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A 0-0 result in the Bulgarian League

8 October 2008 18:32 PM CET | By Dejan  | Filed under: Reports | Tags: ,

Bulgarian Team ChampionshipLike we see in more and more events, this week’s Bulgarian Team Championships also applied a variation of the Sofia Rule. In the third round this led to an incident: the result of one game was declared 0-0 for breaking the tournament regulations.

By Dejan Bojkov

This year’s Bulgarian Team Championships took place 1-7 October in Borovetz, Bulgaria. Lokomotiv Sofia (with GMs Chatalbashev, GM Kr. Georgiev, GM Velikov, and IMs N. Ninov, J. Ivanov and IM Andonov) won the final, scoring five consecutive wins and drawing their last two matches. In the women section Lokomotiv 2000 Plovdiv (with WIM R. Genova, WFM A. Nikolova, WFM I. Videnova and WIM S.Savova) won the title.

Bulgarian Team Championship

This year the organizers of the championship have been experimenting with the Sofia Rule. The players were not allowed to offer a draw before move 30 without the permission of the chief arbiter, unless a theoretically drawn position was reached.

So what happened in the third round? In the game Bratanov (Lokomotiv 2000) - Stojanov (Bulmex) White offered a draw on move 22, which was accepted by the second player. While signing the score sheets one of the arbiters approached and warned them that this was not in accordance with the rules, and that they needed to proceed to move 30.

Both players did not know about the new rule (Jivko Bratanov arrived some 15 minutes late for the first round, while Svetlin Stojanov came straight for the second.) They refused to continue the game, for which they were both “rewarded” a zero. Bratanov tried to speak with the chief arbiter GM Venzislav Inkiov, asking him: “Why do we need to continue a totally senseless game?”, but the decision of the arbiter was final and over.

“This is simply nonsense”, said the frustrated Bratanov, “if the chief arbiter can decide the outcome of a game, he may even decide to shoot me.” Both players wanted to protest to the tournament committee, but none of its members wanted to support them, so they abandoned the idea.

Now a purely technical question arises, and it’s not quite clear to me. How will this game be counted for ELO rating? Will they both lose rating points?

The new rule was met with mixed feelings. Some of the players support it, while others consider it a limitation of the players’ rights and an attempt to artificially increase the arbiter’s importance. There are really pros and cons to this rule.

Among the advantages is the fact that the game might become more attractive, and the sports element increases. The latter can be important for the prestige of chess, and the desired status of Olympic sport.

My personal opinion is that it might be very useful in super-tournaments or tournaments where people receive conditions (fees for participation, prizes, etc.). In that case chess professionals are obliged to do their job, and not to skip it, which I consider fair enough.

However, how can one force an amateur player, who is paying a fee to participate in a tournament for having fun (he may go there with his family on a vacation, etc. and chess might not be his main concern) to play at least two hours for example, and to make 30 moves at least?! Would this not just chase him away from the playing hall?

At the playing conference the chief arbiter explained what is a theoretically drawn position (quite a vague concept, indeed) and warned that we cannot play 30 moves à tempo and then offer draw. Still, those who want to share the point cannot be stopped, and there was a boom of 31-moves games! On the other hand, some of the players make their decisions to play for feeling bored being so long behind the board for no good reason.

There are players who find a more practical solution to draw. They use a forced opening line which ends by a perpetual check, or forced repetition of moves. But how can you decide if they played, or not? Below you will see two games of that kind. One was really played, the other was not, but can you figure out which of the two was a real game?!

We are trying to make chess more attractive. But will the cure treat the drawing disease in our particular case?

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Comments

36 Responses to “A 0-0 result in the Bulgarian League”

  1. CAL|Daniel on 8 October 2008 19:02 PM

    ah just goes to show why arbiters are stupid. These rules are going to hurt chess alot before we see any help at all. Or as the writer tried to allude to… ‘the cure is worse than the disease’

  2. arne on 8 October 2008 19:08 PM

    Bureaucracy triumphing over reason … where have we seen this before?

  3. Ark on 8 October 2008 19:15 PM

    aha, the classical 12-move pirc draw

  4. Tom Chivers on 8 October 2008 19:29 PM

    Was the first the real?

  5. Remco Gerlich on 8 October 2008 19:42 PM

    I don’t understand why the arbiter is criticized here. It was the tournament organizers that decided that this rule was to be included, not the arbiter. When the players drew while it wasn’t allowed, he explained this to them and was prepared to let them continue.

