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- From: fujimoto@carson.u.washington.edu (Bryant Fujimoto)
- Subject: Re: TO THE GM's/IM's FROM DON
- Message-ID: <1992Dec22.014644.18244@u.washington.edu>
- Sender: news@u.washington.edu (USENET News System)
- Organization: University of Washington
- References: <1992Dec17.184754.542@uoft02.utoledo.edu> <1h18d1INN188@agate.berkeley.edu> <1992Dec21.105652.903@u.washington.edu> <1992Dec21.102851.589@uoft02.utoledo.edu>
- Date: Tue, 22 Dec 1992 01:46:44 GMT
- Lines: 66
-
- dcrosgr@uoft02.utoledo.edu writes:
-
- >In article <1992Dec21.105652.903@u.washington.edu>, fujimoto@carson.u.washington.edu (Bryant Fujimoto) writes:
- >> dcrosgr@uoft02.utoledo.edu writes:
- >>
- >>>My personal philosophy on life can be boiled down to:
- >>
- >>>A working imperfect solution is better than a non-working perfect solution.
- >>
- >>>I have little respect for 'critics' who lack the ability to climb to the top,
- >>>and it spills over....
- >>
- [stuff deleted]
- >>
- >> If you look in the sports pages you find critiques of coaches
- >> and athletes written by journalists who are neither. The sports
- >> writers may claim a player is no longer effective, etc. And it
- >> seems some people enjoy arguing over which of two athletes
- >> (or teams), who did not play at the same time, was the better athlete.
- >> This appears to be the same sort of activity which you are condemning
- >> in some of your posts (how well did Fischer and Spassky play? is
- >> Fischer as good as he once was? etc.). However, since this sort
- >> of thing is accepted in other sports, why do you object to it here?
-
- >Because what Benjie (and the others) did was the equivelent of
- >taking two missed passes thrown by the WINNING Superbowl quarterback, and using
- >them to 'prove' that the man is NOT as good as he was last year (which, by the
- >way, his team ALSO won).
-
- Consider a quarterback who had a good regular season - high precentage
- of completions, lots of yards passing, etc. His team gets to the
- Superbowl where he completes only 5 of 20 passes, has 3 intereceptions,
- no TDs, etc., *but*, his team wins, in part because the opposing
- team turns the ball over 8 times. Even though his team won, his play
- will be criticized by the sports journalists. The difference between
- your example and mine is the quality of play; if its bad, its going to
- be criticized. You appear to think that Fischer's errors are trivial or
- minor (for a QB to have only 2 incompletions in a game is not serious),
- and therefore can not be used as evidence that he no longer plays as well
- as he once did. However, to convince anyone of this you will have
- to directly dispute the criticism of FS-II, and this you steadfastly
- refuse to do.
-
- >Maybe he saw 600 pounds of lineman running towards him.
- >Maybe it was based on a run pattern that was blocked.
- >Maybe he was just stopping the clock.
-
- >Besides, it is not Fisher's coach which was making the comments, it was
- >the quarterback of a semi-pro farm team for the losing team...
-
- Please read the posts more carefully. I was not referring to coaches
- criticizing athletes, I was referring to coaches *being* *criticized*
- by sports journalists (most of whom have never coached at a high
- level, if at all).
-
- Be that as it may, most sports journalists are not even good enough
- to be the losing quarterback of a semi-pro farm team. So even *if*
- we accept your characterization of the GMs, we still have in most
- other sports a situation where the journalists are, by your
- criteria, even more unqualified to comment on the quality of play,
- than the GMs are to comment on FS-II. Yet criticism by sports
- journalists is generally accepted. So why should chess be different?
-
- Bryant Fujimoto
- fujimoto@denali.chem.washington.edu
-
-