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The Knockout lottery system comes up a big winner!!
ELIMINATED:
Hou Yifan ( China ), sitting women's World Champion and # 3 woman in the world,
Humpy Koneru ( India ), # 2 woman in the world, and
Anna Muzychuk ( Slovenia ), # 4 woman in the world
( Judit Polgar( Hungary ), # 1 woman in the world, did not play - she probaly would have been thrown out too!! )
Way to go FIDE! Great system you've given the women! There are just 3 of the top 8 left.
Do you think the women's system is " broken "??
Bob A
I'm not so sure that I'd dump on the format of the tournament. In some ways the tournament is of a similar format to March Madness in men's NCAA basketball. For those of you who don't pay any attention to college basketball, each year the top 68 college basketball teams play in a tournament to determine the best team.
The NCAA Men's Division I Basketball Championship (a.k.a. March Madness) is a huge event with quite a lot of prestige attached to it. There's always speculation about who will make up the Sweet Sixteen and even more interest in the Final Four. The makeup of the Final Four is never easy to guess before the tournament. And did I mention gambling... a lot of dollars exchange hands because of who wins and who doesn't along the way to the NCAA championship.
No one would say that March Madness is broken! If only chess had that sort of following.
Re: Women's World Chess Championship - A Lottery System
Hi Steve:
You are right in one respect - it is not so much the Knockout format that is the problem.
The real problem is the 2-game match. In chess, as opposed to basketball, this introduces much too much " chance " into a sport that should be decided by skill ( hence the " lottery " charge ). And this is especially so for a system determining a Women's World Champion ( it might not be quite as bad, if the system was just determining a " Challenger " for a match with the sitting Women's World Champion, but even then it would still be bad. Note that in the World Championship, the World Cup knockout has been much diminished in effect, where it now just determines 2 of 8 Candidates, in the Candidates Tournament, that determines the " Challenger " for the title )
You are right in one respect - it is not so much the Knockout format that is the problem.
The real problem is the 2-game match. In chess, as opposed to basketball, this introduces much too much " chance " into a sport that should be decided by skill ( hence the " lottery " charge ). And this is especially so for a system determining a Women's World Champion ( it might not be quite as bad, if the system was just determining a " Challenger " for a match with the sitting Women's World Champion, but even then it would still be bad. Note that in the World Championship, the World Cup knockout has been much diminished in effect, where it now just determines 2 of 8 Candidates, in the Candidates Tournament, that determines the " Challenger " for the title )
Bob
Do you really think of chess as that much of a game of chance? How many games do you think they should play against each opponent? 2 or 3 or 4 or 5? How long should this tournament go on for? I think you might have an argument for 3 games but I still think you are quibbling about the format even in that case. Chess is just not that much of a game of chance.
I would actually think that basketball is much more of a game of chance. Think about it. How many times has a basketball game been decided with the very last shot? That is so much so that it is a Hollywood movie ending cliche. If the game was just 1 minute longer the other side might have won. Even football and hockey. How many football games are decided on that last field goal and how many hockey games on that last minute shot? Like Paul Henderson against the Soviets. A funny bounce by the puck, the goalies vision blocked for a split second, a player not hearing another over the noise of the crowd...
Last edited by Zeljko Kitich; Friday, 16th November, 2012, 08:01 PM.
My database has 229 (!) identical games up to 9....Bd6. 4 were agreed drawn at this point. 222 games continued with 10. Nxd3 and were agreed drawn as late as move 16.
However - 3 games continued with 10. Nxg4. 2 of these were drawn - but the 3rd one was lost - by Montreal IM Camille Coudari against "Kaidor" in a "Brooklyn Rapid" in 1968.
Here are some noted players who played this game (Gufeld mastered the game from both sides :-) ):
This tournament really hilites the difference between the Men's and Women's World Championships.
The Men's (Open, Absolute whatever) Champ waits for a match challenger every two years. The Women's Champ defends her title every year, including this knockout style event every other year.
