Now, since it is 2016, the junior girls in Canada are almost entirely in "open" junior clubs, lesson groups, after-school classes, regular chess clubs (At Scarborough Chess Club, Toronto, Ontario, Canada, all juniors and adults, male and female, play in the one swiss tournament each Thursday....the junior girls are becoming deadly!),etc. When they play in Weekend tournaments, there is almost never a Junior Girls section (In fact maybe there NEVER has been one). And at the younger levels, they play totally equal to the boys (Some say their results are better).
BUT....
Talented junior girls, and their parents, want Medals/Titles, because they are made AVAILABLE under the FIDE junior girl and women's parallel/supplementary systems. So rather than play in the U 14 Open section of the Canadian Youth Chess Championships, our top Canadian girls, with a few notable exceptions (Hazel Smith was one in the past), choose, or are pushed into by their parents, the U 14 GIRLS section of the CYCC. And this even when the girl is competitive in the open section, and has some chances to win.
Why is this?
In my view, it is only human nature, especially when a title in Canada wins you a travel subsidy to the FIDE World GIRLS U 14, where you can go for a Junior Girls WORLD CHAMPION TITLE. We all like to hit milestones, get awards that confirm the progress we are making.
So the problem is FIDE! As long as FIDE continues the parallel system, with its parallel titles, the world will continue to lose talented junior girl players into the girls/women's system, where they will improve much more slowly, because the average ratings there are lower than in the comparable open sections.
QUESTION: Is 2016 the time for some member country of FIDE (Canada?) to bring a motion to now disband the separate, parallel women's chess system?
Bob A
BUT....
Talented junior girls, and their parents, want Medals/Titles, because they are made AVAILABLE under the FIDE junior girl and women's parallel/supplementary systems. So rather than play in the U 14 Open section of the Canadian Youth Chess Championships, our top Canadian girls, with a few notable exceptions (Hazel Smith was one in the past), choose, or are pushed into by their parents, the U 14 GIRLS section of the CYCC. And this even when the girl is competitive in the open section, and has some chances to win.
Why is this?
In my view, it is only human nature, especially when a title in Canada wins you a travel subsidy to the FIDE World GIRLS U 14, where you can go for a Junior Girls WORLD CHAMPION TITLE. We all like to hit milestones, get awards that confirm the progress we are making.
So the problem is FIDE! As long as FIDE continues the parallel system, with its parallel titles, the world will continue to lose talented junior girl players into the girls/women's system, where they will improve much more slowly, because the average ratings there are lower than in the comparable open sections.
QUESTION: Is 2016 the time for some member country of FIDE (Canada?) to bring a motion to now disband the separate, parallel women's chess system?
Bob A
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