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- From: pribut@yahoo.com
- Newsgroups: rec.games.chess.misc,rec.answers,news.answers
- Subject: rec.games.chess.misc FAQ [1/4]
- Followup-To: poster
- Approved: news-answers-request@mit.edu
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- Summary: FAQ of the rec.games.chess,Internet Resources
- Keywords: chess FAQ
- Last-Modified: 2002/12/16
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- Archive-Name: games/chess/part1
-
- rec.games.chess Frequently Asked Questions
-
-
-
- Frequently Asked Questions (with answers) for Chess Players
-
- _____________________________________________________
-
- ________| rgcm Chess FAQ (Rec.games.chess.misc FAQ) |________
-
- \ | http://www.drpribut.com/sports/chess.html | /
-
- \ | Last modified DEC 15, 2002 Stephen M. Pribut | /
-
- / |_____________________________________________________| \
-
- /___________) (__________\
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
- Rec.games.chess.misc FAQ
-
- Chess Info from rec.games.chess.misc
-
-
-
- by Stephen Pribut ("mailto:pribut@clark.net")
-
-
-
-
-
- WELCOME:
-
-
-
- Welcome to "The rgcm FAQ", a compilation of information about chess and
-
- the internet. This FAQ is posted in 4 parts, bimonthly, to the newgroup
-
- rec.games.chess.
-
-
-
- Part 1 is about Organizations, Ratings & Titles,
-
- Tournaments,Self-Improvement, and Supplies.
-
-
-
- Part 2 is about Mailing Lists, freely available Services and Material,
-
- Chess-playing Hardware, Software, and Utilities, and a Miscellaneous
-
- section.
-
-
-
- Part 3 is about how to improve and chess related supplies including
-
- computers, software, etc.
-
-
-
- Part 4 contains miscellaneous material.
-
-
-
- The rec.games.chess USENET group is now a hierarchy of 5 groups: *
-
- rec.games.chess.misc * rec.games.chess.play-by-e-mail *
-
- rec.games.chess.computer * rec.games.chess.politics *
-
- rec.games.chess.analysis
-
-
-
- This FAQ contains an overview of all areas of chess. FAQ's specific to
- each of the above areas will be posted. The rec.games.chess.computer FAQ
- will also contain information on tht history of computers in chess and
- sketches of some of the individuals currently active in this field.
-
- If you are new to the newsgroup rec.games.chess, you might want to read
- this FAQ before posting questions to the newsgroup. This twice-monthly
- posting is intended to address some of the frequently asked questions
- (FAQ's) on the rec.games.chess news group. Because the answers may not
- be complete, please feel free to ask questions. This is only intended to
- address first-level concerns, and not to stifle discussions (discussions
- are never stifled on rec.games.chess). How to get the FAQ: This document
- is posted twice monthly to the Usenet newgroups rec.games.chess,
- rec.answers, and news.answers.
-
-
-
- Other ways to obtain the faq: at my website: Steve Pribut's Chess page
- (http://www.drpribut.com/sports/chess.html )
-
-
-
- Anonymous ftp to rtfm.mit.edu (18.181.0.24) and get the files
-
- ftp://rtfm.mit.edu/pub/usenet/news.answers/games/chess/part1
-
- ftp://rtfm.mit.edu/pub/usenet/news.answers/games/chess/part2
-
- ftp://rtfm.mit.edu/pub/usenet/news.answers/games/chess/part3
-
- ftp://rtfm.mit.edu/pub/usenet/news.answers/games/chess/part4
-
-
-
- E-mail(for those without ftp access) send email to:
-
- mail-server@rtfm.mit.edu the body of the message should read:
-
-
-
- send usenet/news.answers/games/chess/part1
-
-
-
- Parts 2,3 and 4 can be obtained the same way as part 1.
-
-
-
- What's New:
-
- FIDE ratings updated.
-
-
-
-
- Table of Contents
-
-
-
- Organizations: International, National, Local, and Mail/E-Mail
-
-
-
- * [1] Federation Internationale des Echecs (FIDE)
-
- * [2] The United States Chess Federation (USCF)
-
- * [3] Chess Federation of Canada (CFC)
-
- * [4] Other Chess Federations
-
- * [5] State and Local Organizations (USA)
-
- * [6] Correspondence Organizations
-
- * [7] Web Sites (WWW)
-
- Ratings and Titles
-
- * [8] Ratings (with FIDE list)
-
- * [9] How USCF Ratings are Calculated(USCF)
-
- * [10] How USCF Lifetime Titles are Earned(CFC)
-
- Tournaments
-
- * [11] Tournaments
-
- * [12] The Swiss Tournament Pairing System
-
- Self-Improvement
-
- * [13.1] I'm a Novice/Intermediate. How Do I Improve?
