The Festival St-Denis was organized by the Chess'n Math Association. We do not usually organize open chess events, as our niche is scholastic chess. However, because the Quebec Open moved to Quebec City this year...and with an August date instead of the traditional July dates, there was a void on the Montreal scene so we felt it would be good to provide a 9-round...one game a day event in the city.
I would appreciate the opinion of folks on the following question: What rating should an organizer use when determining sections and prizes that a player is eligible to play?
This is what we used:
the highest of your permanent rating between FQE, CFC and FIDE.
I looked around at what others were doing (after the fact of course :) ) and this is what I found:
2017 Calgary International:
Based on current FIDE rating (CFC ratings will not be used)
2017 Canadian Open
The following ratings (as of July 1st, 2017) will be used to determine player section eligibility:
For Canadian residents outside Quebec: CFC rating
Residents of Quebec: FQE rating
US Residents: Higher of CFC and USCF ratings
All other foreign players: Highest of CFC, FIDE, or other available rating
For any player in the Master section, FIDE will be used for eligibility if it is higher than other available ratings.
Unrated or provisionally rated players may not win more than C$1000 except in open section.
2017 Canadian Amateur: Eligibility: Players MUST play in the highest section they are eligible for, based on current rating. FIDE or FQE Ratings taken at par
2017 Montreal Open: Rating used (Pairings & Sections) FQE for Quebec residents / highest of FQE or CFC for the Rest of Canada. If you have had a rating in the past that is higher then you can not play in a section that is less than 100 points from your highest rating.
2017 Quebec Open - For the A section, FIDE ratings will be used for players who have them, FQE for Quebec players, CFC for Canadians from other provinces, and National ratings for players from other countries.
2017 Toronto Open - I could not find the criteria...can some one help me here please.
2017 Varennes International ($16,000 Guranteed Prize Fund...I could not find the criteria...can some one help me here please.
2018 Trois-Rivieres Open ($11,300 Guaranteed Prize Fund) Ratings: For Section A, FIDE ratings will be used. if a player does not have a FIDE rating, the highest valid rating between that of the FQÉ and CFC will be used.
For all other sections, the highest valid rating between that of the FQÉ and CFC will be used. If you have had a rating in the past that is higher then you can not play in a section that is less than 100 points from your highest rating.
In hindsight I would have done it differently for our event. Is there an ideal solution? Is there a pôlicy that our National Federation has adopted that I know not? Would it not be nice to have a standard approach to this...or have I been out of the loop so long that I know nothing. (I like the rules for the Canadian Open but should we distinguish between permanant and provisional ratings when determining which section a player can participate?)
Also, I have noticed another rating system (why not...if CMA can have one afterall :) ) the URS System...
URS (Universal Rating System) Ratings
(Updated every month, following the updates on universalrating.com)
The Universal Rating System™ (URS™ for short) is a new sport’s rating system designed to assess the relative strength of participants. It was developed as a result of a collaborative research project funded by the Grand Chess Tour, the Kasparov Chess Foundation and the Chess Club of Saint Louis. Unlike Elo rating, the URS calculates a single overall rating for every chess player which is optimized to represent their strength at classical chess based upon their game results across all time controls (classic, rapid and blitz). The research claims to indicate that incorporating both slow and fast-play results provides better information regarding a player’s overall chess ability, with the enlarged pool of data aiding the overall accuracy of the rating system and improving the ability to estimate the strength of a player at classical time limits. Read more at the official website universalrating.com.
The ratings are updated (as of today) monthly. Chess-db.com is displaying those ratings on the players' profiles and will be offering various statistical information on this and other pages.
Should this also be taken into consideration?
Larry
I would appreciate the opinion of folks on the following question: What rating should an organizer use when determining sections and prizes that a player is eligible to play?
This is what we used:
the highest of your permanent rating between FQE, CFC and FIDE.
I looked around at what others were doing (after the fact of course :) ) and this is what I found:
2017 Calgary International:
Based on current FIDE rating (CFC ratings will not be used)
2017 Canadian Open
The following ratings (as of July 1st, 2017) will be used to determine player section eligibility:
For Canadian residents outside Quebec: CFC rating
Residents of Quebec: FQE rating
US Residents: Higher of CFC and USCF ratings
All other foreign players: Highest of CFC, FIDE, or other available rating
For any player in the Master section, FIDE will be used for eligibility if it is higher than other available ratings.
Unrated or provisionally rated players may not win more than C$1000 except in open section.
2017 Canadian Amateur: Eligibility: Players MUST play in the highest section they are eligible for, based on current rating. FIDE or FQE Ratings taken at par
2017 Montreal Open: Rating used (Pairings & Sections) FQE for Quebec residents / highest of FQE or CFC for the Rest of Canada. If you have had a rating in the past that is higher then you can not play in a section that is less than 100 points from your highest rating.
2017 Quebec Open - For the A section, FIDE ratings will be used for players who have them, FQE for Quebec players, CFC for Canadians from other provinces, and National ratings for players from other countries.
2017 Toronto Open - I could not find the criteria...can some one help me here please.
2017 Varennes International ($16,000 Guranteed Prize Fund...I could not find the criteria...can some one help me here please.
2018 Trois-Rivieres Open ($11,300 Guaranteed Prize Fund) Ratings: For Section A, FIDE ratings will be used. if a player does not have a FIDE rating, the highest valid rating between that of the FQÉ and CFC will be used.
For all other sections, the highest valid rating between that of the FQÉ and CFC will be used. If you have had a rating in the past that is higher then you can not play in a section that is less than 100 points from your highest rating.
In hindsight I would have done it differently for our event. Is there an ideal solution? Is there a pôlicy that our National Federation has adopted that I know not? Would it not be nice to have a standard approach to this...or have I been out of the loop so long that I know nothing. (I like the rules for the Canadian Open but should we distinguish between permanant and provisional ratings when determining which section a player can participate?)
Also, I have noticed another rating system (why not...if CMA can have one afterall :) ) the URS System...
URS (Universal Rating System) Ratings
(Updated every month, following the updates on universalrating.com)
The Universal Rating System™ (URS™ for short) is a new sport’s rating system designed to assess the relative strength of participants. It was developed as a result of a collaborative research project funded by the Grand Chess Tour, the Kasparov Chess Foundation and the Chess Club of Saint Louis. Unlike Elo rating, the URS calculates a single overall rating for every chess player which is optimized to represent their strength at classical chess based upon their game results across all time controls (classic, rapid and blitz). The research claims to indicate that incorporating both slow and fast-play results provides better information regarding a player’s overall chess ability, with the enlarged pool of data aiding the overall accuracy of the rating system and improving the ability to estimate the strength of a player at classical time limits. Read more at the official website universalrating.com.
The ratings are updated (as of today) monthly. Chess-db.com is displaying those ratings on the players' profiles and will be offering various statistical information on this and other pages.
Should this also be taken into consideration?
Larry
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