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Eligibility Votes - March 2022 - Printable Version +- Forums (https://www.chessscotland.com/forum) +-- Forum: Members Only (https://www.chessscotland.com/forum/forum-16.html) +--- Forum: Announcements (https://www.chessscotland.com/forum/forum-6.html) +--- Thread: Eligibility Votes - March 2022 (/thread-2143.html) |
RE: Eligibility Votes - March 2022 - Douglas Bryson - 05-04-2022 (05-04-2022, 01:18 PM)Willie Rutherford Wrote: Let's guess only about 30 people a year are seriously considered for selection to represent Scotland, the vast majority will have life-long eligibility through birth or parentage..... On the last Olympiad perhaps half the 10 players were resident-only qualifiers for a Scotland registration. If they leave Scotland to work or live should their eligibility to represent Scotland be curtailed? RE: Eligibility Votes - March 2022 - WBuchanan - 05-04-2022 (05-04-2022, 12:27 PM)Alex McFarlane Wrote: There seems to be three main questions here. I think we should be trying to focus on these. RE: Eligibility Votes - March 2022 - Alex McFarlane - 05-04-2022 Hi Willie, With regard to being selected for Scotland, that is only a small part of the problem. To be able to play in a FIDE rated event of any description you need to be given a FIN (FIDE Identification Number). This is issued by your 'own' national federation. For Douglas to establish which category a player satisfies would be time consuming. Tournament organisers would need to be educated in the problems that a late attempt at registration can cause. A player without a FIN means that the tournament cannot be submitted to FIDE for rating. Some federations can be slow to issue FINs, especially if they do not know who the player is. This becomes a real problem with players who currently satisfy residency but may lose that right in the future so prefer to seek a more permanent solution. Imagine the admin that will be required for a junior rapidplay to be FIDE rated. For a small tournament in Edinburgh this weekend I know of 6 juniors who have not provided sufficient evidence to be registered under the current arrangements! With regard to proposal 2, I agree totally EXCEPT our own rules have already been broken. I argue that there should be a 'statute of limitations' on when this can be corrected and that any reasonable time to do so has been exceeded. If England refuses to accept Matt back then he faces a €50 per year fee from FIDE to be registered as FID which I feel, morally, Chess Scotland should pay. In addition he will no longer be invited to title norm events as FID (which would be his designation) does not satisfy the nationality requirements for opponents' title norms. If we do reject Matt shouldn't we also be doing the same for anyone who used residency but no longer qualifies? It is a minefield that I for one don't want to enter. If we leave Matt as SCO but strip him of the rights associated with that, then we are clearly discriminating against him. There were no restrictions put on him initially by Chess Scotland. RE: Eligibility Votes - March 2022 - WBuchanan - 05-04-2022 Not sure what you're on about Alex, in this paragraph "If England refuses to accept Matt back then he faces a €50 per year fee from FIDE to be registered as FID which I feel, morally, Chess Scotland should pay. In addition he will no longer be invited to title norm events as FID (which would be his designation) does not satisfy the nationality requirements for opponents' title norms." From Motion 2 notes "If members vote No they disagree then Matthew Turner would retain his Scotland registration but would only qualify for full SCO rights if he completed a two year period of residency." Nobody is going to be forcing Matt to 'go back' to England! RE: Eligibility Votes - March 2022 - Willie Rutherford - 05-04-2022 (05-04-2022, 02:40 PM)Douglas Bryson Wrote:(05-04-2022, 01:18 PM)Willie Rutherford Wrote: Let's guess only about 30 people a year are seriously considered for selection to represent Scotland, the vast majority will have life-long eligibility through birth or parentage..... Why not? If residence was your only connection to Scotland and you are no longer resident why should you still be eligible? Of course, there is a discussion to be had about exact criteria to make sensible allowance for short-term periods of non-residency e.g. your eligibility based on residency expires if you have not been resident in Scotland for at least 6 months in the last 5 years (top of head example) (05-04-2022, 03:14 PM)Alex McFarlane Wrote: Hi Willie,Thanks Alex but like others have said, eligibility for an SCO code at FIDE and eligibility to represent Scotland or be declared Scottish Champion are surely 2 entirely different things. I am not sure I care who has an SCO code, the more the merrier. Re MT I see no problem with the status quo of him retaining his SCO code but being ineligible to represent Scotland. The only "discrimination against" him would be the perfectly valid one of not allowing him to represent Scotland because he doesn't meet the criteria. The same "discrimination" that applies to everyone else. I agree it is important that where relevant the individuals should be helped to understand the implications of having an SCO code if they hope to represent some other country. It seems maybe