-
- * [13.2] New To The Net & Chess. What Do I Do?
-
- * [14] Recommended Openings (and Books) for Novice to Intermediate
-
- Supplies
-
- * [15] Publications
-
- * [16] Where to Get Books and Equipment
-
- Publicly available playing, e-mail lists, or material
-
- * [17] E-Mail Games, ICS, Mailing Lists, Gopher, Usenet Reader
-
- * [18] Material Available via Anonymous FTP
-
- Commercially available playing or material
-
- * [19] Chess-Playing Computers
-
- * [20] Chess-Playing Software
-
- * [21] Database Software
-
- * [22] Utility Software
-
- Miscellaneous
-
- * [23] Using Graphic Chess Symbols in Printed Text
-
- * [24] Trivia
-
- * [25] Common Acronyms
-
- * [26] Rules
-
- * [27] Variants
-
- * [28] Disclaimer and Copyright Notice
-
-
-
- Subject: [1] Federation Internationale des Echecs (FIDE)
-
- http://www.fide.org/
-
-
-
- FIDE (pronounced "fee-day") is an international chess organization that
- organizes tournaments, grants titles, and controls the World
- Championship cycle of FIDE. For an example of how politics works in any
- organization read the latest happennings in rec.games.chess.politics.
-
-
-
- FIDE grants three over-the-board titles: FIDE Master (FM), International
- Master (IM), and Grandmaster (GM). FM can be obtained by keeping your
- FIDE rating over 2300 for 25 games. IM and GM titles require
- performances at certain levels for 25-30 games (2450 for IM and 2600 for
- GM). This is usually achieved by obtaining several "norms." A norm is
- obtained when a player makes at least a given score in a FIDE
- tournament. The required score is a function of the number of rounds and
- the strength of the opposition. There are also minimum rating
- requirements. There are about 35 GM's, 60 IM's, and 100 FM's living in
- the U.S., not all of whom are active players.
-
-
-
- FIDE also grants titles for which only women are eligible: FIDE Woman
- Master, Woman International Master (WIM) and Woman Grandmaster (WGM).
- Women are also eligible for the other titles.
-
-
-
- FIDE also grants titles for Chess Composition, Composition Judging,
- Tournament Direction (as "Arbiter"), and Correspondence Chess. Another
- title one may obtain is "International Organiser".
-
-
- Subject: [2] The United States Chess Federation (USCF)
-
-
- * United States Chess Federation Home Page (USCF)
-
- http://www.uschess.org/
-
-
-
- The UNITED STATES CHESS FEDERATION (USCF) is the governing organization
- for chess in America. A not-for-profit corporation, it has more than
- 80,000 paid members. Its membership spans every state and territory of
- the U.S.
-
-
- It does several things: (1) computes ratings for players who play in
- USCF-rated tournaments, (2) publishes a monthly magazine called _Chess
- Life_, (3) sponsors national over-the-board tournaments such as the
- National Open and the U.S. Open, and a variety of correspondence
- (postal) tournaments, and (4) officially represents the interests of
- chess in the U.S. to international chess organizations. Most
- over-the-board tournaments held in the U.S. are USCF-rated. This means
- that to play in them, you must join the USCF (this can normally be done
- at the tournament site if you prefer). _Chess Life_ includes a listing,
- sorted by state, of USCF-rated tournaments to be held in the following
- few months. It periodically publishes the addresses of all state
-
-
-
-
-
- There are nearly 2,000 USCF-affiliated chess clubs, and more than
- 100,000 chess players participate in USCF events every year. The
- official publication, Chess Life, is distributed nationally every month
- to more than 250,000 readers.
-
- The USCF was founded in 1939 and grew gradually until 1972, when
- membership doubled due to interest in Bobby Fischer's rise to the World
- Championship. The last five years have seen the rolls swell by nearly 50
- percent, spurred by the growth of scholastic chess and the spread of
- chess computers.
-
- The USCF sanctions thousands of chess tournaments with a half-million
- rated games each year. It is the organizer of 25 national championship
- events including the US Championship, the US Women's Championship, and
- the Amateur, Junior and Senior championships. The USCF sponsors the
- National Scholastic Championships which annually draw over 3,000
- players.
-
- USCF also sponsors American participation in international events. The
- United States Team is the current World Champion, winning in Zurich in
- 1993 ahead of Russia, the Ukraine and six other finalists. Thirty-one of
- the world's 415 grandmasters are Americans.
-
- The USCF rating system, developed by statistician Arpad Elo in the early
- 60s, rates the performance of chessplayers in sanctioned tournaments.
- Most ratings fall between 400 and 2600, with an average of about 1350.
