Here is a decade old article which is still very relevant today.
Because the ratings are so accurate, players take their ratings very personally, and that causes all kinds of unintended side effects. The biggest of these side effects is that there are many situations where the rating system discourages players from participating in tournaments. This is exactly the opposite of what it should do, but for every person I know that plays in tournaments because of the rating system, there are more who, if not completely retired from tournament play, only play in “selected” events where they perceive they can protect their rating.
This is a terrible situation. So bad, in fact, that if anyone asks me what one thing is most wrong with organized play, the answer is: ratings can, and do, enormously discourage participation among many potential players. Anything that discourages play is bad, but something that discourages it more than everything else put together must be changed. The fact that people stop playing the game they love due to this “artificial” factor is ironic and frustrating because with some common sense changes, the opposite could be true – an accurate rating/ranking system could be used to encourage play.
– Dan Heisman
http://www.chesscafe.com/text/skittles176.pdf
Because the ratings are so accurate, players take their ratings very personally, and that causes all kinds of unintended side effects. The biggest of these side effects is that there are many situations where the rating system discourages players from participating in tournaments. This is exactly the opposite of what it should do, but for every person I know that plays in tournaments because of the rating system, there are more who, if not completely retired from tournament play, only play in “selected” events where they perceive they can protect their rating.
This is a terrible situation. So bad, in fact, that if anyone asks me what one thing is most wrong with organized play, the answer is: ratings can, and do, enormously discourage participation among many potential players. Anything that discourages play is bad, but something that discourages it more than everything else put together must be changed. The fact that people stop playing the game they love due to this “artificial” factor is ironic and frustrating because with some common sense changes, the opposite could be true – an accurate rating/ranking system could be used to encourage play.
– Dan Heisman
http://www.chesscafe.com/text/skittles176.pdf
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