Why the ‘Queen of Chess’ abandoned the Gibraltar tournament
Christian Science Monitor
Mengqi Sun
Christian Science MonitorFebruary 4, 2017
It looks like the movement toward public protests has even reached the rarified air of international chess tournaments.
On Friday, the world’s top female chess player threw a match against male opponent Babu Lalith of India after just five moves of the final round at the Tradewise Gibraltar Chess Festival.
In a controversial move, Hou Yifan, often referred as the “Queen of Chess,” said her intentional resignation from the game was meant to protest having been paired against mostly female players at a major tournament where male contestants dramatically outnumbered female.
“I think it’s unfair, not only for me, but for the other women players,” the 22-year-old Chinese chess grandmaster said in an interview after the game, pointing out that she was paired against seven female players in a 10-round tournament.
Ms. Hou’s five-move loss to a player she outranks set a new record as the quickest loss by a grandmaster, a powerful blow to the international chess community.
“I pointed it out to the arbiters” when the pairings were announced after the first round, she said, but nothing changed.
In an interview with the Chess News in May, Hou spoke out against the World Chess Federation’s different rules in women and men’s tournaments, and she chose not to defend her women’s world championship title this month in Iran. She has also pledged to attend only open (mixed-sex) events in the future.
Meanwhile, the founder and organizer of the tournament Brian Callaghan sought to defend the pairings, dismissing Hou’s protest as a “bad day at the office.”
“Clearly nothing was going on, it comes out of a machine and sometimes the odds fall that way,” he told the Telegraph. “When you are running something as big as this you are going to have incidents, this one just happened to involve Yifan.”
“I think that we’re sympathetic to what she is saying about the pairings,” he said. “I don’t think that the pairings are wrong,” he added, but he said he recognized why “they’re a reason for concern from her perspective.”
This is not the first time a female grandmaster challenged gender equity in this traditionally male-dominated arena. Susan Polgar, the Hungarian-American chess player, has been advocating for women’s roles in chess for years. In 1986, Ms. Polgar became the first women in history to qualify for the Men’s World Championship in 1986, which led the Federation to change its policy and admit women players in the game.
Polgar continued to break glass ceilings, as the Christian Science Monitor’s Lisa Suhay noted in 2014:
“In 1991, she broke down barriers once again by becoming the first woman to earn the men’s grandmaster title by achieving a rating more than 2500 playing against men instead of women. A player’s rating represents the strength of that player based on all the games played in tournaments over the course of a player’s entire chess career. Most grandmasters and international masters are rated between 2400 and 2600.”
Hou said she hopes her actions brought attention to the situation and that future tournaments will see “a 100 percent fair situation.”
She apologized to her fans and said she hoped they would understand why she took the step she did. “Of course when we are playing in a tournament we want to show our best performance and create interesting games for the chess fans, for the organisers, for the people who love chess,” she said.
“We are chess players.”
Source: https://www.yahoo.com
I support Hou on this matter! she can’t be avoiding the double standards of the female/make chess world only to be paired against 7 females in 10 draws. What are the statistical odds of that?
If the pairing program has a preference for same sex pairing when drawing from a pool of players of equal points, then the gender column on the program must be expunged altogether-period!
I think the pairings might have been arranged to some extent on the basis of players with a high rating doing badly in the tournament getting pitted against players with a low rating doing well and if on average female players with the same score were doing the opposite well for their rating to Hou Yifan doing badly for her rating then she might have run into more female opponents sort of because of that.
What Hou Yifan did is most unsports(wo)manlike, a disgrace towards her opponent and chess.
There are more intelligent ways of making her point.
But there could be a bit of money to be made out of adjusting the pairings a bit so a copy of the source code of the exact program to be used to generate the parings in a tournament should be sent to FIDE at the planning stage of a tournament so that they can check that everything is above board.
One great thing about Gibraltar tournament is that they actually invite a lot of women and men to play in the same tournament. Chances are that women also play against each other in such a setting. It doesn´t make any sense to protest against that, especially if the pairings are chosen by a computer.
Another thing that doesn´t make any sense at all is that she abandons one of the games she was paired with a male grandmaster as a sign of protest against being paired with female grandmasters.
i just fail to see her point.