- The highest rated player in the US is Grandmaster Gata Kamsky, rated
- 2784 as of June 1997. In 1970, the World Chess Federation adopted the
- USCF rating method for international events. In 1993, World Champion
- Gary Kasparov achieved the highest international rating ever, 2805,
- breaking Bobby Fischer's 1972 record of 2785. In 1997, Kasparov broke
- his own record and achieved a rating of 2820. (The next highest player,
- Vladimir Kramnik, was rated 2770 on the same list.)
-
-
- The USCF national office is located at: 3054 NYS Rt 9W, New Windsor, NY
- 12553. Phone: 845-562-8350.
-
- Memberships can be obtained and orders taken by calling 800-388-KING.
-
-
- Subject: [3] Chess Federation of Canada (CFC) http://www.chess.ca/
-
- The CFC maintains ratings of all players in good standing, runs
- tournaments, attempts to promote chess in Canada, and sells equipment to
- both members and non-members. Members get a subscription to _En
- Passant_, a bimonthly magazine. The rating system used by the CFC is the
- Elo system, also used by the USCF and FIDE. Local variations make CFC
- ratings from 25-200 points lower than USCF ratings for players of
- similar ability.
-
- Write to: Chess Federation of Canada, 2212 Gladwin Crescent, E-1(b),
- Ottawa, Ontario, K1B 5N1, Canada. Phone 613-733-2844; fax 613-733-5209.
-
- Subject: [4] Other Chess Federations
-
- Argentine Chess Federation http://www.adrianroldan.com/ Austrian Chess
- Federation http://www.chess.at/ Italian Chess Federation
- http://www.federscacchi.it/ German Chess Federation
- http://www.schachbund.de/
-
-
- Subject: [5] State and Local Organizations (USA)
-
- Every state has its own chess organization affiliated with USCF, and
- most also have a bimonthly or quarterly publication. The state
- organizations are listed in the annual _Chess Life_ yearbook issue
- (April). From these state organizations, information can be obtained on
- local chess clubs. Another good way to find a local club is to look at
- the tournament listings in the back of every _Chess Life_.
-
- Subject: [6] Correspondence Organizations
-
- International Correspondence Chess Federation http://www.iccf.com/ and
- http://www.iccfus.com/links.htm
-
-
- The ICCF aim is to promote International Correspondence Chess as a way
- to meet and establish friendships with people throughout the world in
- peaceful competition. There is only one language on the chess board.
-
- More Contact information is available online
- http://www.iccfus.com/info.htm .
-
- Links on International Correspondence chess are also online
- http://www.iccfus.com/links.htm .
-
- Subject:[7] Web Sites (WWW)
-
- Web Sites (WWW)
-
-
- Steve Pribut's Chess Page http://www.drpribut.com/sports/chess.html
- The Week In Chess TWIC - Mark Crowther
- http://www.chesscenter.com/twic/twic.html
-
- Internet Chess Library at UPitt
- http://www.pitt.edu/~schach/Archives/index2.html
-
- Chessopolis http://www.chessopolis.com/
-
- Chessbase http://www.chessbase.com/
-
- Internet Chess Club http://www.chessclub.org/from/fineygan
-
- Chess.Net Live Chess http://www.chess.net/
-
- Chess Politics (US) http://www.chess Chess Cafe
-
- Russell Hanon http://www.chesscafe.com/
-
- Tim Krabbe http://www.xs4all.nl/~timkr/chess/chess.html
-
-
-
- Chesslab Search Database of 2 Million Games
-
- http://www.chesslab.com/PositionSearch.html
-
-
-
- Subject: [8] Ratings
-
-
-
