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Probably the disclaimer shall be written - it is for competitive chess - aka FIDE rated events.
Data using the FIDE standard rating list. Only active players per FIDE (the flag shall be not i or wi). ~100 players had no birth year, thus don' use in your promotional :)
Bin 5 years.
Some clear conclusions - high school kids drop from chess significantly, though some would come back later like in their 30s, and then some increase for ~60 years (retirement >> more free time).
Congrats to two gentlemen born in 1925 and still keeping active: Raymond Dickson, and Steve St-Pierre. (Maybe someone could confirm indeed their age as ~98?)
On active list 60 as F(emale) and 804 as M(ale).
Last edited by Egidijus Zeromskis; Wednesday, 26th April, 2023, 04:11 PM.
Reason: seems the picture can not be in full size...
Probably the disclaimer shall be written - it is for competitive chess - aka FIDE rated events.
Data using the FIDE standard rating list. Only active players per FIDE (the flag shall be not i or wi). ~100 players had no birth year, thus don' use in your promotional :)
Bin 5 years.
Some clear conclusions - high school kids drop from chess significantly, though some would come back later like in their 30s, and then some increase for ~60 years (retirement >> more free time).
Congrats to two gentlemen born in 1925 and still keeping active: Raymond Dickson, and Steve St-Pierre. (Maybe someone could confirm indeed their age as ~98?)
On active list 60 as F(emale) and 804 as M(ale).
also confounding the graph ; Many low rated kids who do things like wycc and get a fide rating but are too low rated for Canadian fide sections so show as inactive.
also confounding the graph ; Many low rated kids who do things like wycc and get a fide rating but are too low rated for Canadian fide sections so show as inactive.
CYCC and WYCC were less than a year ago - they would be still active now.
I would expect there to be higher numbers born in the 1950s than around 1970 because of 1) baby boomer bump in population and 2) Fischer mania peaked in 1972. I would think chess in schools has increased the participation of those born after 1990.
I would expect there to be higher numbers born in the 1950s than around 1970 because of 1) baby boomer bump in population and 2) Fischer mania peaked in 1972. I would think chess in schools has increased the participation of those born after 1990.
Good expectations, though those players are now in 70 year old range. From my observations there are not many of them at tournaments.
I tried with the whole FIDE players list standard/rapid/blitz:
For CAN there are 20% without the DOB thus rendering the statistics to big errors. Though the trend looks similar - just the first peak moves towards 1970.
The public CFC player's list does not have activity or DOB columns.
Probably the disclaimer shall be written - it is for competitive chess - aka FIDE rated events.
Data using the FIDE standard rating list. Only active players per FIDE (the flag shall be not i or wi). ~100 players had no birth year, thus don' use in your promotional :)
Bin 5 years.
Some clear conclusions - high school kids drop from chess significantly, though some would come back later like in their 30s, and then some increase for ~60 years (retirement >> more free time).
Congrats to two gentlemen born in 1925 and still keeping active: Raymond Dickson, and Steve St-Pierre. (Maybe someone could confirm indeed their age as ~98?)
On active list 60 as F(emale) and 804 as M(ale).
FIDE, ergo the CFC ... focus on rated chess. FIDE rated chess or otherwise rated chess. Such a very very narrow spectrum of Chess being enjoyed across Canada.
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