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Stewarton Allegro entries once again dropping on last year. Most noticeable in the Major with a grand total of 11 entries, less than half in either the Open or Minor.
Still could get in, if you ask nice.
U -14 and U-12 also very scarce and will probably be amalgamated.
Dropping levels of entries are noticeable for the past couple of years now in most of the tournaments I have an interest in which leads to most of them running at a loss.
Obviously this can only be sustained for a short time and, while plans are in place for this season coming, the season after could see a sharp decline in weekend and one day tournaments unless the entries pick up.
I understand the reluctance to pay an entry fee with a 3 in front of it but costs for those events rise year on year and your entry fee doesn't.
Or do we cut prizes to the bone to attempt to save money, perhaps prize money isn't the draw organisers think it is?
I've seen arguments on this forum indicating that some fees are too high at the moment. That complaint may disappear along with the congress or event to be replaced with a why aren't there more congresses and events.
Some venues where the events I am involved with are into 4 figures for a weekend hire, so something has to give here.
Do entry fees start reflecting the real world for entrants and then possibly suffer even more of a dearth of entrants and fold?
( May come as a relief for some organisers not having to deal with all the hassle of setting one of these things up.)
Do we accept that congresses will fall out of fashion, as it were, because you have to assume that if your entry is going down then the event is less popular then it can be stopped and no one will miss it too much?
Do we go back to the less salubrious venues that are indeed cheaper but have the attendant bars in the next room, or a hen party in the venue? ( I know, 'cause I was there.)
Basically, I suppose, I have to ask if you all want to go back to playing in 1 or 2 weekends a year, if that, and just play in the your club and local league or does meeting people from all over Scotland and beyond appeal to you?
If the second option then you have make the effort to enter as many congresses as you can.
As you can, I said, I am well aware of the other demands on spare time in this day and age so there is no need to categorise why you cannot attend every event in the calendar , try instead to keep it to what could entice you to attend more events.
Just positive things, try it, you might like it.
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(10-06-2017, 10:34 PM)JMcNicoll Wrote: Stewarton Allegro entries once again dropping on last year. Most noticeable in the Major with a grand total of 11 entries, less than half in either the Open or Minor.
Still could get in, if you ask nice.
U -14 and U-12 also very scarce and will probably be amalgamated.
Dropping levels of entries are noticeable for the past couple of years now in most of the tournaments I have an interest in which leads to most of them running at a loss.
Obviously this can only be sustained for a short time and, while plans are in place for this season coming, the season after could see a sharp decline in weekend and one day tournaments unless the entries pick up.
I understand the reluctance to pay an entry fee with a 3 in front of it but costs for those events rise year on year and your entry fee doesn't.
Or do we cut prizes to the bone to attempt to save money, perhaps prize money isn't the draw organisers think it is?
I've seen arguments on this forum indicating that some fees are too high at the moment. That complaint may disappear along with the congress or event to be replaced with a why aren't there more congresses and events.
Some venues where the events I am involved with are into 4 figures for a weekend hire, so something has to give here.
Do entry fees start reflecting the real world for entrants and then possibly suffer even more of a dearth of entrants and fold?
( May come as a relief for some organisers not having to deal with all the hassle of setting one of these things up.)
Do we accept that congresses will fall out of fashion, as it were, because you have to assume that if your entry is going down then the event is less popular then it can be stopped and no one will miss it too much?
Do we go back to the less salubrious venues that are indeed cheaper but have the attendant bars in the next room, or a hen party in the venue? ( I know, 'cause I was there.)
Basically, I suppose, I have to ask if you all want to go back to playing in 1 or 2 weekends a year, if that, and just play in the your club and local league or does meeting people from all over Scotland and beyond appeal to you?
If the second option then you have make the effort to enter as many congresses as you can.
As you can, I said, I am well aware of the other demands on spare time in this day and age so there is no need to categorise why you cannot attend every event in the calendar , try instead to keep it to what could entice you to attend more events.
Just positive things, try it, you might like it.
Interesting post John.
I can give you one reason (sure there are many, we won't find out unless others contribute)....As a regular entrant over the last 30+ years hardly missing any events, due to the introduction of Fide Rated Weekenders, I have no choice but to miss those events.
I have hopes of the GM title (losing points in weekends will destroy my chances of reaching my goal). As I work, this means the energy required to gain the little points available are slim, one oversight means instead of gaining slim points, I lose a vast amount of points which is not easy to make up. Alex MacFarlane has confirmed this is another posting.
Due to the inactivity of not playing as often I find myself not having the desired sharpness required to help me reach my goals.
This year I have missed Perth, Edinburgh and Ayr due to the introduction of Fide Rated events.