- Different countries have different rating systems. The most common
- system in use is called the Elo system, named after its inventor. An
- excellent book on the subject is _The Rating of Chessplayers, Past &
- Present_ by Arpad E. Elo (copyright 1978; ISBN 0-668-04721-6). FIDE and
- the USCF use the Elo system, although in the USCF there have been some
- adjustments and additions in the past which have distorted USCF ratings
- vis-a-vis systems which have been "pure Elo" forever. The latest FIDE
- lists are online at
-
- FIDE Ratings Top 100 Players October 2002
-
- Rank Name Title Country Rating Games B-Day
- 1 Kasparov, Garry g RUS 2836 0 1963-04-13
- 2 Kramnik, Vladimir g RUS 2809 0 1975-06-25
- 3 Anand, Viswanathan g IND 2755 0 1969-12-11
- 4 Adams, Michael g ENG 2745 6 1971-11-17
- 5 Topalov, Veselin g BUL 2743 14 1975-03-15
- 6 Leko, Peter g HUN 2743 13 1979-09-08
- 7 Ponomariov, Ruslan g UKR 2743 0 1983-10-11
- 8 Bareev, Evgeny g RUS 2737 10 1966-11-21
- 9 Ivanchuk, Vassily g UKR 2709 2 1969-03-18
- 10 Morozevich, Alexander g RUS 2707 6 1977-07-18
- 11 Gelfand, Boris g ISR 2704 6 1968-06-24
- 12 Grischuk, Alexander g RUS 2702 0 1983-10-31
- 13 Shirov, Alexei g ESP 2699 9 1972-07-04
- 14 Khalifman, Alexander g RUS 2690 0 1966-01-18
- 15 Svidler, Peter g RUS 2690 0 1976-06-17
- 16 Akopian, Vladimir g ARM 2689 0 1971-12-07
- 17 Karpov, Anatoly g RUS 2688 1 1951-05-23
- 18 Polgar, Judit (GM) wg HUN 2685 2 1976-07-23
- 19 Sokolov, Ivan g NED 2684 27 1968-06-13
- 20 Short, Nigel D. g ENG 2684 9 1965-06-01
- 21 Smirin, Ilia g ISR 2683 14 1968-01-21
- 22 Van Wely, Loek g NED 2681 18 1972-10-07
- 23 Zvjaginsev, Vadim g RUS 2680 9 1976-08-18
- 24 Dreev, Alexey g RUS 2673 19 1969-01-30
- 25 Almasi, Zoltan g HUN 2672 0 1976-08-29
- 26 Sasikiran, Krishnan g IND 2670 28 1981-01-07
- 27 Malakhov, Vladimir g RUS 2670 6 1980-11-27
- 28 Vaganian, Rafael A g ARM 2667 9 1951-10-15
- 29 Ye, Jiangchuan g CHN 2667 4 1960-11-20
- 30 Azmaiparashvili, Zurab g GEO 2666 15 1960-03-16
- 31 Lautier, Joel g FRA 2665 0 1973-04-12
- 32 Rublevsky, Sergei g RUS 2664 9 1974-10-15
- 33 Nikolic, Predrag g BIH 2661 0 1960-09-11
- 34 Georgiev, Kiril g MKD 2658 0 1965-11-28
- 35 Sutovsky, Emil g ISR 2657 20 1977-09-19
- 36 Bacrot, Etienne g FRA 2653 0 1983-01-22
- 37 Kasimdzhanov, Rustam g UZB 2653 0 1979-12-05
- 38 Krasenkow, Michal g POL 2651 20 1963-11-14
- 39 Movsesian, Sergei g SVK 2651 16 1978-11-03
- 40 Beliavsky, Alexander G g SLO 2650 27 1953-12-17
- 41 Onischuk, Alexander g USA 2649 33 1975-09-03
- 42 Sakaev, Konstantin g RUS 2647 0 1974-04-13
- 43 Kaidanov, Gregory S g USA 2646 25 1959-10-11
- 44 Piket, Jeroen g NED 2646 0 1969-01-27
- 45 Lutz, Christopher g GER 2645 12 1971-02-24
- 46 Xu, Jun g CHN 2643 13 1962-09-17
- 47 Volkov, Sergey g RUS 2642 13 1974-02-07
- 48 Huebner, Robert Dr. g GER 2640 7 1948-11-06
- 49 Graf, Alexander g GER 2635 29 1962-08-25
- 50 Vallejo Pons, Francisco g ESP 2635 10 1982-08-21
- 51 Gurevich, Mikhail g BEL 2634 42 1959-02-22
- 52 Korchnoi, Viktor g SUI 2634 19 1931-03-23
- 53 Hjartarson, Johann g ISL 2634 0 1963-02-08
- 54 Motylev, Alexander g RUS 2634 0 1979-06-17
- 55 Landa, Konstantin g RUS 2632 11 1972-05-22
- 56 Tkachiev, Vladislav g FRA 2632 10 1973-11-09
- 57 Tiviakov, Sergei g NED 2631 37 1973-02-14
- 58 Goldin, Alexander g USA 2630 28 1965-02-27
- 59 Seirawan, Yasser g USA 2629 11 1960-03-24
- 60 Epishin, Vladimir g RUS 2628 38 1965-07-11
- 61 Radjabov, Teimour g AZE 2628 8 1987-03-12
