Author: Flemming Rodler
Date: 16:54:53 04/22/00
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On April 22, 2000 at 09:45:05, James T. Walker wrote: >On April 22, 2000 at 09:18:45, Dan Andersson wrote: > >>Nope you claim a draw, not by making a move but by claiming it. Making a move >>and claiming it is a chess server sillyness. That means any chess program must >>have a separate implementations of 3-fold for 'correct' chess. > >Hello Dan, >I think you are right. Only the person/computer having the move can claim the >draw, so you must make the claim before making the move. Otherwise you no >longer have the move, your opponent does. Of course then the other >person/computer has the right to dispute the claim and call an arbiter. :) >Jim Walker You are right. Here is a quote from the FIDE rules of tournament play: "9.2. The game is drawn, upon a correct claim by the player having the move, when the same position, for at least the third time (not necessarily by repetition of moves) (a) is about to appear, if he first writes his move on his scoresheet and declares to the arbiter his intention to make this move, or (b) has just appeared. Positions as in (a) and (b) are considered the same, if the same player has the move, pieces of the same kind and colour occupy the same squares, and the possible moves of all the pieces of both players are the same. Positions are not the same if a pawn could have been captured en passant or if the right to castle immediately or in the future has been changed. " /Flemming
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