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Draw by agreement

A game of chess can end in a draw by agreement. A player may offer a draw at any stage of a game; if the opponent accepts, the game is a draw.[1] In some competitions, draws by agreement are restricted; for example draw offers may be subject to the discretion of the arbiter, or may be forbidden before move 30 or 40, or even forbidden altogether. The majority of draws in chess are by agreement.[2]

Under FIDE rules, a draw should be offered after making the move and before pressing the clock, then marked in the scoresheet as (=). However, draw offers made at any time are valid. If a player offers a draw before making a move, the opponent has the option of requesting a move before deciding whether or not to accept the offer. Once made, a draw offer cannot be retracted and is valid until rejected.

A player may offer a draw by asking, "Would you like a draw?", or similar; the French word remis (literally "reset") is internationally understood as a draw offer and may be used if the players do not share a common language. Players may also offer draws and accept draw offers by merely nodding their heads.[3] A draw may be rejected either verbally or by making a move.

A draw by agreement after less than twenty moves where neither player makes a serious effort to win is colloquially known as a "grandmaster draw". Many chess players and organizers disapprove of grandmaster draws, and efforts have been made to discourage them, such as forbidding draw offers before move 30.[4] However, professional players have defended grandmaster draws, saying they are important to conserve energy during a tournament.

Etiquette edit

Although a draw may be offered at any time, an illogical offer runs the risk of violating article 11.5, which states: "It is forbidden to distract or annoy the opponent in any manner whatsoever. This includes [...] unreasonable offers of a draw[.]" This rule is applied with the arbiter's discretion; for example, a player loudly offering a draw while the opponent is thinking may well suffer a time penalty or even forfeit the game, but it is unlikely that a player would be penalized for offering a draw in a lifeless position when it is not their turn to move.[5]

At one time, chess players considered it bad manners to play out a superior but theoretically drawn endgame. In such cases, the superior side was expected to offer a draw.[6]

There are certain behavioural norms relating to draw offers not codified in the FIDE Laws of Chess but widely observed. For example, many consider it bad manners for a player who has offered a draw once to do so again before their opponent has offered a draw. Such repeated offers of a draw have also sometimes been considered distracting enough to warrant the arbiter taking action under article 11.5.

Reshevsky vs. Mastichiadis, 1950
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Position before 24.Nd2

It is considered bad etiquette to offer a draw in a clearly lost position[7][8] or even when one has no winning chances but one's opponent does.[9] Garry Kasparov regularly criticizes grandmasters who offer a draw when their position is worse.[10] However, such offers are sometimes used as psychological tricks. The position in the diagram arose in the game Samuel ReshevskyFotis Mastichiadis, Dubrovnik 1950. Reshevsky played 24.Nd2?, and saw at once that he would be put into a very bad situation with 24...Nxf2. Thinking quickly, he offered a draw to his opponent, who was busy writing down the move in his scoresheet. Mastichiadis, a minor master, was so happy to get half a point against his illustrious opponent that he did not pause to examine the position before accepting the offer.

The rule about the procedure of offering a draw was violated in a 1981 game between Garry Kasparov and Anatoly Karpov. Kasparov moved 17. Ra2 and offered a draw. Karpov instantly replied 17... Be7 and then said "Make a move!", which is a violation of the rule. Kasparov moved 18. b5 and then Karpov accepted the draw.[11]

Petrosian vs. Fischer, 1958
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Final position after 67.f7, draw agreed

In the 1958 game between Tigran Petrosian and Bobby Fischer, Fischer offered a draw without making a move first, which was accepted by Petrosian.[12] He explains in his book My 60 Memorable Games:

I offered a draw, not realizing it was bad etiquette. It was Petrosian's place to extend the draw offer after 67...Rxg6+ [...] 68.Kxg6 Kb1 69.f8=Q c2 with a book draw.[13] (See queen versus pawn endgame.)

Practical considerations edit

Petrosian vs. Korchnoi, 1977, game 12
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Black is winning but offered a draw.

Players sometimes make draw offers in consideration of outside factors. In 1977 Viktor Korchnoi and former World Champion Tigran Petrosian played a twelve-game quarter-final Candidates Match to ultimately determine the challenger for the 1978 World Championship. After eleven games, Korchnoi was leading by one point, so he only needed a draw in the final game to advance to the semi-finals. Korchnoi, as Black, was winning this game, but he offered a draw after 40 moves.[14] According to Edmar Mednis, it was "gentlemanly and the practical thing to do".[15] Korchnoi went on to unsuccessfully challenge Anatoly Karpov for the World Championship.

Sometimes, time constraints for one or both of the players may be a factor in agreeing to a draw. A player with an advantageous position but limited time may be agreeable to a draw to avoid risking a loss from running out of time, and the opponent may also be agreeable to a draw due to their disadvantageous position.

Grandmaster draw edit

A grandmaster draw or short draw is a draw reached after very few moves, usually between high-ranked players. British master P. H. Clarke wrote about the positive aspects of a short draw:

Unless you are of the calibre of Botvinnik – and who is – you cannot hope to play at full power day after day. The technical[16] draws are a necessary means of conserving energy. As such, they contribute to raising the standard of play rather than lowering it.[17]

All of the games of the second Piatigorsky Cup were annotated by players, including the short draws. Their comments on two short draws follow (Spassky vs. Petrosian and Reshevsky vs. Portisch), followed by comments on some other short draws.