- 62 Bologan, Viktor g MDA 2627 9 1971-12-14
- 63 Lputian, Smbat G g ARM 2627 0 1958-02-14
- 64 Kobalia, Mikhail g RUS 2625 0 1978-05-03
- 65 Lastin, Alexander g RUS 2625 0 1976-10-30
- 66 Sadler, Matthew g ENG 2624 0 1974-05-15
- 67 Jussupow, Artur g GER 2622 9 1960-02-13
- 68 Pigusov, Evgeny g RUS 2622 0 1961-03-31
- 69 Shabalov, Alexander g USA 2621 29 1967-09-12
- 70 Aleksandrov, Aleksej g BLR 2621 22 1973-05-11
- 71 Milov, Vadim g SUI 2620 34 1972-08-01
- 72 Nielsen, Peter Heine g DEN 2620 29 1973-05-24
- 73 Zhang, Zhong g CHN 2620 13 1978-09-05
- 74 Fressinet, Laurent g FRA 2619 0 1981-11-01
- 75 Dautov, Rustem g GER 2617 0 1965-11-28
- 76 Dorfman, Josif D g FRA 2617 0 1953-05-01
- 77 Macieja, Bartlomiej g POL 2615 29 1977-10-04
- 78 Istratescu, Andrei g ROM 2615 23 1975-12-03
- 79 Filippov, Valerij g RUS 2615 0 1975-11-28
- 80 Vescovi, Giovanni g BRA 2614 9 1978-06-14
- 81 Bruzon, Lazaro g CUB 2613 16 1982-05-02
- 82 Nisipeanu, Liviu-Dieter g ROM 2613 0 1976-08-01
- 83 Nunn, John D.M. g ENG 2611 0 1955-04-25
- 84 Hansen, Curt g DEN 2610 9 1964-09-18
- 85 Benjamin, Joel g USA 2609 13 1964-03-11
- 86 Dominguez, Lenier g CUB 2608 20 1983-09-23
- 87 Hodgson, Julian M. g ENG 2608 0 1963-07-25
- 88 Baklan, Vladimir g UKR 2607 14 1978-02-25
- 89 Agrest, Evgenij g SWE 2607 13 1966-08-15
- 90 Hracek, Zbynek g CZE 2607 12 1970-09-09
- 91 Kharlov, Andrei g RUS 2606 13 1968-11-20
- 92 Hickl, Joerg g GER 2605 7 1965-04-16
- 93 Shipov, Sergei g RUS 2604 2 1966-04-17
- 94 Kazhgaleyev, Murtas g KAZ 2604 0
- 95 Ftacnik, Lubomir g SVK 2603 22 1957-10-30
- 96 Khenkin, Igor g GER 2603 20 1968-03-21
- 97 Peng, Xiaomin g CHN 2602 0 1973-04-08
- 98 Neverov, Valeriy g UKR 2601 27 1964-06-21
- 99 Giorgadze, Giorgi g GEO 2601 19 1964-10-10
- 100 Bu, Xiangzhi g CHN 2601 12 1985-12-10
- 101 Ehlvest, Jaan g EST 2600 37 1962-10-14
- 102 Eingorn, Vereslav S g UKR 2600 18 1956-11-23
-
-
- Top 50 Women October 2002
-
- Rank Name Title Country Rating Games B-Day
- 1 Polgar, Judit (GM) wg HUN 2685 2 1976-07-23
- 2 Xie, Jun (GM) wg CHN 2569 2 1970-10-30
- 3 Stefanova, Antoaneta (GM) wg BUL 2541 43 1979-04-19
- 4 Zhu, Chen (GM) wg CHN 2509 4 1976-03-16
- 5 Chiburdanidze, Maia (GM) wg GEO 2497 13 1961-01-17
- 6 Skripchenko-Lautier, Almira wg FRA 2497 0 1976-02-17
- 7 Galliamova, Alisa (IM) wg RUS 2496 9 1972-01-18
- 8 Ioseliani, Nana (IM) wg GEO 2491 0 1962-02-12
- 9 Wang, Lei wg CHN 2490 0 1975-02-04
- 10 Koneru, Humpy wg IND 2484 11 1987-03-31
- 11 Peptan, Corina (IM) wg ROM 2479 9 1978-03-17
- 12 Wang, Pin wg CHN 2473 13 1974-12-11
- 13 Xu, Yuhua wg CHN 2473 0 1976-10-29
- 14 Kovalevskaya, Ekaterina wg RUS 2466 18 1974-04-17
- 15 Matveeva, Svetlana wg RUS 2465 9 1969-07-04
- 16 Polgar, Sofia (IM) wg HUN 2462 0 1974-11-02
- 17 Kosteniuk, Alexandra (IM) wg RUS 2455 13 1984-04-23 18
- Khurtsidze, Nino (IM) wg GEO 2455 0 1975-09-28 19 Peng, Zhaoqin
- (IM) wg NED 2443 10 1968-05-08 20 Kachiani-G., Ketino (IM) wg
- GER 2439 0 1971-09-11 21 Zhukova, Natalia wg UKR 2436 21
- 1979-06-05 22 Maric, Alisa (IM) wg YUG 2434 8 1970-01-10 23
- Alexandrova, Olga (IM) wg UKR 2430 35 1978-01-28 24 Cosma, Elena
- Luminita wg ROM 2430 24 1972-01-22 25 Zielinska, Marta wg POL
- 2430 9 1978-01-30 26 Sedina, Elena (IM) wg ITA 2428 25
- 1968-06-01 27 Kosintseva, Tatiana wg RUS 2427 9 1986-04-11 28
- Bojkovic, Natasa wg YUG 2424 0 1971-09-03 29 Radziewicz, Iweta
- (IM) wg POL 2421 43 1981-03-16 30 Zatonskih, Anna wg UKR 2421