this didn't happen with MT (as to why...let's not go through all that again, please!) so as stated before, if MT is unhappy with the status quo I would be sympathetic to CS supporting him financially to move, within reason. I hope he would choose not to. RE: Eligibility Votes - March 2022 - Alex McFarlane - 05-04-2022 But FIDE doesn't differentiate, everyone down as SCO is Scottish. THey are therefore seen as representing Scotland in any FIDE rated event. If Matt plays at Hastings for example he is considered as Scottish and representing Scotland for player norms. If he won the British, he would be classed as Scottish not English. In addition CS pays FIDE €1 per year for each active SCO player. I cannot see an argument that we are not paying for him as he is not really Scottish getting anywhere with FIDE! We cannot use the designation as we choose. As long as he is registered with FIDE as SCO that's it. We can decide which team events he is selected for but have no say in many individual events. This point seems to be missed, possibly because we currently don't have anyone performing at a high enough level. Would we be trying to stop Matt playing in the Candidates if he was good enough because he was the wrong type of SCO? There seems to be a total lack of understanding in the way FIDE works but, more importantly, in the amount of work which would be required to ensure that those no longer resident were disenfranchised (which would be required by some suggestions). RE: Eligibility Votes - March 2022 - WBuchanan - 05-04-2022 (05-04-2022, 08:19 AM)Douglas Bryson Wrote: I was chairman of the Eligibility Working Panel (EWP) panel set up to examine CS eligibility rules and to try and find resolution of the difficulties of the 2019 Scottish Championship. Hi again Douglas. This is another reply to your earlier post #134. This has the effect of copying it all again, sorry. You write: "With regard to the issue of the FIDE registration of students and other temporary residents mentioned by various posters the majority EWP view was that the stipulation of a minimum period of two years is sufficient. In the allocation of FIDE IDs we simply ask players if they meet at least one of the criteria 1) Born here 2) parent born here 3) Residency of two years - any one of the three is considered sufficient. CS do not seek information on the future work and location choices of players and no record is kept of how any player meets the eligibility requirements. Therefore we do not currently know who are "residency only" players." I'm puzzled by this line of argument, and by the last statement. The Operating Procedures for selection state that players who wish to be considered for selection are already responsible for ensuring their addresses and contact details are kept up to date: https://www.chessscotland.com/wp-content/uploads/2022/02/Selections_OP_Feb_2022.pdf Players wishing to be considered eligible, already registered and that are under your existing radar regarding birth/parent, could simply be asked. You know when players have left Scotland from their address details. There would be some i's to be dotted and t's to be crossed. For most eligible players a single once-only item of data would suffice as birth/parent status are permanent, lifelong categories and could be marked as such? For players you register in the future there would be no extra admin requirement to speak of. They can be marked as Birth/Parent or Not Permanent. Problem when they leave Scotland? They'll have non Scottish addresses, which the OPs say they are responsible for keeping up to date. More i's and t's, and rather you than me - but isn't this the nature of Admin. There shouldn't be hoards of them seeking eligibility surely? Why will the sky fall above Scotland, if people aren't given lifelong eligibility? The sky's fine above Wales and Ireland! I meant to ask you about this as well: "The majority EWP conclusion was that as far as FIDE is concerned any player holding a SCO registration is considered as Scottish regardless of their geographic location. Any player ruled ineligible from representing Scotland under a CS residency check would be unable to play for any other federation until they had transferred away from Scotland. Should CS place restrictions on players who have already demonstrated a connection to the Scotland chess community now or at some time in the past?" It may be an editing creation, but there is no EWP view expressed there; FIDE's official view isn't an EWP matter. Anyway, don't players who live and play here for years, decades even, demonstrate a stronger connection? I think what you said about them being warned about a future penalty should they transfer is sufficient. 