Maybe lessons from one system will influence the other. It seems that one is too easy, the other too tough!
For those who complain that the favourites win too often at chess, or that it takes too long for a player to get a crack at the world championship title, maybe there is something to be said for the Women's World Chess Championship format. The quick knockout element certainly makes for less certainty, if not excitement. Isn't that what the Poker special interest crowd on chesstalk have wanted for chess in the past?
Anything that can go wrong will go wrong. Murphy's law, by Edward A. Murphy Jr., USAF, Aerospace Engineer
Do you really think of chess as that much of a game of chance? How many games do you think they should play against each opponent? 2 or 3 or 4 or 5? How long should this tournament go on for? I think you might have an argument for 3 games but I still think you are quibbling about the format even in that case. Chess is just not that much of a game of chance.
I would actually think that basketball is much more of a game of chance. Think about it. How many times has a basketball game been decided with the very last shot? That is so much so that it is a Hollywood movie ending cliche. If the game was just 1 minute longer the other side might have won. Even football and hockey. How many football games are decided on that last field goal and how many hockey games on that last minute shot? Like Paul Henderson against the Soviets. A funny bounce by the puck, the goalies vision blocked for a split second, a player not hearing another over the noise of the crowd...
Make a basketball game twice as long and, maybe, the favourite team will come out on top more often. Or at least the one with greater stamina. Which is perhaps the case with longer chess matches as well.
Anything that can go wrong will go wrong. Murphy's law, by Edward A. Murphy Jr., USAF, Aerospace Engineer
Make a basketball game twice as long and, maybe, the favourite team will come out on top more often. Or at least the one with greater stamina. Which is perhaps the case with longer chess matches as well.
In earlier times human vs. computer matches were limited to six games by convention, after it was found that even a top human player was too exhausted by having to continually concentrate with all his might in order to try to avoid making a mistake on any given turn, given that it would be too costly against a computer.
Now that computers are even stronger, perhaps any future serious human vs. computer matches could be limited to just two games as well(?!)
Anything that can go wrong will go wrong. Murphy's law, by Edward A. Murphy Jr., USAF, Aerospace Engineer
The number of top players being upset at stage two is truly astonishing.
GM Humpy Koneru's mistake in the late middlegame was perhaps the most surprising, as pointed out on chessbase.com, where the key position was explained in some depth. She had been one of the favourites to win it all.
I see two separate factors at work here:
1) the talent pool at the top in women's chess (other than GM Judit Polgar, who doesn't play in women's-only events, and is much stronger than anyone else) is getting deeper, with many players rated over 2400, and capable of taking out players 100-200 points higher-rated on any given day;
2) the shortness of the matches, only two regular-timed games, does make it more of a lottery, as many others on this board have noted. If a top player has a bad day, or runs into an unfamiliar variation, or an in-form opponent, or an awkward rival, and loses, then she has to win the next game to stay alive, and that is a lot of pressure.
Anyone out there care to hazard a guess as to the overall winner this time!? :)
I'm picking Zhukova of Ukraine. She has had an achievement-filled career without winning anything really big, so motivation will be high, and I think she has the experience to match anyone still alive, in pressure situations.
I'm picking Zhukova of Ukraine. She has had an achievement-filled career without winning anything really big, so motivation will be high, and I think she has the experience to match anyone still alive, in pressure situations.
Currently #39 in FIDE's November ranking for women and married to the men's #9, Alexander Grischuk. I believe her image has previously found its way to this board.
My database has 229 (!) identical games up to 9....Bd6. 4 were agreed drawn at this point. 222 games continued with 10. Nxd3 and were agreed drawn as late as move 16.
However - 3 games continued with 10. Nxg4. 2 of these were drawn - but the 3rd one was lost - by Montreal IM Camille Coudari against "Kaidor" in a "Brooklyn Rapid" in 1968.
Here are some noted players who played this game (Gufeld mastered the game from both sides :-) ):
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