Re: Summary of Oakville Winter Open Feb 2-4, 2018
Hi John:
I know you prefer a prize structure that gives lower prizes to more players.......thus your plumping for 3 pt. prizes......which of course lowers all the higher scoring prizes. I believe you feel that this would attract more average players, who would feel even they had a chance at a prize, even if quite small. I hope this is your thesis and I'm not putting words in your mouth!
On the other side of the coin though, since the prize money is finite, is there a legitimate question about how low the top prizes can be, before top players stop playing, because the prize is insufficient for the effort?
I know top players also "love" the game, but it is a financial source for them as well, like a business. They have to measure their expenses vs their odds of a prize, and how high that prize might be.
Both seem possible models, and each will attract players differently.
I think the organizers have to decide which model they want.....and they are free to do that......this is a capitalist venture, chess organizing.
But the fact that some organizers choose the Hua model, does not stop other organizers from gambling on the Brown model.
In fact, until the Brown model is tried for a major weekend tournament, all we have is theoretical argument. We need on the ground facts to do any comparison, and we don't have those for the Brown model.
Bob A
Hi John:
I know you prefer a prize structure that gives lower prizes to more players.......thus your plumping for 3 pt. prizes......which of course lowers all the higher scoring prizes. I believe you feel that this would attract more average players, who would feel even they had a chance at a prize, even if quite small. I hope this is your thesis and I'm not putting words in your mouth!
On the other side of the coin though, since the prize money is finite, is there a legitimate question about how low the top prizes can be, before top players stop playing, because the prize is insufficient for the effort?
I know top players also "love" the game, but it is a financial source for them as well, like a business. They have to measure their expenses vs their odds of a prize, and how high that prize might be.
Both seem possible models, and each will attract players differently.
I think the organizers have to decide which model they want.....and they are free to do that......this is a capitalist venture, chess organizing.
But the fact that some organizers choose the Hua model, does not stop other organizers from gambling on the Brown model.
In fact, until the Brown model is tried for a major weekend tournament, all we have is theoretical argument. We need on the ground facts to do any comparison, and we don't have those for the Brown model.
Bob A
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