- 0 1978-07-17 31 Hoang Thanh Trang (IM) wg VIE 2420 13 1980-04-25
- 32 Vasilevich, Tatjana (IM) wg UKR 2415 8 1977-01-14 33
- Arakhamia-Grant, Ketevan (IM) wg GEO 2413 0 1968-07-19 34
- Gaponenko, Inna wg UKR 2411 18 1976-06-22 35 Galianina-Ryjanova,
- Julia wg RUS 2409 23 1974-05-15 36 Mkrtchian, Lilit wg ARM
- 2409 4 1982-08-09 37 Foisor, Cristina Adela (IM) wg ROM 2408 16
- 1967-04-07 38 Prudnikova, Svetlana wg YUG 2407 0 1967-03-18 39
- Hunt, Harriet (IM) wg ENG 2406 7 1978-02-04 40 Lymar, Irina wg
- UKR 2405 13 1974-10-20 41 Krush, Irina (IM) wm USA 2403 6
- 1983-12-24 42 Stepovaia-Dianchenko, Tatiana wg RUS 2398 0
- 1965-09-23 43 Lomineishvili, Maia wg GEO 2397 8 1977-11-11 44
- Houska, Jovanka wg ENG 2397 0 1980-06-10 45 Pogonina, Natalija
- wf RUS 2397 0 1985-03-09 46 Vijayalakshmi, Subbaraman (IM) wg
- IND 2394 27 1979-03-25 47 Matnadze, Ana wg GEO 2392 26
- 1983-02-20 48 Ning, Chunhong wg CHN 2390 0 1968-01-21 49
- Dworakowska, Joanna (IM) wg POL 2389 12 1978-10-21 50 Danielian,
- Elina wg ARM 2389 8 1978-08-16
-
-
-
- FIDE/International Ratings
-
-
-
- 2600+ World Championship Contenders 'Super Grandmasters'
- 2400+ Grandmasters (GM) and most International Masters (IM)
- 2200+ Most National Masters
- 2000+ Expert
- 1800+ Amateur Class A
- 1600+ Amateur Class B
- 1400+ Amateur Class C
- 1200+ Amateur Class D
- <1200 Beginner Class E
-
-
-
-
-
- One question which often arises is: Do Elo historical ratings of famous
- players of the past enable us to predict how well they would do against
- present day players? Some discussion of this issue occurred in (the now
- discontinued) _Chess Notes_ in 1988.
-
- Edward Winter wrote, "Elo's retrospective rankings look less and less
- convincing the more one studies them. For example, George Walker is
- attributed 2360, the same as George Botterill in January 1988 (who has
- thus had the benefit of insight into a century and a half of chess
- development since Walker's time)." Ken Whyld responded this "shows a
- misunderstanding of ELO. The ratings do not reflect how a player from a
- past age would fare against a present-day player. . . . Elo's figures
- measure competitive ability, NOT the quality of play. . . . In chess we
- can only know the standing of players within the pool of which they are
- a part. It is idle speculation to make comparisons between discrete
- periods." Arpad Elo himself then got into the discussion, saying, "The
- historical ratings have generated controversy partly because people
- misunderstand what they represent . . . Mr. Ken Whyld . . . correctly
- points out how ratings should be viewed, i.e., as a measure of
- competitive ability, and that proper comparisons can be made only
- between players of the same milieu. . . . There is also a fundamental
- point that should not be overlooked: the rating scale itself is an
- arbitrary scale, open ended, . . . with no reproducible fixed points."
-
- The Performance Rating Formula/(The Periodic Rating Formula)
-
- First equation of the Elo system:
-
- Rp = Rc + D(P)
-
- Rp - Performance rating.
- Rc - (Average) Competition/Opposition rating.
- D(P) - Rating difference based on percentage score P
-
-
- This equation is used to determine ratings on a periodic basis (at
- certain time intervals). It may also be used to determine provisional
- ratings for players having less than a certain number of games versus
- rated players.