    When they refused, what other option did he have?

  6. pete on 8 October 2008 20:29 PM

    Yes, the purpose of this article is clear, all should see how bad the Sophia rule is. Well, I don’t think so. The rules are simple, if the players want they can repeat the same position 3 times = draw.

    All in all I think the Sophie rule is great. Is it for amateur tournaments, I don’t know. But as pointed in the beginning the organizers EXPERIMENTED with it.

  7. Sebastian on 8 October 2008 20:35 PM

    I think that we have to ask the players once why they achieve such a position without trying to fight for a win earlier and twice why they don’t play to the kings. When they really love the game, then they have no problem - not only going for move 30- but hoping to employ a late false of the opponent and try to beat him, if necessary, until the two Kings were left alone on the board.

  8. arne on 8 October 2008 21:11 PM

    “When they refused, what other option did he have?”

    Well, he’s not a robot who automatically has to follow the rules of the organizers, is he? He is a person, an expert even; he can form an opinion as a human being gifted with reason, and judge upon it. In this case, it’s completely obvious what was going on, and awarding the players with 0-0 is absurd. Chess is not a game where you have a choice on every move. Sometimes the position simply demands a certain move or action, and this move or action might simply lead to a dead draw. It’s just the nature of the game, and no Sophia rule or whatever can ever change it.
    The arbiter should simply have returned the ball back in the organizer’s court or perhaps consult FIDE before making such a harsh decision.

  9. JW on 8 October 2008 21:58 PM

    That’s the only thing he can do. But when he is on the tournament he had to follow the rules.

    That is easy, simply.

  10. Andre Gan on 8 October 2008 23:22 PM

    Sofia Rule is only good for invited or contracted Professional players who are by contracts tasked to play in very important tournaments like Dortmund, Mtel Masters, Linares and Corus, to mention a few, and in return they are entitled to appearance fees and free accomodations apart from winning tournament prizes. Thus the said players are obliged to play chess of high quality. This Rule reminds me of what the late GM Robert James Fischer had fought for in the past about those intentional draws among Soviet Grandmasters so that they could gang up against him in their respective turns.

    On the other hand, one of the drawbacks of this Rule is that it is an indirect violation of one’s right not to play further especially if the given position is more or less equal.

    In my opinion, the Sofia Rule has to stay because its rationale clearly outweigh some known inconveniences or shortcomings for the best interest of the sport itself.

  11. James on 9 October 2008 2:26 AM

    I cannot understand why the two players awarded 0-0 refused to comply with the arbiters. If they really wanted to, they could have just blitzed 5 moves in about a minute and agreed a draw.

  12. James on 9 October 2008 2:27 AM

    If one of the players agreed a draw before 30 moves twice in a row, they are “castling kingside” (0-0)

    If one of the players agreed a draw before 30 moves three times in a row, they are “castling queenside” (0-0-0)

  13. Bas on 9 October 2008 2:30 AM

    OMG! We are talking about geniusses here and still they are stupud enough to put more effort in complaining about this rule instead of playing to move 31!

    Whats the problem?!?!?!?!

    1. When you consider yourself professional you know the rules of the tournement. If you dont like it, dont play.
    2. Its so easy to teckle this rule you cannot say its an disadvantage.
    3. There are the rules of the game and of the tournement. They dont strike with eachother. When a position is draw its not neccesary to play on for the game but for the tournement it is (still stupid but whatever) so PLAY ON.

  14. Castro on 9 October 2008 2:32 AM

    Ok, my opinion:
    Sofia rule is stupid because:
    a) It’s easily fooled, if the players want (especialy by masters!)
    b) I think the result of a chess game belongs to nobody but the players. Even from the “move” 0. So I agree with fighting the unfought draws, but only by positive stimuls (money, elo, invitations, etc.). Never trying to “punish”. It’s simply stupid.

    NOW!: In the present case, I absolutely suport the arbiter, because he is only doing his job, and stupid as the rule is, the players must know where they are when accepting to play some tournament.

    They shouldn’t provoque the arbiter, especialy after being (re-)informed, and in fact they had the adicional option of resuming the game (stupidily, in fact!) onto move 30 or to a fast 3-fold repetition.