Spassky vs. Petrosian edit

Spassky vs. Petrosian, 1966
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Drawn on the 22nd move

Boris Spassky wrote:

The present game once again demonstrates how grandmasters play when they do not care to win. Of course, it is not an interesting spectacle for the onlookers. However, if chess enthusiasts could find themselves in the positions of the grandmasters they would not judge them so severely.[18]

Reshevsky vs. Portisch edit

Reshevsky vs. Portisch, 1966
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Drawn after the 16th move

Lajos Portisch wrote:

Here Reshevsky offered me a draw, which was accepted. Is this a grandmaster draw? I do not think so. Reshevsky had consumed most of his time, and had only 30 minutes for the remaining moves. On my part it would have been pointless to rely on his time trouble as I saw that after 17. dxe5 Nd5 18. Bxe7 Qxe7 19. Nxd5 Bxd5 20. Be4,[19] the draw is evident. In such a strong tournament and against such outstanding players it would not be wise to try to win a game of this kind. One could only lose energy. Neither side had any advantage, so why try to force the issue?[20]

Averbakh vs. Fischer edit

Averbakh vs. Fischer, 1958
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Draw agreed after 21.Rb1

In the 1958 game[21] between Yuri Averbakh and Bobby Fischer, the players agreed to a draw in an unclear position where White is a piece ahead. Asked about the draw, the teenage Fischer said, "I was afraid of losing to a Russian grandmaster and he was afraid of losing to a kid."[22] Averbakh stated that Fischer offered the draw and that each player had only about ten minutes to make the 19 or 20 moves before time control.

Karpov vs. Kasparov edit

Karpov vs. Kasparov, 1984
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Position after 13...c5, draw agreed

Several short draws occurred in the World Chess Championship 1984 between Anatoly Karpov and Garry Kasparov. This one occurred in the 29th game after thirteen moves.[23] Kasparov explains

Draw agreed on Black's proposal: with the resulting complete symmetry, the fighting resources are practically exhausted.

White had used 99 minutes; Black had used 51 minutes.[24]

Keres vs. Petrosian edit

Keres vs. Petrosian, 1962
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Position after 14...a5, draw agreed

In 1962 a Candidates Tournament was held in Curaçao to determine the challenger to Mikhail Botvinnik in the 1963 World Championship. There is good evidence that Soviet players Tigran Petrosian, Paul Keres, and Efim Geller arranged to draw all of the games between themselves. The twelve games played between these three players were all short draws, averaging 19 moves.[25]

This diagram shows the final position from the shortest one – only fourteen moves were played. This was in the 25th of 28 rounds, and the final game between Keres and Petrosian.[26] Bobby Fischer charged that Petrosian accepted a draw when he was winning and Jan Timman agrees. Petrosian went on to win the tournament and win the championship from Botvinnik.[27]

Tal vs. Botvinnik edit

Tal vs. Botvinnik, 1960
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Position after 17...Nd8, draw

In the 21st of 24 games of the 1960 World Chess Championship between Mikhail Tal and Mikhail Botvinnik,[28] Tal only needed a half point to win the title, so he got to a position where Black had no winning chances, and quickly agreed to a draw.

Polugaevsky vs. Tal edit

In the 1967 USSR Championship, Lev Polugaevsky and Mikhail Tal were leading with the same number of points going into the next-to-last round. They played each other that round. After

1. d4 Nf6
2. c4 e6

Polugaevsky offered a draw. Tal explains

I played 2...e6 and Lev offered me a draw. I accepted, although for decency's sake we made a further 12 moves or so, and the question of first place was put off until the last round..[29]

Kasparov vs. Karpov edit

Kasparov vs. Karpov, 1986
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After 21...Qb6, draw agreed

Before the 20th game of the 1986 World Championship, Kasparov had just lost three games in a row, which evened the match score. Kasparov had White in the 20th game, in which a draw was agreed after 21 moves. White had used 1 hour and 11 minutes; Black used 1 hour and 52 minutes.[30] Kasparov writes "In the 20th game we decided in the end 'not to play' (i.e. to aim for a short draw) [...] A typical grandmaster draw, although one can understand the two players – each fulfilled the objective he had set himself before the game."[31] Kasparov did not want to lose a fourth game in a row, and Karpov wanted to draw as Black.

Kasparov vs. Smyslov edit

Kasparov had this to say about one of the games of his 1984 match against Vasily Smyslov: "It all ended in a 'planned' draw, and I was not exactly delighted with such a pre-programmed result."[32]

Steps taken to discourage draws edit

Although many games logically end in a draw after a hard-fought battle between the players, there have been attempts throughout history to discourage or completely disallow draws. Chess is the only widely played sport where the contestants can agree to a draw at any time for any reason.

Because "grandmaster draws" are widely considered unsatisfactory both for spectators (who may only see half-an-hour of play with nothing very interesting happening) and sponsors (who suffer from decreased interest in the media), various measures have been adopted over the years to discourage players from agreeing to draws.

Only theoretical draws allowed (Sofia Rules) edit

Chess trainer Mark Dvoretsky, writing in a column for the website Chess Cafe,[33] suggested that agreed draws should not be allowed at all, pointing out that such an agreement cannot be reached in other sports such as boxing. Although some have claimed that outlawing agreed draws entirely requires players to carry on playing in "dead" positions (where no side can reasonably play for a win), Dvoretsky says that this is a small problem and that the effort required to play out these positions until a draw can be claimed by repetition or lack of material, for example, is minimal.

The Sofia 2005 tournament employed a similar rule, which has become known as "Sofia rules".[34] The players could not draw by agreement, but they could have draws by stalemate, threefold repetition, the fifty-move rule, and insufficient material. Other draws are only allowed if the arbiter declares it is a drawn position.

