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ChessBomb seems to have got the colours reversed in the Adams -Giri game that Adams evidently won as Black. If that's indeed correct, then the standings heading into the final round are:
While perhaps not a major impediment to his World Champion aspirations, his shortcomings in this aspect of the game are certainly a handicap. First and foremost, his chances of winning the World Cup take a serious hit since so many of the matches are decided via Blitz playoffs. One has only to think of Grischuk taking quick draws with White the last World Cup just so he could get to the shorter time controls in the Rapid/Blitz playoffs. I wouldn't think Caruana could even be considered a bona fide favourite in such a format.
"I have played a blitz game once. It was on a train, in 1929." – Mikhail Botvinnik
"He who analyses blitz is stupid*." – Rashid Nezhmetdinov
"Blitz chess kills your ideas." – Bobby Fischer
*some here would prefer "intellectually inept"
Perhaps you should have confined your quotes to Botvinnik, Mathieu. To utilize quotes by two of the greatest blitz players of their day strikes me as decidedly incongruous to your counterargument. Moreover, you might want to scrutinize the verb in that Nezhmetdinov quote (:
This was a six-player all play all tournament today with a time limit of 4 minutes + 2 seconds from the first move. The players played both blitz games against each other consecutively. Players received 3 points for a win, 1 point for a draw and 0 points for a loss.
There was some confusion with the speed of the results coming in. The official final standings after tie-break are:
Perhaps you should have confined your quotes to Botvinnik, Mathieu. To utilize quotes by two of the greatest blitz players of their day strikes me as decidedly incongruous to your counterargument. Moreover, you might want to scrutinize the verb in that Nezhmetdinov quote (:
Come on man, it's 2014. I just took some famous quotes from the wiki article on blitz... ;)
Obviously, my point was just that there's not really much to analyze from one day of playing blitz. Who cares if Caruana or Kramnik are down on the blitz rating list. That has absolutely nothing to do with their capacity to play a game of real chess.
...Who cares if Caruana or Kramnik are down on the blitz rating list. That has absolutely nothing to do with their capacity to play a game of real chess.
This line of reasoning involving 'real' chess can be extended indefinitely.
Let's start with this: the only reason a time control such as 40 moves in 2 hours, then 1 hour SD with 30 seconds increment is considered as 'real' chess is because FIDE decrees it so. And the reason FIDE decrees it so is to enable tournaments to finish in reasonable time. It isn't because the very best chess quality is ordained to be at that time control.
Given that, one could just as easily say "Who cares if Joe Sixpack is down on the FIDE rating list? It has nothing to do with his capacity to play a game of real chess." In this case, 'real' chess would mean chess with much longer time controls, maybe 2 hours per move or something.
And one could extend further, comparing 2 hours per move to correspondence chess, where not only are there days to make moves, but one can play out lines on a board, not have to visualize them. Is this 'real' chess? Well, how about centuries to make moves, and the ability to have 100 million lines being played out on 100 million chess boards? Ahhh.... getting close to computer chess, and since computers make calculations much faster than humans, we can replace centuries with seconds as in blitz. Is this 'real' chess? Well, no computer we can imagine can search the entire chess tree in ANY amount of time, so again start increasing times, give the computer hours per move.... is that 'real' chess?
It looks like we need a definition for 'real' chess, and that would likely be for us limited humans back to FIDE time controls. But it's not about some absolute quality, it's instead a compromise between quality and time.
Blitz is also a compromise between quality and time. We get a lot more games of a lot less quality. There is nothing less 'real' about blitz. And I would also say there is nothing more or less 'real' about correspondence chess.
The argument that blitz performance doesn't have anything to do with slower time controls is incorrect. Slow time controls still allow for a given move having to be decided on in seconds. Slow time control games can be and often are decided in these moments.
Mathieu, you've given us your opinion in another thread of the back-to-back blunders** from first Carlsen, then Anand, in game 6 of the WC, saying it's not so bad in a historical context. You are willing to accept such blunders in 'real' chess. Yet here you are now, belittling blitz chess for its preponderance of errors and non-optimal play stemming from a very restricting time control. But restrictive time controls are RELATIVE, not absolute. Your 'real' chess can be equally belittled.
**Mathieu's definition of blunder needs revisiting: "For me, a real blunder has to clearly change the evaluation of the position." He argues that if Anand had replied to Carlsen's blunder with the correct ...Nxe5+ Carlsen may still have held the game to a draw. What this indicates is that before playing 26.Kd2, Carlsen still had winning chances, but after that move, the BEST Carlsen could have hoped for with no blunder from Anand was a draw. And that should be the definition of blunder: a move that with best play robs you of any winning or drawing chances you had before the move.
Last edited by Paul Bonham; Tuesday, 9th December, 2014, 04:12 PM.
Reason: clarification
Only the rushing is heard...
Onward flies the bird.
Come on man, it's 2014. I just took some famous quotes from the wiki article on blitz... ;)
Obviously, my point was just that there's not really much to analyze from one day of playing blitz......That has absolutely nothing to do with their capacity to play a game of real chess.
Poor Usain Bolt, Carl Lewis, Jim Hines!
Now we know the blazing sprints are not "real" track,
compared to the slow-chugging long-distance runners:-(
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