    0-0 is a completely civilized, fair and happy result of such a game, as the information provided tells me!
    I congratulate the brave arbiters (and give a laugh at these blind organizers and irresponsable masters — nothing personal, of course :-) .

  15. noyb on 9 October 2008 5:39 AM

    The players knew the rules going into the tournament (or should have). Tough! The rule may not be perfect but that’s the rule.

  16. arne on 9 October 2008 7:01 AM

    It’s stupid to follow stupid rules, that’s why they refused to play on. Sometimes it’s more important to make a point than to gain a point, but oh well …

  17. Dikke Deur on 9 October 2008 8:17 AM

    Yesterday I won my game by playing the brilliant Qd1-g7 mate!

    My opponent claimed this was against the rules, but I just said I was not interested in stupid rules.

    You know what? I made a point and gained a point at the same time!

    2-0!!

  18. Michel on 9 October 2008 8:41 AM

    About the amateur; I don´t think this makes any difference for him. There a lots of amateurs that don´t won´t short draws at all. Why are you playing chess in the first place? For a short draw?! Is that fun? I don´t think so.
    And chess exist out of rules. I don´t think that one rule more chases the amateur from the board.
    But this is, of course, my personal opinion,

  19. Dunne Deur on 9 October 2008 9:49 AM

    Dikke Deur, the difference is that your move Qd1-g7 is against the official FIDE laws of chess, while the rule of not being allowed to draw before move 30 is just a whismy idea of some tournament organisers. I’m sure you can make a distinction between the two…

  20. Sergio on 9 October 2008 12:39 PM

    They could also have showed that this rule is pointless by playing moves like Kh1 Kh8, Kg1 Kg8 until they reached the 31. move. I wonder how the arbiter would react then.

    The main point is : If players want a draw, you can’t stop them. I like the idea of rewarding players more for a win then punish the ones that choose to go for a draw.

    Personally i don’t like quick draws, and i am not tempted to accept or offer one. But if both players like to do that. Let them. But i can’t understand what is nice about that.

  21. Frits Fritschy on 9 October 2008 14:09 PM

    This is a discussion that will never reach a conclusion.
    Personally I think the water will flow any way downwards it can find. Look at the fourth round of the Russian championship superfinal: 6 draws, 5 by (early) repetition.
    Of course, when you’re a professional player, playing short draws is not the perfect way to advertise yourself.
    But let’s look at the game in question, after 25… Nxb4, is there really ‘a total exhaustion of the position’? I wonder what Kramnik or Carlsen would do with any colour. I would say black is a little better, b3 is easier to attack. As usual, especially in team competitions, the draw has probably more to do with players feeling insecure than with the position on the board.

  22. Rodzjer on 9 October 2008 14:15 PM

    Just want to comment on a few things that I’ve read here.

    If you enter a tournament, you inherently agree with the rules that apply. If you find the rules too stupid to play with, don’t play. That’s the choice they should have made, instead of choosing not to play on at move 22.

    Stupid rules or not (who’s to say?), you cannot ask an arbiter to not adhere to the rules, just because he’s a human being and gifted with intelligence, insight or reason.
    If arbiters start ignoring rules, burn your chessboard and pieces along with it, that’s the end to civilized chess as we know it.

  23. Frank Sträter on 9 October 2008 15:13 PM

    There are 3 possible results for a chess game: 1-0, 0-1, 1/2-1/2
    Awarding a game a 0-0 result is absurd and a big mistake by the arbiter. I don’t believe that it’s the way to penalize players for not following tournament rules. If the Sofia rules don’t describe what to do in case of players not adhering to that “no draw before move 30″ rule, then the Sofia rules are not complete.

  24. semipatz on 9 October 2008 17:52 PM

    1. Qd1-g7 isn’t mate anyway. It’s not even check. Black just responds Raxg7, with advantage. ;)

  25. semipatz on 9 October 2008 17:54 PM

    Actually, 0-0 is a possible outcome per the FIDE rules.

  26. Bartleby on 9 October 2008 22:54 PM

    The Sofia rules are fine in a super tournament where there are lots of skilled arbiters, the players are pros who can be expected to know the rules, and the whole chess world is watching.
    I would like to play by anti-draw rules at my amateur level, but I cannot see how it could possibly work. In the minor leagues, there is always a lot of hassling and dealing. The Sofia rules just will be hassled and dealt with like anything else.
    For Bulgarian players it’s quite hard, since they easily could have avoided the problem. But for the arbiter it is a clear-cut case. He told them about the consequences,and they still chose to ignore the rules. 0-0 is therefore the logical result according to the rulebook - not specially for Sofia, but for every case where both players break rules serious enough to justify a forfeited game.

