought Kramnik ought to play. The very thing the regulations are supposed to protect players from – an upsetting appeals committee decision shortly before a game – has happened, and the reason why it’s happened is that the appeals committee have utterly failed to carry out their duties according to the regulations. It’s clear that the very least Kramnik should have been entitled to was a postponement and the appointment of an Appeals Committee which had some idea of their duties.
I agree with you that it is possible that the Appeals Committee were well motivated. But that doesn't alter the fact that they weren't fit to run a whelk stall, as we say in the Labour Party.
Posted by: rdh at February 16, 2007 08:57Dear rdh,
I said Makropoulos being an IM (in the 70-80's not today) is just one indication (even if not quite an IM, I know that this on its own is not that impresive) of not being stupid. Also, being in power, and knowing to manouver well, is definetely something that requires (some sort of) inteligence. (he is NOT a yes man. he is the one that usually decides the policies (for good or bad:))
I really believe that the decision was not so outrageous (if wrong) to justify Kramnink not playing. You are entitled of your opinion, and I respect it, but you cannot call stupid people who disagree with this. I am not willing to start again arguing about this, since a lot has been said already and arguments circulate.
So we have: a) Appeal comitee doing something over their duties (according to you and other people)
b) Kramnink not appearing for game 5
The match eventually continued with Kramnink losing game 5. The main reason for this, was that this was the only way to continue the match legally, since otherwise Topalov would win in the court. So judging from that, and assuming Kramnink (and his manager mainly) could have known this, it means that Kramnink by abstaining from game 5 decided to either stop the match or lose a game. Since he continued, the first choise is excluded. So he decided to lose one game, in order to have his toilet open. Well, this means one of the three things:
i) He misjudged
ii) He thought that this was a crucial issue for his image
iii) He was cheating
I belive i) to be true. This means that a rational person (not misjudging) would play game 5.
Now, since many people would argue that he was cheating, it does not seems very rational for him, if he wants to remove doubts from his name to refuse to play. The best way to clear his name would be to play and win with toilets closed.
I believe that the situation came as result of several persons fault (including the comitee). It was Topalov+Danailov, that filed the appeal (not illegal, but likely a bit imoral). Then appeal comitee failing to predict Kramninks (possibly irrational) behaviour. Kramnink (possibly relying on Zukhov) insisting to much by abstaining from game 5. The fact that the match was held in Russia. The fact that the appeal comittee was (possibly) Topalov friendly. The last two were accepted by both sides, butt things would be different if they hadn't.
And speaking of good intention and labour party.. Most people in the world would not even acknowledge the good intentions of your (new)labour goverments...
Posted by: derida at February 16, 2007 09:31We are not speaking of whether Kramnik’s decision not to play was rational, justified or anything else (I think it was both of those, but of course you can disagree with that: he has called it himself an ‘emotional’ decision). But we are speaking of whether or not it was predictable. And I continue to think that if Makropoulos did not predict it then he was a fool (it goes without saying that he was wrong).
You should not believe everything Ilyumzhinov tells you about the legal advice he received. But yes, obviously what happened created a difficult situation, since either the forfeit was valid or the reason it wasn’t valid was that FIDE had failed to run the match according to its contractual obligations.
I simply cannot understand how anyone can say that the appeals committee’s decision was not outrageous. The regulations say no protest later than two hours after a game. There is no power to extend this time limit. They entertained such a protest. End of. I don’t see any scope for debate about it.
What do you say anyone could say in defence of their decision? Do you say they were somehow entitled to ignore the regulations, or what?
rdh said "I simply cannot understand how anyone can say that the appeals committee’s decision was not outrageous. "
I agree, at the time everyone thought it was outrageous too. That is why they were summarily dismissed.
At the time as I recall, the widely held view was that the appeals commitee was stacked in Topalovs favour. Amazing how these revisionists like to rewrite history isnt it?
The regs stated that Kramnik (& Topalov for that matter) had their own washroom facilities. That was contractual.
Topalovs complaint wasnt altogether unreasonable, but showing Topalovs team the video of kramnik going to the bathroom then locking it was totally unreasonable.
Given that there was a video how did any whiff of a hint of cheating come about anyway?
The answer is this shower of liars..the Topalistas just BS their arses off at every opportunity and assume people who watched (and listened) to the event live suffer amnesia.
Posted by: toppleover at February 16, 2007 10:25Thanks for posting the link to the new, improved version of the signaling video, Mig. It really opened my eyes (and ears) to what was truly going on!
Posted by: OrangeKing at February 16, 2007 11:20toppleover, you were doing quite well, until you got a remission. To help you (as well as others) cope with that ailment we have created a little aptitude test that can also serve as a cheat sheet. Keep a copy of it close by, you may need it when you start to feel confused by the information debris. Mr. rdh, a very ‘special person’ in our ranks, flunked the test several times. The next edition of the test will be in pictures, since challenged people sometimes do better with visual clues.
Elista Standardized Aptitude Test (E-SAT)
Entity A: Chess Player
Entity B: Chess Player
Entity C: Appeals Committee
Location: H: Playing Hall
Location: X: Unobserved Room. A Toilet.
Location: Y: Observed Room: A Shared Toilet.
Event A: Chess Match between Entities A & B
Event B: Entity B goes N (N=50) times to Location X. (Normal N=3/4)
Question 1: What should Entity A (Player) Do?
a) Do Nothing
b) Request Clarification. Protest Event B.
Question 2: What Should Entity C (Appeals Committee) Do?
a) Do Nothing. Event B is highly unusual but Ok (per contract). Suspicious Behavior is good for Chess.
b) Redirect Entity B to Location Y (Observed Location, A Shared Toilet). Eliminate Suspicion.
Posted by: Dimi at February 16, 2007 14:00Dimi, get a grip really. What does it matter how many times he went there. Maybe he had some problems with health, maybe he was smoking or maybe just nervous. To cheat he´d just need to go once.
Posted by: Zombre at February 16, 2007 14:17>[...] Meanwhile, Topailov are accusing Kramnik of cheating and saying, without any non-magical explanation of how this is possible, that common ceiling cables are in some way proof of this.
Few weeks ago a man walks into a nearby service station shop with a gun in his hand. As a consequence the clerk empties the cash register and hands him the money. And this is where the mystery part of the story begins: couple of days later somebody recognizes the man and he gets arrested. Why ? I am completely dumbfounded and fail to understand this. Due to the absence of any corpse there is no proof whatsoever that the man would actually have killed somebody ! Also the gun might have been unloaded or even been a non-functional replica !
"The threat is stronger than the execution!"
- Aaron Nimzowich
OK, Dimi, I give up. Since you simply ignore any point I make, there is no point in debate.
I will though observe that the same Appeals Committee pointed out that N=50 was simply a Danailov lie. The fact that you still repeat it tells any objective observer everything they need to know.
Posted by: rdh at February 16, 2007 16:02RDH: OK, Dimi, I give up. Since you simply ignore any point I make, there is no point in debate.
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Dear RDH, no, I do not ignore what you say. Nor I hide from difficult questions. I do not like the ‘sh** & run’ types and I’m not one of them. As you might have noticed, I read your stuff because you’re an influential blogger. And particularly because you represent exactly what I disagree with on a subject I care about. There was just one comment that I missed responding to: Topalov’s interview in NIC. I will comment on that when I get my copy (very soon).
RDH: I will thoug



