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Dark Knight / Le Chevalier Noir
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For the curious, I've mentioned at least one time on chesstalk that I once read in a book I owned long ago that the longest possible chess game was calculated to be over 5,000 moves... indeed, it turns out that the figure appears to be over 5,850 moves(!):
Is the 50-move rule automatic, or does one of the players have to declare it? If the players must declare then any chess game is theoretically infinite. I would also add that all one need do is look back to some of the older Informants for Hubner annotations to see far more moves than a paltry 5850.
Is the 50-move rule automatic, or does one of the players have to declare it? If the players must declare then any chess game is theoretically infinite. I would also add that all one need do is look back to some of the older Informants for Hubner annotations to see far more moves than a paltry 5850.
There is a new rule this last year that the game IS drawn after 75 moves (without a capture or pawn move). Between 50 & 75 moves, one of the players has to claim it. [There is a similar rule change for repetition, I think at 5 repeats, the game IS drawn, can claim at 3...]
There is a new rule this last year that the game IS drawn after 75 moves (without a capture or pawn move). Between 50 & 75 moves, one of the players has to claim it. [There is a similar rule change for repetition, I think at 5 repeats, the game IS drawn, can claim at 3...]
I'm assuming you mean this is a new FIDE rule?
Would this mean that for a weekend Swiss being FIDE rated, if there were to be a 150-move game with a lot of shuffling back and forth of a few pieces and with a non-draw result, the TD would have to (before doing the pairings for the next round) play through the game checking for 75-move rule or 5-time repeats, and changing the game result if either were found?
Only the rushing is heard...
Onward flies the bird.
Would this mean that for a weekend Swiss being FIDE rated, if there were to be a 150-move game with a lot of shuffling back and forth of a few pieces and with a non-draw result, the TD would have to (before doing the pairings for the next round) play through the game checking for 75-move rule or 5-time repeats, and changing the game result if either were found?
The TA would declare a result of the game as draw, if he has a good memory to notice the same position >= 5x. A 75-moves rule is simple to track (players are required to write down the moves when a time control is with an increment, or a TA writes down moves otherwise when <5mins are left). Though it is done during the game, not after, because "12.1 The arbiter shall see that the Laws of Chess are strictly observed."
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