Also known as the "Sofia-Corsica Rules", the anti-draw measure was adopted in the Bilbao Final Masters[35] and the FIDE Grand Prix 2008–2010 (part of the qualifying cycle for the World Chess Championship 2012) did not allow players to offer a draw. The draw had to be claimed with the arbiter, who was assisted by an experienced grandmaster. The following draws were only allowed through the Chief Arbiter:[36]

  • Threefold repetition of position
  • Fifty-move rule
  • Perpetual check
  • A theoretical draw

No draw offers before a certain move edit

In 1929, the first edition of the FIDE Laws of Chess required thirty moves to be played before a draw by agreement. This rule was discarded when the rules were revised in 1952. In 1954 FIDE rejected a request to reinstate the rule, but it did state that it is unethical and unsportsmanlike to agree to a draw before a serious contest had begun. FIDE stated that the director should discipline players who repeatedly disrespect this guideline, but it seemed to have no effect on players. In 1962 FIDE reinstated a version of the rule against draws by agreement in fewer than thirty moves, with the director allowing them in exceptional circumstances. FIDE had the intention of enforcing the rule and the penalty was a loss of the game by both players. However, players ignored it or got around it by intentional threefold repetition. Directors were unable or unwilling to enforce the rule. In 1963 FIDE made another attempt to strengthen the rule. Draws by agreement before thirty moves were forbidden, and the penalty was forfeit by both players. Directors were to investigate draws by repetition of position to see if they were to circumvent the rule. The rule was dropped in 1964 because it was decided that it had not encouraged aggressive play.[37][38]

In 2003, GM Maurice Ashley wrote an essay "The End of the Draw Offer?", which raised discussion about ways to avoid quick agreed draws in chess tournaments. Ashley proposed that draw offers not be allowed before move 50.[39]

The 2003 Generation Chess International Tournament in New York City had a rule that draws could not be agreed to before move fifty (draws by other means, such as threefold repetition or stalemate, were permissible at any stage).

In the World Chess Championship 2016 and 2018, the players were not permitted to agree a draw before move 30. In the 2021 and 2023 championships, this was extended to move 40.

Replay the game (gladiator chess) edit

In the very first international round-robin tournament in London in 1862, drawn games had to be replayed until there was a decisive result.[40] A similar format, called gladiator chess, was introduced in the Danish Chess Championships 2006.

Proposed cure for severe acute "drawitis" by FIDE officials Eliminates draws completely by forcing a fast time control game to be played after an accepted draw proposal to ensure there is always a winner and a loser. One potential issue for this proposal is that both players can quickly agree to a draw in the tournament game and then play a speed chess game to decide things. The FIDE 128 player tournament has seen many matches where the two tournament time control games are drawn and advancement is decided by rapid (thirty minutes for a game) or blitz (five minutes) games.

Alternative scoring systems edit

3-1-0 scoring system edit

The 3-1-0 scoring system awards three points for a win, one point for a draw, and no points for a loss. This system discourages draws, since draws are worth only two-thirds of their previous value. It was adopted by FIFA for football matches in 1994, after many leagues around the world had used it successfully to reduce the number of stalling draws. FIFA formerly employed the 2-1-0 scoring system, which is equivalent to that used generally in chess today: one point for a win, half a point for a draw, and no points for a loss. A 3-1-0 system was first used in the 2003 Lippstadt chess tournament and again in the 2008 Bilbao chess tournament.[41]

At the 1964 FIDE Congress, the Puerto Rican delegate proposed that a win be given four points, a draw be given two points, a game played and lost one point, and no points for a forfeit. This would be equivalent to a 3-1-0 system with a 1 point penalty for forfeit. This had been suggested previously by Isaac Kashdan but was not implemented.[42]

This system has received some criticism. GM Larry Kaufman points out that the reason for the high draw rate is not one of incentives, but rather the nature of chess as a game: White has a first-move advantage, but it is not enough to win by force. He thus argues that Black should consider a draw to be a good result, and should not be penalised for it: under the 3-1-0 system, Kaufman argues that chess would become like "a game of 'chicken'; who will 'blink' first and play an unsound move to avoid the mutually bad result of a draw?".[43] It has also been pointed out that the 3-1-0 system incentivises players to trade wins with each other instead of agreeing to draws,[44] and gives players an easier time cheating as a team. (A team of players enters an open event; one of them is selected to obtain the maximum score and portion of the prize fund, and the others throw their games to that player; the prize is then shared among the team. This is easier to do when a win earns more points.)[45]

BAP scoring system edit

The BAP System was designed to make it undesirable for one or both players to agree to a draw by changing the point value of win/loss/draw based on color played: three points for winning as Black, two points for winning as White, one point for drawing as Black, and no points for drawing as White or for losing as either White or Black.

The BAP System was developed by Clint Ballard, a chess aficionado and software-company president, who named it the Ballard Anti-draw Point system (BAP).[46] Ballard explained the purpose of the BAP System: "The usual flurry of last round draws in almost all tournaments makes chess unmarketable on TV. No excitement, no drama, no TV money for chess. Chess will NEVER succeed in the American TV market until we eliminate the draw as anything other than a very rare outcome. With my anti-draw point system, I am hoping to make 100% of games fighting games with risk and uncertainty, i.e. dramatic potential."[47]

The BAP System was first used in the 2006 Bainbridge Slugfest tournament.[48]

Other scoring systems edit

There have been proposals that certain kinds of draws should be worth more points than others. Ed Epp has suggested that draws should be scored as 0.4–0.6 to compensate for White's first-move advantage.[43] Many players, including former world champions Emanuel Lasker and José Raúl Capablanca, have argued that stalemate should be worth more than a normal draw, with three-quarters of a point for a side delivering stalemate (one-quarter of a point going to the side who is stalemated). Kaufman and Arno Nickel have suggested that stalemate and bare king should both be scored as ¾ to the superior side, and that a player who brings about threefold repetition should only be awarded ¼ of a point, citing engine statistics to argue that this would be sufficient to solve the draw death problem (in the trial games simulating human World Championship level, the draw rate was decreased by these rule changes from 65.6% to 22.6%).[43]

Financial penalties edit

In the previously mentioned 2003 Generation Chess International Tournament, players agreeing to premature draws were to be fined 10% of their appearance fee and 10% of any prize money won. In a similar vein, the tournament organiser Luis Rentero (best known for organising the very strong tournaments in Linares) has sometimes enforced a rule whereby draws cannot be agreed to before move thirty.

