Zero start – crazy or practical? By GilaChess 30 November 2009 at 4:13 pm and have 1 Comment

I read with interest one article from New in Chess that the zero start rule from FIDE was created when an incident involving Anand vs Karpov match where the FIDE president Kirsan Illumzhinov was made to wait about half an hour for Karpov to arrive to officiate the event. No doubt the FIDE president was not happy to be embarassed at such a public event waiting for a player to arrive.

The latest players punished by the zero start rule are the Chinese Wang Yue and Li Chao. Read article here.

musical-chairsTo me it seems pretty silly when the players are so near the playing area yet are penalised because they were not sitting at the table. Even Hou Yifan found out the hard way with a penalised game when she was actually in the tournament hall looking at some boards but was not sitting on her chair when the game started. Perhaps a loud speaker system announcing a count down before the game starts to avoid silly losses like these ? I can just imagine players dashing to their seats as if they are playing musical chairs.

I won’t debate about the merits of the zero start rule or otherwise but I’m interested to see what Malaysian chess enthusiast think. Take the poll on the right hand side of this blog.

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One response : “ Zero start – crazy or practical? ”

  1. 1
    jkks :

    actually this is different from normal classical games, as the two players were late in this case to the 2nd _RAPID_ game.

    the rapid games do _NOT_ have any firm start times, except for the first one of course

    they should have been disqualified if they were late to the classical games, which they were not

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