Re: What can Canada do to nurture its chess talents?
There was a huge debate last year on this forum as to whether a prestige event such as the Canadian Closed should be held at all if it can't live up to certain standards (because the go-ahead for holding the event leaves too little time to properly prepare). Certain elite players would rather sit back and criticize and blame the organizer than have the passion and giving back to the game that is being mentioned here. When I suggested that such players could try and contribute to the organizing of such tournaments, the outcry was shameful. What came out of it all was that personal ambitions and desires of the elite players (with some exceptions, I hope) come before any notion of giving ANYTHING to the game besides their well-trumpeted presence, which only occurs with payment of a large fee.
My personal feeling is that players who denigrate organizers rather than help them should be blacklisted and not allowed to play prestige CFC events until they formally apologize and agree to do "community service" on behalf of chess. This should be a universal policy across Canada. In pro sports, if you denigrate the officials or the league you play in, you get fined and possibly suspended. Same idea here.
These players are a blight on the chess scene. They wrongly view organizers as being a dime a dozen, and if a particular organizer doesn't bust his or her butt hard enough, just get another one that will.
Without organizers (who are in short supply), you simply don't have organized chess. Without a particular group of elite players, you simply have less players. It's obvious to me which of the two is more expendable.
How's that for "communicating the idea of giving back to the game"? Will it change anything? Will any such elite players change their outlook and give something back to the game? Will anyone involved with the CFC consider penalizing such players? HA HA HA HA!
Originally posted by Hans Jung
View Post
My personal feeling is that players who denigrate organizers rather than help them should be blacklisted and not allowed to play prestige CFC events until they formally apologize and agree to do "community service" on behalf of chess. This should be a universal policy across Canada. In pro sports, if you denigrate the officials or the league you play in, you get fined and possibly suspended. Same idea here.
These players are a blight on the chess scene. They wrongly view organizers as being a dime a dozen, and if a particular organizer doesn't bust his or her butt hard enough, just get another one that will.
Without organizers (who are in short supply), you simply don't have organized chess. Without a particular group of elite players, you simply have less players. It's obvious to me which of the two is more expendable.
How's that for "communicating the idea of giving back to the game"? Will it change anything? Will any such elite players change their outlook and give something back to the game? Will anyone involved with the CFC consider penalizing such players? HA HA HA HA!
Comment