Other edit

In 2005, GM John Nunn wrote that he believed the rules did not need to change, and that the simple solution was for organizers to not invite players known for taking short draws.[49]

References edit

  1. ^ "FIDE Handbook E. Miscellaneous / 01. Laws of Chess / FIDE Laws of Chess taking effect from 1 January 2018". FIDE. Retrieved 12 July 2020.
  2. ^ (Schiller 2003:26–27)
  3. ^ (Schiller 2003:26–27)
  4. ^ (Hooper & Whyld 1996)
  5. ^ (Schiller 2003:26–27, 30)
  6. ^ (Mednis 1990:61, 68)
  7. ^ (Benjamin 2006:30)
  8. ^ (Krush 2011:54)
  9. ^ (Burgess 2000:461)
  10. ^ (Peterson 2009:36)
  11. ^ (Kasparov 2008:32)
  12. ^ "Tigran Vartanovich Petrosian vs Robert James Fischer (1958)". www.chessgames.com.
  13. ^ (Fischer 2008:31)
  14. ^ "Tigran Vartanovich Petrosian vs Viktor Korchnoi (1977)". www.chessgames.com.
  15. ^ (Mednis 1993:206–7)
  16. ^ Normally a "technical draw" is not a draw by agreement and is due to the impossibility of checkmate.
  17. ^ (Evans 1970:85–86)
  18. ^ (Kashdan 1968:119–20)
  19. ^ Converted from the book's descriptive chess notation 17. PxN N-Q4 18. BxB QxB 19. NxN BxN 20. B-K4
  20. ^ (Kashdan 1968:52)
  21. ^ "Yuri Averbakh vs Robert James Fischer (1958) Mutually Assured Drawstruction". www.chessgames.com.
  22. ^ (Evans 1970:86)
  23. ^ Karpov vs. Kasparov January 19, 2010, at the Wayback Machine
  24. ^ (Kasparov 2008:167–68)
  25. ^ (Timman 2005:25ff)
  26. ^ "Paul Keres vs Tigran Vartanovich Petrosian (1962)". www.chessgames.com.
  27. ^ (Timman 2005:185–86)
  28. ^ "Mikhail Tal vs Mikhail Botvinnik (1960)". www.chessgames.com.
  29. ^ (Tal 2003:338)
  30. ^ "Garry Kasparov vs Anatoly Karpov (1986)". www.chessgames.com.
  31. ^ (Kasparov 2009:201, 205)
  32. ^ (Kasparov 2011:469)
  33. ^ "GrandMaster Square >>> Draw proposal from GM Mark Dvoretsky". www.gmsquare.com. Retrieved 2016-05-02.
  34. ^ Sofia rule 2018-09-28 at the Wayback Machine Chessdom, 2007
  35. ^ . Archived from the original on 2008-08-03. Retrieved 2008-09-04. Bilbao Final Masters 2009 regulations
  36. ^ Grand Prix Regulations, section 4.4, FIDE web site, accessed May 2, 2008
  37. ^ (Harkness 1967:50–52)
  38. ^ (Just & Burg 2003:xxiv)
  39. ^ Ashley, Maurice. "The End of the Draw Offer?". www.thechessdrum.net. Retrieved 2023-02-11.
  40. ^ 1862 London Tournament, Mark Weeks' Chess Pages
  41. ^ . Archived from the original on 2008-08-03. Retrieved 2008-09-04.
  42. ^ (Harkness 1967:52)
  43. ^ a b c Kaufman, Larry (2020). Kaufman's New Repertoire for Black and White. New in Chess. pp. 211–217. ISBN 978-9-056-91862-0.
  44. ^ Dorfman, Ron (28 October 2007). "The 'Bilbao Draw' – how it doesn't solve the problem". chessbase.com. ChessBase. Retrieved 21 January 2024.
  45. ^ Friedel, Frederic (6 November 2007). "The Bilbao Draw – feedback from our readers". chessbase.com. ChessBase. Retrieved 21 January 2024.
  46. ^ "It worked for poker: Can chess make it on TV?". 11 October 2006.
  47. ^ "BAP - ChessBanter". www.chessbanter.com.
  48. ^ . Archived from the original on 2008-04-13. Retrieved 2008-04-19.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: archived copy as title (link)
  49. ^ The draw problem – a simple solution, by John Nunn