50 euros isn't much amongst chess expenses for competitive players. And as it's FIDE that charge it, it's not really CS responsibility and you did warn them. For this we should freely give away lifelong eligibility? Cheers RE: Eligibility Votes - March 2022 - Willie Rutherford - 05-04-2022 (05-04-2022, 04:19 PM)Alex McFarlane Wrote: But FIDE doesn't differentiate, everyone down as SCO is Scottish.Thanks Alex. That does help me understand where you are coming from. I have been indeed focussing on Scottish Champion eligibility and eligibility to be selected to represent Scotland, which as you say, is up to CS not FIDE. But the status quo has allowed MT to "represent" Scotland in individual events up to now with no problem. So just let that continue. Where's the harm? The whole debate was, I thought, about giving him "full eligibility". Similarly, those losing their "full eligibility" due to no longer being resident can just keep their SCO codes if they want. CS having to pay €1 for each SCO registered player doesn't seem important on the basis that most, but obviously not all, SCO players are contributing to CS funds through membership and/or grading fees. As for MT being SCO in the candidates etc - good luck to him! RE: Eligibility Votes - March 2022 - hamish olson - 05-04-2022 I think it is implicit in the motion that the type of representing Scotland discussed is "selected to represent" rather than the more everyday playing in tournaments under as SCO code kind - it explicitly states he will keep his SCO code either way. I can understand the confusion though - perhaps the motion should enumerate what the rights being proposed are. (05-04-2022, 12:45 PM)hamish olson Wrote: I agree with your three questions Alex, and respect your logic on all points but think this begs the follow up question of:A bit indulgent to quote myself, but I have realised that I misread Alex's post that I was replying to. I was meaning to say that my answer to (b) is that I do in fact support motion 1 as a simplifying change - I just wish the associated communication was a bit better. Alex, did you perhaps misspeak your answer to (b) - the way I was reading your statement, particularly the part about "too difficult to administer in practice" was that you supported motion 1 too - as that is the most simple way to administer, at least compared with the status quo. (05-04-2022, 03:40 PM)Willie Rutherford Wrote:Hi Willie, I think that what you are proposing here is a bit harsh.(05-04-2022, 02:40 PM)Douglas Bryson Wrote:(05-04-2022, 01:18 PM)Willie Rutherford Wrote: Let's guess only about 30 people a year are seriously considered for selection to represent Scotland, the vast majority will have life-long eligibility through birth or parentage..... I think if someone has lived here for a prolonged period of time then they should have permanent eligibility. To be honest I personally couldn't care less whether someone was born here or not, or if someone has Scottish parents or not. I'm not sure I'd even include either of those in the eligibility criteria at all if this was all starting from scratch (which I know it is not) - I would just have residency. Are you really saying if someone has been living here since say two years old, then moves to Newcastle in their twenties or thirties then they should lose their eligibility? I suspect you were thinking of people who had moved here as adults and momentarily forgot about other cases. It would be possible to have a whole heap of conditional rules to make that work, but I actually think motion 1 strikes a sensible balance - we can't even seem to keep track of decisions at AGMs reliably - can we really keep track of complicated and inevitably evolving eligibility criteria? I would have some sympathy for say 2 years residency for initial registration and eligibility, and 5-10 years to make it permanent, with no middle ground, but think one criteria is even simpler and halves the amount of checking. RE: Eligibility Votes - March 2022 - WBuchanan - 05-04-2022 Sensible thoughts, both. Just a comment from the inside of the washing machine... ![]() To clip this part off: "I suspect you were thinking of people who had moved here as adults and momentarily forgot about other cases. It would be possible to have a whole heap of conditional rules to make that work, but I actually think motion 1 strikes a sensible balance - we can't even seem to keep track of decisions at AGMs reliably - can we really keep track of complicated and inevitably evolving eligibility criteria? I would have some sympathy for say 2 years residency for initial registration and eligibility, and 5-10 years to make it permanent, with no middle ground, but think one criteria is even simpler and halves the amount of checking. " The claim that Motion 1 is firming up existing rules has been widely made, but is untrue. So if there was no Motion 1, and this caused the admin burden to be heavy, it would have to be heavy already. Isn't the checking burden being used as a Trojan horse? Motion 1 is 2015 SGM proposal (which wanted SCO code => eligibility) on steroids (now wants, and insists on getting, lifelong eligibility from temporary residence, as well), which was defeated, by pulling the whole eligibility item and giving it to a committee. There was another eligibility motion on the table at the time, which was closer to firming up existing procedures, had that been the aim. Despite appearances, there was obviously no REAL rush - then, and now. It wouldn't have been hard to devise (imperfect, no doubt) scales to take into account things like you are discussing. How long people stayed here, and how long that should give them. Sliding scales and a few parameters. Supposed time constraints and the induced 'rush job' thinking reduce head space and prevent reasoned thought and planning. Now we are throwing out anything that might cause a bit of checking - without even thinking about it. Just a thought as we dive out of the way of the horse's wheels! |