I was free for Ayr and would have played.
So there you go John, one guaranteed entry missed.
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(12-06-2017, 10:17 PM)SBMannion Wrote: (10-06-2017, 10:34 PM)JMcNicoll Wrote: Stewarton Allegro entries once again dropping on last year. Most noticeable in the Major with a grand total of 11 entries, less than half in either the Open or Minor.
Still could get in, if you ask nice.
U -14 and U-12 also very scarce and will probably be amalgamated.
Dropping levels of entries are noticeable for the past couple of years now in most of the tournaments I have an interest in which leads to most of them running at a loss.
Obviously this can only be sustained for a short time and, while plans are in place for this season coming, the season after could see a sharp decline in weekend and one day tournaments unless the entries pick up.
I understand the reluctance to pay an entry fee with a 3 in front of it but costs for those events rise year on year and your entry fee doesn't.
Or do we cut prizes to the bone to attempt to save money, perhaps prize money isn't the draw organisers think it is?
I've seen arguments on this forum indicating that some fees are too high at the moment. That complaint may disappear along with the congress or event to be replaced with a why aren't there more congresses and events.
Some venues where the events I am involved with are into 4 figures for a weekend hire, so something has to give here.
Do entry fees start reflecting the real world for entrants and then possibly suffer even more of a dearth of entrants and fold?
( May come as a relief for some organisers not having to deal with all the hassle of setting one of these things up.)
Do we accept that congresses will fall out of fashion, as it were, because you have to assume that if your entry is going down then the event is less popular then it can be stopped and no one will miss it too much?
Do we go back to the less salubrious venues that are indeed cheaper but have the attendant bars in the next room, or a hen party in the venue? ( I know, 'cause I was there.)
Basically, I suppose, I have to ask if you all want to go back to playing in 1 or 2 weekends a year, if that, and just play in the your club and local league or does meeting people from all over Scotland and beyond appeal to you?
If the second option then you have make the effort to enter as many congresses as you can.
As you can, I said, I am well aware of the other demands on spare time in this day and age so there is no need to categorise why you cannot attend every event in the calendar , try instead to keep it to what could entice you to attend more events.
Just positive things, try it, you might like it.
Interesting post John.
I can give you one reason (sure there are many, we won't find out unless others contribute)....As a regular entrant over the last 30+ years hardly missing any events, due to the introduction of Fide Rated Weekenders, I have no choice but to miss those events.
I have hopes of the GM title (losing points in weekends will destroy my chances of reaching my goal). As I work, this means the energy required to gain the little points available are slim, one oversight means instead of gaining slim points, I lose a vast amount of points which is not easy to make up. Alex MacFarlane has confirmed this is another posting.
Due to the inactivity of not playing as often I find myself not having the desired sharpness required to help me reach my goals.
This year I have missed Perth, Edinburgh and Ayr due to the introduction of Fide Rated events.
I was free for Ayr and would have played.
So there you go John, one guaranteed entry missed.
A statistician's view would be interesting, especially about the probabilities at the core of FIDE (and CS's) rating system in what I tend to call the black box. From memory, these do expect higher-rated players to achieve unrealistically high winning scores (given a rating difference of the 400 points that are assumed by the boundaries of the black box, it is close to 95%).
These probabilities take no account of colour, far less the enormous increase in available chess information, much of it personalised. Neither has FIDE (or CS), to my knowledge ever undertaken any serious review of the probability spread within the black box, despite over 40+ years of its operation. They have tinkered around the edges, but essentially only with K factors, a different issue
It does seem likely that these probabilities have narrowed over the years but this remains wholly untested. This, too, despite the fact that the black box initially applied only to players over 2200 and effectively to around 2600 - Fischer and for a decade and more after him, was the only high outlier ... but if he'd played any games after 1972, even he'd almost certainly have dropped back much closer to the chasing pack at no more than around 2600.
Would any reputable bookie risk giving odds of circa 95% against a 2300-2400 player continually scoring 5/5 in weekenders playing average field rated 400 points lower? I doubt it. But otherwise the stronger player loses rating points.
Discuss!? And perhaps lobby FIDE!?!?
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14-06-2017, 12:43 AM
(This post was last modified: 14-06-2017, 12:53 AM by WBuchanan.)
The player rated 400 points higher than their opponents wouldn't be expected to get 5/5 95% of the time Craig. The 95% expectancy would mean the strong player would average 4+3/4 (4.75) out of five, eg half the time getting 4.5 and half the time 5/5. Not that far from reality?
Not that I'm disagreeing with you...a statistician IS at hand - Jeff Sonas, who has written several articles about rating theory vs practice. Here's the first one
http://en.chessbase.com/post/the-elo-rat...ncy-tables
According to this 2011 article:
1) The true theoretical expectancy of the stronger player at a 400 difference is 92% (eg see the first graph on the link).
