Tele Chess
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Tele Chess
Hi there, I notice that in 76 London played both Belgrade and New York in telechess matches, and the following year there was the first telechess olympiad. Was this the beginnings of that phenomena or are there earlier recorded events? I am having trouble tracking them down but have only just started looking.
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Re: Tele Chess
Are you interested in matches where moves are transmitted by telegram, Telex, telephone, telegraph or other technologies such as Morse code or facsimile transmission?
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Re: Tele Chess
Yes definitely. I'm aware that matches began by telegraph with the anglo/American cable matches around the turn of the 19th century but I didn't think that sort of thing carried in into the 70s to the point where an olympiad was formed from it. Why didn't it continue through the 80s? Why was there only one such olympiad?
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Re: Tele Chess
Some reasons.MJMcCready wrote: ↑Thu Oct 19, 2023 1:06 pmYes definitely. I'm aware that matches began by telegraph with the anglo/American cable matches around the turn of the 19th century but I didn't think that sort of thing carried in into the 70s to the point where an olympiad was formed from it. Why didn't it continue through the 80s? Why was there only one such olympiad?
https://gardinerchess.com.au/gm-rogers- ... ed-part-1/
https://gardinerchess.com.au/gm-rogers- ... ed-part-2/
edit : also http://www.olimpbase.org/1990to/1990aus.html
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Re: Tele Chess
Ok thanks, so it was a bit of a disaster then?
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Re: Tele Chess
Rogers wrote a typically readable account of all this in a recent Chess Informant.
"Set up your attacks so that when the fire is out, it isn't out!" (H N Pillsbury)
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Re: Tele Chess
Is that the same account as at the links Nick gave above?Matt Mackenzie wrote: ↑Thu Oct 19, 2023 5:14 pmRogers wrote a typically readable account of all this in a recent Chess Informant.
It appears that the accounts above were written in around 2015 ("25th anniversary").
Was the Chess Informant account more recent than that?
I must admit I had been completely unaware of this aspect of chess history until now, and it is a really amazing story!
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Re: Tele Chess
It is in volume 156, out earlier this year. It may well be a rewrite of the above piece, yes.
"Set up your attacks so that when the fire is out, it isn't out!" (H N Pillsbury)
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Re: Tele Chess
It's the wider context I am interested in. According to this link Holland and Sweden also played a match by telex and someone wrote a book about it.
https://find.slv.vic.gov.au/discovery/f ... s&offset=0
https://find.slv.vic.gov.au/discovery/f ... s&offset=0
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Re: Tele Chess
I also wasn't aware that Fischer had to resort to it once too.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Capablanca_Memorial
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Capablanca_Memorial
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Re: Tele Chess
GDR players were restricted in their foreign travel from the mid 1970s, so Telex matches were one of the few ways they could reliably get Western opposition - maybe not so surprising that they took the events seriously.
Last edited by Matt Mackenzie on Sat Oct 21, 2023 6:04 pm, edited 1 time in total.
"Set up your attacks so that when the fire is out, it isn't out!" (H N Pillsbury)
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Re: Tele Chess
Am I right in thinking that matches by telephone were reasonably common in the 60s / 70s? I remember playing for my Birmingham school in at least two phone matches in the latter stages of the Sunday Times competition (vs Ayr Academy and Methodist College, Belfast) - the games took much longer than normal - but considerable saving on travel time, of course. I don't know how common transmission errors were - and if they were generally spotted quite quickly.
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Re: Tele Chess
Yes, the Informant article is a rewrite of the Gardiner Chess articles. The anecdotes are the more or less same, but I was able to include extra information I had learned in recent years, and also improve the annotations.Matt Mackenzie wrote: ↑Fri Oct 20, 2023 12:15 amIt is in volume 156, out earlier this year. It may well be a rewrite of the above piece, yes.
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Re: Tele Chess
Absolutely right about the games taking more time, even for only six boards. Bedford played Cheltenham and Glasgow by phone in the National Club. You could occasionally ask about your opponent's clock time. Time scrambles were unsatisfactory, with opportunities for sharp practice. You used to rent a telephone line from the GPO before the days of BT.Andy Stoker wrote: ↑Sat Oct 21, 2023 8:24 amAm I right in thinking that matches by telephone were reasonably common in the 60s / 70s? I remember playing for my Birmingham school in at least two phone matches in the latter stages of the Sunday Times competition (vs Ayr Academy and Methodist College, Belfast) - the games took much longer than normal - but considerable saving on travel time, of course. I don't know how common transmission errors were - and if they were generally spotted quite quickly.
As a teacher supervising a school team my school even had a telephone match in the Sunday Times zonal stage against a school only about 30 miles away. It became apparent that there was minimal supervision at the other end when we heard ill-disciplined behaviour and giggling. My colleague had to speak sharply to someone. Luckily the opposition was so weak that any collusion did not matter.
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Re: Tele Chess
Was having a match by telephone a last resort or adherence to a trend back then? Was it actually perceived as the way forwards at some point? I can't quite work out what brought it about.Paul Habershon wrote: ↑Sat Oct 21, 2023 5:56 pmAbsolutely right about the games taking more time, even for only six boards. Bedford played Cheltenham and Glasgow by phone in the National Club. You could occasionally ask about your opponent's clock time. Time scrambles were unsatisfactory, with opportunities for sharp practice. You used to rent a telephone line from the GPO before the days of BT.Andy Stoker wrote: ↑Sat Oct 21, 2023 8:24 amAm I right in thinking that matches by telephone were reasonably common in the 60s / 70s? I remember playing for my Birmingham school in at least two phone matches in the latter stages of the Sunday Times competition (vs Ayr Academy and Methodist College, Belfast) - the games took much longer than normal - but considerable saving on travel time, of course. I don't know how common transmission errors were - and if they were generally spotted quite quickly.
As a teacher supervising a school team my school even had a telephone match in the Sunday Times zonal stage against a school only about 30 miles away. It became apparent that there was minimal supervision at the other end when we heard ill-disciplined behaviour and giggling. My colleague had to speak sharply to someone. Luckily the opposition was so weak that any collusion did not matter.