-
- Also visit http://www.vogclub.com/ratings/elodetails.phtml for a
- reasonably understandable outline of the system. FIDE has provided its
- handbook online for details on its system:
- http://handbook.fide.com/handbook.cgi?level=B&level=02&level=10&
-
- Subject: [9] How USCF Ratings are Calculated
-
-
-
- The following is a simplified version of how the USCF rating system
- works; for a full version, write to the USCF (see [2]).
-
- *** For the first 20 games (provisional rating): ***
-
- Take the rating of the opponent +400 if the player wins. Take the rating
- of the opponent -400 if the player loses. Take the rating of the
- opponent if the game is a draw. Average these numbers. (If unrated
- players play other unrated players, this requires several iterations of
- the above.) *** After 20 games (established rating): *** The maximum
- amount a player can win or lose per game (called the "K" factor) varies
- according to rating. Players rated under 2100 have a 32-point maximum;
- players rated 2100-2399 have a 24-point maximum, and players rated 2400
- and up have a 16-point maximum. (In a "1/2 K" tournament, divide these
- maximums by two (?).)
-
- If players of equal rating play, the loser loses half of the maximum,
- the winner gains the same amount. No change for a draw. If players of
- unequal rating play, the higher-rated player gains fewer points for a
- win, but loses more points for a loss. (The lower-rated player does the
- opposite, of course.) A higher-rated player loses points for a draw; a
- lower-rated player gains points. For players rated 400 or so points
- apart, the maximum rating change is used for an upset, and the minimum
- gain/loss is 1 point if the much higher-rated player wins.
-
- The true formula for the number of points won/lost versus the ratings
- difference is a curve, but a straight-line approximation for players
- with a K factor of 32 points can be used, where every 25 points of
- ratings difference is one additional rating point gained/lost starting
- from a beginning of 16 points for a win/loss, and from zero for a draw.
- (I.e., for a 100-point difference, the higher-rated player gains 16 - 4
- = 12 points for a win, but loses 16 + 4 = 20 points for a loss. If a
- draw, the higher-rated player loses 4 points, the lower-rated player
- gains 4.) The actual formula is as follows:
-
- K = K factor
- delta_R = (Opponent's rating) - (Player's rating)
- Expected_Wins = 1/(10^(delta_R / 400) + 1)
- New_Rating = (Current rating) + K * ((Actual wins) - (Expected_Wins))
- Rounds Delta 4 .7 5 .6 6 .5 7 .4 8 .3 9+ .2
-
-
- Also, norms may be earned if the delta is met as well as exceeded. An
- established player's rating cannot drop below (his rating - 100)
- truncated to the next lowest hundred (i.e., a 1571 player cannot drop
- below 1400). This is called the rating's "floor."
-
-
-
- Subject: [10] How USCF Lifetime Titles are Earned
-
- USCF's class title norm system is similar to the system FIDE uses to
- determine GM and IM titles (see [1]). There is no time limit for
- accumulating points towards USCF titles. There are two titles per class
- from E to Expert: "Certified" and "Advanced." Master-level titles have a
- different naming scheme: 2200 is "Life Master," followed by "1-Star Life
- Master" at 2300, "2-Star Life Master" at 2400, etc. Points are earned
- toward titles by exceeding the expected score of a player with the
- minimum rating of that level by a certain number of points. Rules:
-
- 1. A norm can be earned only in events of four rounds or greater. (Norms
- cannot be earned by playing a rated match.)
-
- 2. A minimum score of two game points in the event is required, not
- counting unplayed games.
-
- 3. Ten "norm points" are required for a title.
-
- 4. Making a norm earns two points toward the title for that level.
-
- 5. A player who does not have the title 100 points below the norm level
- also earns five points towards that title.
-
- 6. A player who does not have the title 200 points below the norm level
- automatically achieves that title.
-
- 7. A player who achieves an established rating, but not the title
- corresponding to 100 points below this rating, is awarded that title.
-
- 8. Only established rated players can earn titles. The Life Master title
- may still be earned by playing 300 games at the 2200 level. After 1996,
- this title may only be earned through the norm system. For a full
- description of the system, see _Chess Life_ May 1992.
-
- Subject: [11] Tournaments
-
- Chess tournaments can be large (1000 players) or small (10 players or
- even less); long (1 round per day for 2 weeks) or short (a few rounds in
- one day). There are tournaments only for Masters and tournaments only
- for beginners, although most tournaments are open to anyone.
-
- A typical _Chess Life_ will list about 350 tournaments coming up in the
- U.S. in the next couple of months, and there will be about the same
- number which are unlisted. If you want to participate in a tournament
- but are intimidated because you don't know the procedures, by all means
- go and ask the director and/or other players questions before things
- begin. They'll be glad to help. A typical tournament announcement will
- contain the following: (1) Date(s) and name of the tournament. (2) What
- kind of tournament it is, e.g., 4-SS or 3-RR. The number given denotes
- how many rounds will be played. "SS" stands for Swiss System, which is a
- method of pairing the contestants (see [12]). "RR" stands for
- round-robin, a format in which the players are divided into groups of
- similar ratings before the tournament begins, and then each member of a
- group plays every other member of that group. Thus, in a 3-RR, the group
- size will be four. The Swiss System is by far the most popular in the
- U.S.