Bibliography edit

External links edit

  • FIDE Laws of Chess
  • , by Mark Weeks
  • Sofia draw rule

draw, agreement, game, chess, draw, agreement, player, offer, draw, stage, game, opponent, accepts, game, draw, some, competitions, draws, agreement, restricted, example, draw, offers, subject, discretion, arbiter, forbidden, before, move, even, forbidden, alt. A game of chess can end in a draw by agreement A player may offer a draw at any stage of a game if the opponent accepts the game is a draw 1 In some competitions draws by agreement are restricted for example draw offers may be subject to the discretion of the arbiter or may be forbidden before move 30 or 40 or even forbidden altogether The majority of draws in chess are by agreement 2 Under FIDE rules a draw should be offered after making the move and before pressing the clock then marked in the scoresheet as However draw offers made at any time are valid If a player offers a draw before making a move the opponent has the option of requesting a move before deciding whether or not to accept the offer Once made a draw offer cannot be retracted and is valid until rejected A player may offer a draw by asking Would you like a draw or similar the French word remis literally reset is internationally understood as a draw offer and may be used if the players do not share a common language Players may also offer draws and accept draw offers by merely nodding their heads 3 A draw may be rejected either verbally or by making a move A draw by agreement after less than twenty moves where neither player makes a serious effort to win is colloquially known as a grandmaster draw Many chess players and organizers disapprove of grandmaster draws and efforts have been made to discourage them such as forbidding draw offers before move 30 4 However professional players have defended grandmaster draws saying they are important to conserve energy during a tournament Contents 1 Etiquette 2 Practical considerations 3 Grandmaster draw 3 1 Spassky vs Petrosian 3 2 Reshevsky vs Portisch 3 3 Averbakh vs Fischer 3 4 Karpov vs Kasparov 3 5 Keres vs Petrosian 3 6 Tal vs Botvinnik 3 7 Polugaevsky vs Tal 3 8 Kasparov vs Karpov 3 9 Kasparov vs Smyslov 4 Steps taken to discourage draws 4 1 Only theoretical draws allowed Sofia Rules 4 2 No draw offers before a certain move 4 3 Replay the game gladiator chess 4 4 Alternative scoring systems 4 4 1 3 1 0 scoring system 4 4 2 BAP scoring system 4 4 3 Other scoring systems 4 5 Financial penalties 4 6 Other 5 References 5 1 Bibliography 6 External linksThis article uses algebraic notation to describe chess moves Etiquette editAlthough a draw may be offered at any time an illogical offer runs the risk of violating article 11 5 which states It is forbidden to distract or annoy the opponent in any manner whatsoever This includes unreasonable offers of a draw This rule is applied with the arbiter s discretion for example a player loudly offering a draw while the opponent is thinking may well suffer a time penalty or even forfeit the game but it is unlikely that a player would be penalized for offering a draw in a lifeless position when it is not their turn to move 5 At one time chess players considered it bad manners to play out a superior but theoretically drawn endgame In such cases the superior side was expected to offer a draw 6 There are certain behavioural norms relating to draw offers not codified in the FIDE Laws of Chess but widely observed For example many consider it bad manners for a player who has offered a draw once to do so again before their opponent has offered a draw Such repeated offers of a draw have also sometimes been considered distracting enough to warrant the arbiter taking action under article 11 5 Reshevsky vs Mastichiadis 1950abcdefgh8 nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp 877665544332211abcdefghPosition before 24 Nd2 It is considered bad etiquette to offer a draw in a clearly lost position 7 8 or even when one has no winning chances but one s opponent does 9 Garry Kasparov regularly criticizes grandmasters who offer a draw when their position is worse 10 However such offers are sometimes used as psychological tricks The position in the diagram arose in the game Samuel Reshevsky Fotis Mastichiadis Dubrovnik 1950 Reshevsky played 24 Nd2 and saw at once that he would be put into a very bad situation with 24 Nxf2 Thinking quickly he offered a draw to his opponent who was busy writing down the move in his scoresheet Mastichiadis a minor master was so happy to get half a point against his illustrious opponent that he did not pause to examine the position before accepting the offer The rule about the procedure of offering a draw was violated in a 1981 game between Garry Kasparov and Anatoly Karpov Kasparov moved 17 Ra2 and offered a draw Karpov instantly replied 17 Be7 and then said Make a move which is a violation of the rule Kasparov moved 18 b5 and then Karpov accepted the draw 11 Petrosian vs Fischer 1958abcdefgh8 nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp 877665544332211abcdefghFinal position after 67 f7 draw agreed In the 1958 game between Tigran Petrosian and Bobby Fischer Fischer offered a draw without making a move first which was accepted by Petrosian 12 He explains in his book My 60 Memorable Games I offered a draw not realizing it was bad etiquette It was Petrosian s place to extend the draw offer after 67 Rxg6 68 Kxg6 Kb1 69 f8 Q c2 with a book draw 13 See queen versus pawn endgame Practical considerations editPetrosian vs Korchnoi 1977 game 12abcdefgh8 nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp 877665544332211abcdefghBlack is winning but offered a draw Players sometimes make draw offers in consideration of outside factors In 1977 Viktor Korchnoi and former World Champion Tigran Petrosian played a twelve game quarter final Candidates Match to ultimately determine the challenger for the 1978 World Championship After eleven games Korchnoi was leading by one point so he only needed a draw in the final game to advance to the semi finals Korchnoi as Black was winning this game but he offered a draw after 40 moves 14 According to Edmar Mednis it was gentlemanly and the practical thing to do 15 Korchnoi went on to unsuccessfully challenge Anatoly Karpov for the World Championship Sometimes time constraints for one or both of the players may be a factor in agreeing to a draw A player with an advantageous position but limited time may be agreeable to a draw to avoid risking a loss from running out of time and the opponent may also