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Despite severe criticism for a very high number of draws, the London Chess Classic was an interesting event followed by chess players around
the world.
After the first three rounds where every single game was drawn, many people, including the super-GM Levon Aronian, called for abolishing draw offers!
Aronian suggested to do away with all draw offers, not just those before move 30. | Photo: Maria Emelianova/Chess.com.
One of the commonly named reasons to prohibit draw offers is a sports analogy: Just imagine a soccer match that ends after just 20 minutes because
both teams agreed to a draw! I don't want to start a discussion here about differences between chess and other sports, but using the same logic, why
don't we prohibit resignation as well?
Imagine a soccer match where one team is losing 0:3 and decides to resign in the middle of the game! Sounds ridiculous, right? But this is exactly what
we have in chess! Sometimes the spectators don't even understand why a player decided to give up, like in the following game from the above-
mentioned tournament:
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a b c d e f g h
Δ ¥ f J # , . @
I can almost hear a club player snort: "What, an extra pawn for Black? Big deal! Yesterday I won a game being down a bishop!"
It is difficult to refute this logic by explaining that the super-GM Maxime Vachier-Lagrave is not exactly a class-D player, and therefore we will always see
games like this:
a b c d e f g h
Δ ¥ f J # , . @
Yes, it was the invitational U.S. championship and yet White kept playing the endgame down a rook and a knight! Most strong players frown upon such
behavior. But again, I really doubt that Cristiano Ronaldo hates the other team for not resigning and stopping the game in a completely hopeless
situation.
I addressed the subject of resignation in an old article. In that article I shared the advice that I give to all my students:
If you are a beginner, then you should never resign: Play till checkmate. First of all, your opponent, who is probably a beginner himself, may possibly
stalemate you despite (or because of) his huge material advantage. But even if he does beat you, you'll get another lesson how to convert a winning
advantage in to a win.
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a b c d e f g h
Δ ¥ f J # , . @
It turns out that even grandmasters occasionally use the same approach and sometimes it works on the master level too!
a b c d e f g h
Δ ¥ f J # , . @
a b c d e f g h
Δ ¥ f J # , . @
So, should you resign in a lost position or play till a checkmate? It is a very individual decision, at least while resignation is not abolished.
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