Re: FIDE level chess in Canada
Hi Bob,
Firstly I'd like to say that I am speaking as a player and not an organizer.
I disagree with this entirely. Having these class prizes is promoting mediocrity. Most tournaments I've been to, the lower classes subsidize the top section, and so they should. Some people call me elitist, but I am actually quite indifferent as to whether an elite player has or not to pay an entry fee, so long as the prize fund is quite substantial.
It's incomprehensible to me how so many weak players seem to legitimately believe they should be in contention for a "prize". Truth is, there's very little money in chess (playing). Professionals have to teach to make money off chess. Whatever little money exists in chess, in my opinion, should be to improve the quality of tournaments (which is beneficiary to all players) and then prizes to the top finishers, in the top section.
One interesting example I can think of are the Guelph tournaments. Hal only gives prizes to the top section, although I don't think lower sections subsidize the top section. However, bottle water, fruit, coffee, granola bars are provided. Many players seem to like this format enough and the "classes" don't seem to be suffering that much in participation. Winners in the lower classes get a neat trophy, a symbol of achievement amongst our weak peers, great!
Over the past two Summers, I had the opportunity to play in a couple of tournaments in Greece, and all the tournaments over there seemed to follow a very identical format. One section open swiss, 9 rounds, only the top 10 finishers get prizes. Then they had a prize for top woman and a prize for best age category finisher (top finisher U18, U16, U14, U12). Everyone played together in one section, and people seemed quite content with that.
You and I, Bob, are weak. So is a 2200 and so is a 1200. I don't see why anyone below IM strength could think he/she should ever be winning any money from playing chess. We don't contribute anything to the game itself. It really bothers me this North American chess culture, particularly in the USA, where people really think their garbage chess should net them anything. I am (perhaps foolishly) of the opinion that we should all be playing chess for the love of the game, and that the elite players should in addition play for something else, since they (also, ideally) contribute to chess.
Someone gave this example once and I've repeated it and will again. When we go to the movies, we spend $15 per person on ticket alone these days it seems. $30 if you want to take someone, plus parking, plus popcorn or dinner etc... a 4 hour evening can cost $50-100. I believe chess tournaments range from $50-100 for 2-3 days or something like 30 hours worth of entertainment.
Surely I've won a few prizes in chess tournaments, and I welcome them as a neat bonus, not something I had been looking forward to. At best, it covered my expenses for the weekend.
Anyone out there who is not at least an IM and thinks he/she should be entitled to get money from playing chess, you're weak. Quit whining and get a McJob. You'll make more money over a weekend and it's guaranteed!
This is nothing against you Bob, just responding to the idea you presented. Unfortunately many people share that view and I am strongly against it.
Alex Ferreira
Originally posted by Bob Armstrong
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Hi Bob,
Firstly I'd like to say that I am speaking as a player and not an organizer.
I disagree with this entirely. Having these class prizes is promoting mediocrity. Most tournaments I've been to, the lower classes subsidize the top section, and so they should. Some people call me elitist, but I am actually quite indifferent as to whether an elite player has or not to pay an entry fee, so long as the prize fund is quite substantial.
It's incomprehensible to me how so many weak players seem to legitimately believe they should be in contention for a "prize". Truth is, there's very little money in chess (playing). Professionals have to teach to make money off chess. Whatever little money exists in chess, in my opinion, should be to improve the quality of tournaments (which is beneficiary to all players) and then prizes to the top finishers, in the top section.
One interesting example I can think of are the Guelph tournaments. Hal only gives prizes to the top section, although I don't think lower sections subsidize the top section. However, bottle water, fruit, coffee, granola bars are provided. Many players seem to like this format enough and the "classes" don't seem to be suffering that much in participation. Winners in the lower classes get a neat trophy, a symbol of achievement amongst our weak peers, great!
Over the past two Summers, I had the opportunity to play in a couple of tournaments in Greece, and all the tournaments over there seemed to follow a very identical format. One section open swiss, 9 rounds, only the top 10 finishers get prizes. Then they had a prize for top woman and a prize for best age category finisher (top finisher U18, U16, U14, U12). Everyone played together in one section, and people seemed quite content with that.
You and I, Bob, are weak. So is a 2200 and so is a 1200. I don't see why anyone below IM strength could think he/she should ever be winning any money from playing chess. We don't contribute anything to the game itself. It really bothers me this North American chess culture, particularly in the USA, where people really think their garbage chess should net them anything. I am (perhaps foolishly) of the opinion that we should all be playing chess for the love of the game, and that the elite players should in addition play for something else, since they (also, ideally) contribute to chess.
Someone gave this example once and I've repeated it and will again. When we go to the movies, we spend $15 per person on ticket alone these days it seems. $30 if you want to take someone, plus parking, plus popcorn or dinner etc... a 4 hour evening can cost $50-100. I believe chess tournaments range from $50-100 for 2-3 days or something like 30 hours worth of entertainment.
Surely I've won a few prizes in chess tournaments, and I welcome them as a neat bonus, not something I had been looking forward to. At best, it covered my expenses for the weekend.
Anyone out there who is not at least an IM and thinks he/she should be entitled to get money from playing chess, you're weak. Quit whining and get a McJob. You'll make more money over a weekend and it's guaranteed!
This is nothing against you Bob, just responding to the idea you presented. Unfortunately many people share that view and I am strongly against it.
Alex Ferreira
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