be agreeable to a draw due to their disadvantageous position Grandmaster draw editA grandmaster draw or short draw is a draw reached after very few moves usually between high ranked players British master P H Clarke wrote about the positive aspects of a short draw Unless you are of the calibre of Botvinnik and who is you cannot hope to play at full power day after day The technical 16 draws are a necessary means of conserving energy As such they contribute to raising the standard of play rather than lowering it 17 All of the games of the second Piatigorsky Cup were annotated by players including the short draws Their comments on two short draws follow Spassky vs Petrosian and Reshevsky vs Portisch followed by comments on some other short draws Spassky vs Petrosian edit Spassky vs Petrosian 1966abcdefgh8 nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp 877665544332211abcdefghDrawn on the 22nd move Boris Spassky wrote The present game once again demonstrates how grandmasters play when they do not care to win Of course it is not an interesting spectacle for the onlookers However if chess enthusiasts could find themselves in the positions of the grandmasters they would not judge them so severely 18 Reshevsky vs Portisch edit Reshevsky vs Portisch 1966abcdefgh8 nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp 877665544332211abcdefghDrawn after the 16th move Lajos Portisch wrote Here Reshevsky offered me a draw which was accepted Is this a grandmaster draw I do not think so Reshevsky had consumed most of his time and had only 30 minutes for the remaining moves On my part it would have been pointless to rely on his time trouble as I saw that after 17 dxe5 Nd5 18 Bxe7 Qxe7 19 Nxd5 Bxd5 20 Be4 19 the draw is evident In such a strong tournament and against such outstanding players it would not be wise to try to win a game of this kind One could only lose energy Neither side had any advantage so why try to force the issue 20 Averbakh vs Fischer edit Averbakh vs Fischer 1958abcdefgh8 nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp 877665544332211abcdefghDraw agreed after 21 Rb1 In the 1958 game 21 between Yuri Averbakh and Bobby Fischer the players agreed to a draw in an unclear position where White is a piece ahead Asked about the draw the teenage Fischer said I was afraid of losing to a Russian grandmaster and he was afraid of losing to a kid 22 Averbakh stated that Fischer offered the draw and that each player had only about ten minutes to make the 19 or 20 moves before time control Karpov vs Kasparov edit Karpov vs Kasparov 1984abcdefgh8 nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp 877665544332211abcdefghPosition after 13 c5 draw agreedSeveral short draws occurred in the World Chess Championship 1984 between Anatoly Karpov and Garry Kasparov This one occurred in the 29th game after thirteen moves 23 Kasparov explainsDraw agreed on Black s proposal with the resulting complete symmetry the fighting resources are practically exhausted White had used 99 minutes Black had used 51 minutes 24 Keres vs Petrosian edit Keres vs Petrosian 1962abcdefgh8 nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp 877665544332211abcdefghPosition after 14 a5 draw agreed In 1962 a Candidates Tournament was held in Curacao to determine the challenger to Mikhail Botvinnik in the 1963 World Championship There is good evidence that Soviet players Tigran Petrosian Paul Keres and Efim Geller arranged to draw all of the games between themselves The twelve games played between these three players were all short draws averaging 19 moves 25 This diagram shows the final position from the shortest one only fourteen moves were played This was in the 25th of 28 rounds and the final game between Keres and Petrosian 26 Bobby Fischer charged that Petrosian accepted a draw when he was winning and Jan Timman agrees Petrosian went on to win the tournament and win the championship from Botvinnik 27 Tal vs Botvinnik edit Tal vs Botvinnik 1960abcdefgh8 nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp 877665544332211abcdefghPosition after 17 Nd8 draw In the 21st of 24 games of the 1960 World Chess Championship between Mikhail Tal and Mikhail Botvinnik 28 Tal only needed a half point to win the title so he got to a position where Black had no winning chances and quickly agreed to a draw Polugaevsky vs Tal edit In the 1967 USSR Championship Lev Polugaevsky and Mikhail Tal were leading with the same number of points going into the next to last round They played each other that round After 1 d4 Nf6 2 c4 e6Polugaevsky offered a draw Tal explainsI played 2 e6 and Lev offered me a draw I accepted although for decency s sake we made a further 12 moves or so and the question of first place was put off until the last round 29 Kasparov vs Karpov edit Kasparov vs Karpov 1986abcdefgh8 nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp 877665544332211abcdefghAfter 21 Qb6 draw agreed Before the 20th game of the 1986 World Championship Kasparov had just lost three games in a row which evened the match score Kasparov had White in the 20th game in which a draw was agreed after 21 moves White had used 1 hour and 11 minutes Black used 1 hour and 52 minutes 30 Kasparov writes In the 20th game we decided in the end not to play i e to aim for a short draw A typical grandmaster draw although one can understand the two players each fulfilled the objective he had set himself before the game 31 Kasparov did not want to lose a fourth game in a row and Karpov wanted to draw as Black Kasparov vs Smyslov edit Kasparov had this to say about one of the games of his 1984 match against Vasily Smyslov It all ended in a planned draw and I was not exactly delighted with such a pre programmed result 32 Steps taken to discourage draws editAlthough many games logically end in a draw after a hard fought battle between the players there have been attempts throughout history to discourage or completely disallow draws Chess is the only widely played sport where the contestants can agree to a draw at any time for any reason Because grandmaster draws are widely considered unsatisfactory both for spectators who may only see half an hour of play with nothing very interesting happening and sponsors who suffer from decreased interest in the media various measures have been adopted over the years to discourage players from agreeing to draws Only theoretical draws allowed Sofia Rules edit Chess trainer Mark Dvoretsky writing in a column for the website Chess Cafe 33 suggested that agreed draws should not be allowed at