2) Rating differences of less than 400 slightly exaggerate the expectation of the higher player compared with practice, which continues up to the 400 point - supporting the feeling expressed by Craig and Steve (See the fourth graph).
3) Because of the 400 cutoff, the stronger player is favoured at differences of more than 400 as their score continues to increase with the rating difference (going up to at least 98% for 600 plus, after which the data gets a bit sparse), while the expectation actually used is fixed at a lower value by the cutoff. This favours the stronger player but is kind of pairing is probably rarer.
Careful what you lobby for - for aspiring GM norm hunters, does the difference between expectation and reality not work in your favour when you play a GM rated much higher than you are!?
Hope helpful.
Cheers
[/quote]
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22-06-2017, 07:14 PM
(This post was last modified: 22-06-2017, 07:17 PM by George Neave.)
If everyone you play is always lower rated than you then eventually you will drop rating points. My impression is that many (most?) 2200+ Scottish players play the majority of their chess outside Scotland these days. I am not surprised by that.
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Thank goodness someone has articulated the decline in Ayrshire chess participation. Given the raison d'etre of the Ayrshire Association is to foster and promote chess in Ayrshire, I find it very surprising that the only proposal of note for the associations AGM is to restrict spectators at league games. (the only other proposal, from the same club [Ayr], is in regard to electronic devices)
There have been several tournaments cancelled/postponed in the past season in Ayrshire, I would have thought that an urgent review of this matter would be upper most in the minds of the Ayrshire officials.
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(29-08-2017, 11:50 PM)Patrick McGovern Wrote: Thank goodness someone has articulated the decline in Ayrshire chess participation. Given the raison d'etre of the Ayrshire Association is to foster and promote chess in Ayrshire, I find it very surprising that the only proposal of note for the associations AGM is to restrict spectators at league games. (the only other proposal, from the same club [Ayr], is in regard to electronic devices)
There have been several tournaments cancelled/postponed in the past season in Ayrshire, I would have thought that an urgent review of this matter would be upper most in the minds of the Ayrshire officials.
Now that we have congresses in other parts of the country where the prize is free entry into a congress in Ayrshire, I think the prospects for increased numbers in Ayrshire maybe brighter than you think.
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(31-08-2017, 03:08 PM)George Neave Wrote: (29-08-2017, 11:50 PM)Patrick McGovern Wrote: Thank goodness someone has articulated the decline in Ayrshire chess participation. Given the raison d'etre of the Ayrshire Association is to foster and promote chess in Ayrshire, I find it very surprising that the only proposal of note for the associations AGM is to restrict spectators at league games. (the only other proposal, from the same club [Ayr], is in regard to electronic devices)
There have been several tournaments cancelled/postponed in the past season in Ayrshire, I would have thought that an urgent review of this matter would be upper most in the minds of the Ayrshire officials.
Now that we have congresses in other parts of the country where the prize is free entry into a congress in Ayrshire, I think the prospects for increased numbers in Ayrshire maybe brighter than you think.
congresses will survive due to hard work, sponsorship and the expertise the volunteers undoubtedly have. internally there have been many association run tournaments that have been postponed/cancelled. chess within Ayrshire is in serious decline. if it had not been for a very generous donation by an office bearer some years ago the association would be close to bankruptcy. Income is at an all time low, sponsorship for association run tournaments is non existent. I fear for Ayrshire chess.
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31-08-2017, 05:13 PM
(This post was last modified: 31-08-2017, 05:14 PM by PeterReidSmith.)
The (full) weekend formats are pretty intensive. People of all ages have a variety of interests these days and other commitments - all it takes, for example, is for a specific club/activity/commitment to take up a Saturday or a Sunday and that makes a weekend congress essentially impossible. My own girls, for example, have commitments on a Saturday that simple can't be compromised on, so as a rule weekend events are off. In compensation for that, we try to play in the league, weekday competitions and as many national/international (typically holiday period) tournaments as we can. These are just the facts of life.
Perhaps more innovation is required, and in that front Gary is to be congratulated for attempting to think outside the box a little - even if I don't actually agree with some of it, it's nevertheless the right idea to explore different options. Similarly, the FIDE blitz/allegro initiatives are a great idea and some I attended (including in Ayr - charity one by David C) seemed very popular.
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I too am against FIDE rating of weekend congresses -too hard for me to maintain a 2300 rating. I might consider playing in Glasgow weekender - cost of travel + accommodation is nearly £100 otherwise. I would also consider playing in an interesting FIDE rated tournament abroad if I thought it was value for money.
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