  27. Ben on 10 October 2008 0:29 AM

    Simple: If the chess players want the sponsorship $, they are going to have to abide by the (sometimes artificial) demands of the sponsor.

  28. chessfan on 10 October 2008 1:35 AM

    This rule allowed in regulations for Dresden chess olimpiad

  29. Petr S. on 11 October 2008 9:15 AM

    chessfan: It does not mean the rule is OK :(

    I absolutely agree with the article. This rule is nonsense for amateurs (like me), who want to play for fun!

  30. loestik on 11 October 2008 13:07 PM

    Et pourquoi ne pas généraliser le système utilisé à Bilbao… La victoire à 3 points, la nulle à 1 point et la défaite à 0 point. Cela forcerait ces joueurs nourris, logés (et blanchis?) et défrayés pour leurs petits achats (tabac…) ‘de prendre conscience d’être des privilégiés’ par apport aux joueurs ordinaires… et les encourager à se battre! A bas les NULLES DE SALON !!!

    And why not generalize the system used in Bilbao… The victory to 3 points, the draw to 1 point and the defeat at 0 point. It would force these players fed, housed (and bleached?) and paid for their small purchases (tobacco…) “to take conscience to be privileged” by contribution to ordinary players… and encourage them to fight! At the bottom CLAUSES OF SHOW!!!

  31. Manu on 11 October 2008 15:28 PM

    I fully agree with the arbiter.

  32. loestik on 11 October 2008 17:41 PM

    Response to:
    Frank Sträter on 9 October 2008 15:13 PM

    There are 3 possible results for a chess game: 1-0, 0-1, 1/2-1/2
    Awarding a game a 0-0 result is absurd and a big mistake by the arbiter.

    Loestik: Participating in a tournament is a contract, to play in following the rules of the tournament (you rob a subject, you do not follow the regulations… you pay a fine or go to jail) you refuse to play (or made package) so you are in breach the rules-where O-O (zero-zero, and not small roque) is a score justified!

  33. Bratanov on 12 October 2008 21:53 PM

    When i proposed a draw i had in mind not the move 25.b3, but 25.Bd2 with 25…Bb2 26.Rb1 Bf6 27.b5 ab5 28.Rb5 Nd4 and a really stupid draw.
    So i was sure that it’s not possible to win or to lose this position…

  34. Duhcho on 13 October 2008 23:12 PM

    I can not agree with the regualtions.
    First of all I think that before the arbiter declares the game lost to both players he should have been used other penalties. In order to declare the game lost it is reqiured that the player systematically refuses to follow the rules. In the case mentioned i do not see such situation. So my opinion is that the Chief arbiter has made a big mistake declaring the game lost.
    Concerning the rule i think that the rule is applicable only for tournaments where the players receive conditions - appearance fee, accomodation, etc… We have to not orget that this is a team championship and all players follow the team interests, even more it is played by match points not by board points. So one won game in a match is enough or a team win…. Is it stupid… do u think… u forbid draws and at the same time use match points…..

    Cheers
    FIDE IA

  35. loestik on 14 October 2008 0:29 AM

    Vous êtes tous des ‘marrants’… Si la règle dit: pas de nulle avant les trentiemes coups blancs et noirs - qu’importe la compétition… cela pourrait être une ‘partie de petits chevaux ou de dominos… LA REGLE C’EST LA REGLE… Il ne faut chercher rien d’autre! Et donc 0 blancs + 0 noirs.

    You are all of ‘comics’… If the rule says: no draw before the thirtieves blows - white & black - regardless of the competition… could be a ‘ part of small horses or dominoes… THE RULE IS THE RULE… We must seek nothing else! And therefore 0 white + 0 black.

  36. Bratanov on 14 October 2008 18:29 PM

    Maybe the it’s given to the arbiter the right to put a score 0:0, but it would be very strange if he may to this in a case of draw agreement.
    And there wasn’t anything in he reglament of the tournament about putting such a score in case of draw agreement.
    It was totally an improvisation of the chief arbiter and i think it wasn’t a succesful one :)

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