-
- (3) The time controls, e.g., "30/60, SD/60" or "G/60" or "20/1, 30/1."
- The number on the left is the number of moves, and the number on the
- right is the time in minutes, or if that number is 1 or 2, in hours.
- "SD" stands for "sudden death," and "G" stands for game. Where more than
- one time control is listed, they are the controls which will take effect
- as the game progresses. So, the three examples given above can be
- explained as follows. In the first example, the players would each get
- 60 minutes on their clocks, and would have to have made their 30th moves
- before the 60 minutes expires (your clock only runs when it is your turn
- to move). Then, they each have another 60 minutes to finish the game
- completely. Time left over from the first time control carries over to
- subsequent time controls. In the second example, each player would begin
- with 60 minutes on his clock, and would have to finish the game within
- that time. In the third example, the players would each get 1 hour for
- the first 20 moves, 1 hour for the next 30 moves, and another hour for
- every subsequent group of 30 moves.
-
- (4) The location of the tournament.
-
- (5) The entry fee, sometimes by section (see item 7).
-
- (6) The total prize fund (if any), either "guaranteed" (G) or based on a
- certain number of entries (e.g., b/30). The difference is guaranteed
- prizes must be paid, and "based on" prizes need only be paid in full if
- the stated number of players enter. If the stated number of players do
- not enter, the prize fund is reduced proportionally, but only down to a
- minimum of 50%.
-
- (7) Sections, if any. If none are listed, the tournament is an "open."
- "Open" sections are always open to *any* player. Other sections may be
- restricted to players below a certain rating, and/or occasionally above
- a certain rating. Sometimes sections (or whole tournaments) are
- restricted to certain age groups, school grades, etc. "Class"
- tournaments separate players by USCF rating classes. Sometimes different
- sections carry different entry fees.
-
- (8) Prize fund breakdown (if any). If the tournament is in sections,
- each section shows its own prize fund. In an small open, a typical prize
- fund might look like this: $140-100-70, A 50, B 45, C 40, D/E/Unr. 35,
- Jrs. 20. This means first prize is $140, second is $100, and third is
- $70. The top Class A player gets $50, etc. The top player in the
- combined classes of D, E, and unrated players gets $35, and the top
- Junior (under age 21) gets $20.
-
- (9) The registration time and time the rounds will begin.
-
- (10) Where to send an advance entry fee, and/or who to contact for more
- information.
-
- Subject: [12] The Swiss Tournament Pairing System
-
- The best way to get the rules for a Swiss System is to buy a copy of the
- USCF rulebook, available for about $7.95. However, a VERY simplified
- summary of the USCF rules is:
-
- 1. Arrange players in order by rating, highest to lowest, unrated either
- at the bottom or by estimated rating.
-
- 2. For round 1, divide into two stacks. The top players in EACH stack
- play each other, then the second players in each stack play each other,
- etc. This results in the highest-rated player playing the middle-rated
- player.
-
- 3. After round one, divide up by score groups. Win=1, Draw=1/2, Loss=0.
-
- 4. Pair up each score group as in step 2. If an odd number, the bottom
- person in higher point group plays top person in next score group. If
- odd number in lowest score group, lowest rated player gets a full point
- bye. (Limit players to one bye each.)
-
- 5. Where possible, players should alternate color, or at least equalize.
- (By round 4, players ideally should have had two Whites, two Blacks.)
-
- 6. Players NEVER play the same opponent more than once. If necessary,
- pair players with someone in next lower score group. (Treat as if odd
- number.)
-
- 7. To improve on color allocation as per step 5, if two players in the
- bottom half of a score group are rated within 100 points, they can be
- interchanged. (If rated over 2100, 50 points is a better cutoff.)
-
- -------------------------------- The FAQ is compiled and posted by
- Stephen Pribut at pribut@yahoo.com
-
-
- Copyright (c), 1997-2003 Stephen M. Pribut. Permission to
- copy all or part of this work is granted for individual use, and for
- copies within a scholastic or academic setting. Copies may not be made
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- retained verbatim and be displayed conspicuously. You need written
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- archive, and/or make a translation, and/or publish/mirror on a website
- (scholastic and academic use excepted). If anyone needs other
- permissions that aren't covered by the above, please contact the author.
-
-
- No Warranty This work is provided on an "as is" basis. The copyright
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