Author: blass uri
Date: 07:28:24 05/16/00
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On May 16, 2000 at 08:55:38, Dan Kiski wrote: >On May 16, 2000 at 07:09:13, Stefan Meyer-Kahlen wrote: > >> >>On May 16, 2000 at 04:38:10, Hans Gerber wrote: >> >>>On May 16, 2000 at 02:51:37, Bruce Moreland wrote: >> >>[snip] >> >>>3. It was F. Morsch who dared to propose draw in the time pressure of the human >>>player and in a completely lost position. >>> >>>4. F. Morsch behaved impolitely and without respect. Because you don't propose >>>draw in lost positions (as operator of a machine). >> >>[snip] >> >>I guess that Frans offered the draw because he was so nice not wanting to win >>the game on time. >This bout sums it all up. complaints would have been louder if fritz won the >game on time. I disagree. If fritz won on time I will not say nothing. I also do not think that Fritz could win on time. Fritz all the time evaluated the position as better for tiviakov so tiviakov could draw by repetition if he wanted and I think that the rules let tiviakov to stop the clocks and claim a draw. I am not sure about it but the rules in the Israeli league let a player with less than 2 minutes on the clock to stop the clocks and ask for a draw if the opponent has no practical chance to win except winning on time. I did in a position of king and bishop against king,knight and pawn when my opponent had the advantage and the decision was that it is a draw. Uri
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