all pointing out that such an agreement cannot be reached in other sports such as boxing Although some have claimed that outlawing agreed draws entirely requires players to carry on playing in dead positions where no side can reasonably play for a win Dvoretsky says that this is a small problem and that the effort required to play out these positions until a draw can be claimed by repetition or lack of material for example is minimal The Sofia 2005 tournament employed a similar rule which has become known as Sofia rules 34 The players could not draw by agreement but they could have draws by stalemate threefold repetition the fifty move rule and insufficient material Other draws are only allowed if the arbiter declares it is a drawn position Also known as the Sofia Corsica Rules the anti draw measure was adopted in the Bilbao Final Masters 35 and the FIDE Grand Prix 2008 2010 part of the qualifying cycle for the World Chess Championship 2012 did not allow players to offer a draw The draw had to be claimed with the arbiter who was assisted by an experienced grandmaster The following draws were only allowed through the Chief Arbiter 36 Threefold repetition of position Fifty move rule Perpetual check A theoretical draw No draw offers before a certain move edit In 1929 the first edition of the FIDE Laws of Chess required thirty moves to be played before a draw by agreement This rule was discarded when the rules were revised in 1952 In 1954 FIDE rejected a request to reinstate the rule but it did state that it is unethical and unsportsmanlike to agree to a draw before a serious contest had begun FIDE stated that the director should discipline players who repeatedly disrespect this guideline but it seemed to have no effect on players In 1962 FIDE reinstated a version of the rule against draws by agreement in fewer than thirty moves with the director allowing them in exceptional circumstances FIDE had the intention of enforcing the rule and the penalty was a loss of the game by both players However players ignored it or got around it by intentional threefold repetition Directors were unable or unwilling to enforce the rule In 1963 FIDE made another attempt to strengthen the rule Draws by agreement before thirty moves were forbidden and the penalty was forfeit by both players Directors were to investigate draws by repetition of position to see if they were to circumvent the rule The rule was dropped in 1964 because it was decided that it had not encouraged aggressive play 37 38 In 2003 GM Maurice Ashley wrote an essay The End of the Draw Offer which raised discussion about ways to avoid quick agreed draws in chess tournaments Ashley proposed that draw offers not be allowed before move 50 39 The 2003 Generation Chess International Tournament in New York City had a rule that draws could not be agreed to before move fifty draws by other means such as threefold repetition or stalemate were permissible at any stage In the World Chess Championship 2016 and 2018 the players were not permitted to agree a draw before move 30 In the 2021 and 2023 championships this was extended to move 40 Replay the game gladiator chess edit In the very first international round robin tournament in London in 1862 drawn games had to be replayed until there was a decisive result 40 A similar format called gladiator chess was introduced in the Danish Chess Championships 2006 Proposed cure for severe acute drawitis by FIDE officials Eliminates draws completely by forcing a fast time control game to be played after an accepted draw proposal to ensure there is always a winner and a loser One potential issue for this proposal is that both players can quickly agree to a draw in the tournament game and then play a speed chess game to decide things The FIDE 128 player tournament has seen many matches where the two tournament time control games are drawn and advancement is decided by rapid thirty minutes for a game or blitz five minutes games Alternative scoring systems edit 3 1 0 scoring system edit The 3 1 0 scoring system awards three points for a win one point for a draw and no points for a loss This system discourages draws since draws are worth only two thirds of their previous value It was adopted by FIFA for football matches in 1994 after many leagues around the world had used it successfully to reduce the number of stalling draws FIFA formerly employed the 2 1 0 scoring system which is equivalent to that used generally in chess today one point for a win half a point for a draw and no points for a loss A 3 1 0 system was first used in the 2003 Lippstadt chess tournament and again in the 2008 Bilbao chess tournament 41 At the 1964 FIDE Congress the Puerto Rican delegate proposed that a win be given four points a draw be given two points a game played and lost one point and no points for a forfeit This would be equivalent to a 3 1 0 system with a 1 point penalty for forfeit This had been suggested previously by Isaac Kashdan but was not implemented 42 This system has received some criticism GM Larry Kaufman points out that the reason for the high draw rate is not one of incentives but rather the nature of chess as a game White has a first move advantage but it is not enough to win by force He thus argues that Black should consider a draw to be a good result and should not be penalised for it under the 3 1 0 system Kaufman argues that chess would become like a game of chicken who will blink first and play an unsound move to avoid the mutually bad result of a draw 43 It has also been pointed out that the 3 1 0 system incentivises players to trade wins with each other instead of agreeing to draws 44 and gives players an easier time cheating as a team A team of players enters an open event one of them is selected to obtain the maximum score and portion of the prize fund and the others throw their games to that player the prize is then shared among the team This is easier to do when a win earns more points 45 BAP scoring system edit The BAP System was designed to make it undesirable for one or both players to agree to a draw by changing the point value of win loss draw based on color played three points for winning as Black two points for winning as White one point for drawing as Black and no points for drawing as White or for losing as either White or Black The BAP System was developed by Clint Ballard a chess aficionado and software company president who named it the Ballard Anti draw Point system BAP 46 Ballard explained the purpose of the BAP System The usual flurry of last round draws in almost all