Open Letter by Mr. Jonathan Berry (IA, FM, GMC)

Evil Days Ahead: End of the Rubinstein Rule

FIDE is proposing that, as of July 2009, games be forfeitedif a player is not present at the scheduled start of the game.There may be a “compromise” of 15 minutes suggested, but thattoo is flawed.

I need not tell other Canadians about the vagaries of publictransit. A bus may be late or not appear at all. To avoidforfeiture, bus-enabled players will have to arrive over 30minutes early, at the start of a 12-hour day of play, and often stand outside a locked door in the snow or rain.

That is just one of the nightmares of a zero or 15- minuterule. Among the others are logistical and administrative.

But here’s one that they surely didn’t think of: a zero or15 minute rule encourages cheating. A nasty form ofcheating is the thrown game. In 2008, if a player doesnot show up at the start of the round, he is often hunteddown by friends or tournament directors and dragged to theboard before the Rubinstein one hour has elapsed. If hewants to throw the game, he has to make bad moves, orintentionally exceed the time control: quite an investmentin time for doing nothing. Either way, he loses bothrating points and face. In 2009, the same player justappears ten seconds late, apologizes to the opponent, losesno rating points, experiences no internal conflicts, andthe rest of the day is his.

If forfeit games are rated, that opens up the fullpanoply of thrown-game cheating.

If games in which no moves are played are left unrated (as at present) the zero or 15- minute rule opens up a newmethod of cheating. The norm hopeful will have to pay theunscrupulous opponent simply to show up on time for thegame.

I encourage all FIDE member nations to vote against thisrule change at the 2008 General Assembly in Dresden.

Jonathan Berry
IA, FM, GMC

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