I'm going to make a suggestion re offering draws and although I hate to generalize suggest we teach juniors the rules re draw offers. The reason I say juniors is everytime I've experienced the following it has been juniors. I'm as guilty as the next person since I was the coordinator for a junior chess program at the Y in Hamilton for 3 years and probably didn't teach this either.
The scenario goes like this, the opponent says draw, sticks out their hand over the board expecting you (pressuring you?) to shake their hand and accept a draw, in the meantime they are blocking the board and blocking you from moving. It could be at any point in the game, could be in the middle of a complex middle game with sharp tactics and most of the pieces still on the board or a lost position for them as has happened to me more than once. You then want to look at and record their last move and the position to decide if you want a draw but they keep holding their hand over the board expecting you to agree to the draw. One tournament I was in the opponent waved their hand away to which the reply came 'Is that a no?', its a no if the opponent says no or if they make a move, there is no requirment to shake your hand right away or to verbally reply at all. And the less talking the better so as not to disturbe the other players. A discussion on why its a draw is not the thing to do under the CFC rules. I really don't know if you are offering me a draw because you just blundered then realized it and think you can bamboozle me into accepting a draw.
What I have seen others do including adults is offer a draw without making their move & thereby insisting on a verbal answer and appearing as not going to move until they get that answer.
The scenario goes like this, the opponent says draw, sticks out their hand over the board expecting you (pressuring you?) to shake their hand and accept a draw, in the meantime they are blocking the board and blocking you from moving. It could be at any point in the game, could be in the middle of a complex middle game with sharp tactics and most of the pieces still on the board or a lost position for them as has happened to me more than once. You then want to look at and record their last move and the position to decide if you want a draw but they keep holding their hand over the board expecting you to agree to the draw. One tournament I was in the opponent waved their hand away to which the reply came 'Is that a no?', its a no if the opponent says no or if they make a move, there is no requirment to shake your hand right away or to verbally reply at all. And the less talking the better so as not to disturbe the other players. A discussion on why its a draw is not the thing to do under the CFC rules. I really don't know if you are offering me a draw because you just blundered then realized it and think you can bamboozle me into accepting a draw.
What I have seen others do including adults is offer a draw without making their move & thereby insisting on a verbal answer and appearing as not going to move until they get that answer.
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