tournaments makes chess unmarketable on TV No excitement no drama no TV money for chess Chess will NEVER succeed in the American TV market until we eliminate the draw as anything other than a very rare outcome With my anti draw point system I am hoping to make 100 of games fighting games with risk and uncertainty i e dramatic potential 47 The BAP System was first used in the 2006 Bainbridge Slugfest tournament 48 Other scoring systems edit There have been proposals that certain kinds of draws should be worth more points than others Ed Epp has suggested that draws should be scored as 0 4 0 6 to compensate for White s first move advantage 43 Many players including former world champions Emanuel Lasker and Jose Raul Capablanca have argued that stalemate should be worth more than a normal draw with three quarters of a point for a side delivering stalemate one quarter of a point going to the side who is stalemated Kaufman and Arno Nickel have suggested that stalemate and bare king should both be scored as to the superior side and that a player who brings about threefold repetition should only be awarded of a point citing engine statistics to argue that this would be sufficient to solve the draw death problem in the trial games simulating human World Championship level the draw rate was decreased by these rule changes from 65 6 to 22 6 43 Financial penalties edit In the previously mentioned 2003 Generation Chess International Tournament players agreeing to premature draws were to be fined 10 of their appearance fee and 10 of any prize money won In a similar vein the tournament organiser Luis Rentero best known for organising the very strong tournaments in Linares has sometimes enforced a rule whereby draws cannot be agreed to before move thirty Other edit In 2005 GM John Nunn wrote that he believed the rules did not need to change and that the simple solution was for organizers to not invite players known for taking short draws 49 References edit FIDE Handbook E Miscellaneous 01 Laws of Chess FIDE Laws of Chess taking effect from 1 January 2018 FIDE Retrieved 12 July 2020 Schiller 2003 26 27 Schiller 2003 26 27 Hooper amp Whyld 1996 Schiller 2003 26 27 30 Mednis 1990 61 68 Benjamin 2006 30 Krush 2011 54 Burgess 2000 461 Peterson 2009 36 Kasparov 2008 32 Tigran Vartanovich Petrosian vs Robert James Fischer 1958 www chessgames com Fischer 2008 31 Tigran Vartanovich Petrosian vs Viktor Korchnoi 1977 www chessgames com Mednis 1993 206 7 Normally a technical draw is not a draw by agreement and is due to the impossibility of checkmate Evans 1970 85 86 Kashdan 1968 119 20 Converted from the book s descriptive chess notation 17 PxN N Q4 18 BxB QxB 19 NxN BxN 20 B K4 Kashdan 1968 52 Yuri Averbakh vs Robert James Fischer 1958 Mutually Assured Drawstruction www chessgames com Evans 1970 86 Karpov vs Kasparov Archived January 19 2010 at the Wayback Machine Kasparov 2008 167 68 Timman 2005 25ff Paul Keres vs Tigran Vartanovich Petrosian 1962 www chessgames com Timman 2005 185 86 Mikhail Tal vs Mikhail Botvinnik 1960 www chessgames com Tal 2003 338 Garry Kasparov vs Anatoly Karpov 1986 www chessgames com Kasparov 2009 201 205 Kasparov 2011 469 GrandMaster Square gt gt gt Draw proposal from GM Mark Dvoretsky www gmsquare com Retrieved 2016 05 02 Sofia rule Archived 2018 09 28 at the Wayback Machine Chessdom 2007 Final Chess Masters Bilbao 2008 Competition rules Archived from the original on 2008 08 03 Retrieved 2008 09 04 Bilbao Final Masters 2009 regulations Grand Prix Regulations section 4 4 FIDE web site accessed May 2 2008 Harkness 1967 50 52 Just amp Burg 2003 xxiv Ashley Maurice The End of the Draw Offer www thechessdrum net Retrieved 2023 02 11 1862 London Tournament Mark Weeks Chess Pages Final Chess Masters Bilbao 2008 Competition rules Archived from the original on 2008 08 03 Retrieved 2008 09 04 Harkness 1967 52 a b c Kaufman Larry 2020 Kaufman s New Repertoire for Black and White New in Chess pp 211 217 ISBN 978 9 056 91862 0 Dorfman Ron 28 October 2007 The Bilbao Draw how it doesn t solve the problem chessbase com ChessBase Retrieved 21 January 2024 Friedel Frederic 6 November 2007 The Bilbao Draw feedback from our readers chessbase com ChessBase Retrieved 21 January 2024 It worked for poker Can chess make it on TV 11 October 2006 BAP ChessBanter www chessbanter com Archived copy Archived from the original on 2008 04 13 Retrieved 2008 04 19 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint archived copy as title link The draw problem a simple solution by John Nunn Bibliography edit Benjamin Joel December 2006 The Best of Ask GM Joel Chess Life 2006 12 30 31 archived from the original on 2007 08 25 retrieved 2006 12 13 Burgess Graham 2000 The Mammoth Book of Chess 2nd ed Carroll amp Graf Publishers ISBN 978 0 7867 0725 6 Evans Larry 1970 Chess Catechism Simon and Schuster ISBN 978 0 671 20491 4 Fischer Bobby 2008 1969 My 60 Memorable Games Batsford ISBN 978 1 906388 30 0 Harkness Kenneth 1967 Official Chess Handbook McKay Hooper David Whyld Kenneth 1996 First pub 1992 The Oxford Companion to Chess 2nd ed Oxford University Press ISBN 0 19 280049 3 Just Tim Burg Daniel B 2003 U S Chess Federation s Official Rules of Chess 5th ed McKay ISBN 978 0 8129 3559 2 Kashdan Isaac ed 1968 Second Piatigorsky Cup Dover 1977 reprint ISBN 978 0 486 23572 1 Kasparov Garry 2008 Modern Chess Part 2 Kasparov vs Karpov 1975 1985 Everyman Chess ISBN 978 1 85744 433 9 Kasparov Garry 2009 Modern Chess Part 3 Kasparov vs Karpov 1986 1987 Everyman Chess ISBN 978 1 85744 625 8 Kasparov Garry 2011 Garry Kasparov on Garry Kasparov Part I Everyman Chess ISBN 978 1 85744 672 2 Krush Irina September 2011 Let s Talk About Draws Chess Life 34 Mednis Edmar 1990 Practical Bishop Endings Chess Enterprises ISBN 978 0 945470 04 5 Mednis Edmar 1993 Strategic Chess Mastering the Closed Game Dover ISBN 978 0 486 40617 6 Peterson Macauley March 2009 Kasparov s Curriculum Chess Life 2009 3 34 39 Schiller Eric 2003 Official Rules of Chess 2nd ed Cardoza ISBN 978 1 58042 092 1 Tal Mikhail 2003 The Life and Games of Mikhail Tal Everyman Chess ISBN 978 1 85744 202 1 Timman Jan 2005 Curacao 1962 The Battle of Minds that Shook the Chess World New in Chess ISBN 978 90 5691 139 3External links editFIDE Laws of Chess Issues on the Chess Table Short Draws by Mark Weeks Sofia draw rule Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Draw by agreement amp oldid 1217352620 Only theoretical draws allowed Sofia Rules, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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