Gerry1970 wrote on 08/21/08 at 19:52:09:
Interesting comments. I agree that many club players are better prepared in openings than years ago. Those Starting Out books, etc. have done this. This week I played a 1500 player that knew the Dutch Leningrad easily as well as I did.
Well, what I really meant is that I found it important to prepare better myself. I can't really improvise well without winding up in time-trouble at modern time limits.
Quote:
I live in the US. Wondering if you can explain this rating deflation to me?
I'm not sure. Elo-type ratings systems often experience deflation over time, because new players typically enter at a low rating, improve and get a higher rating, and eventually drop out, taking the gained rating points with them
There are various tools for combating this deflationary tendency (in the USCF system, bonus points for good performances, and rating floors are the main tools), but these can cause ratings to inflate over time.
In the early 1990s, USCF was very concerned about inflation, so tehy fiddled with their use of these tools. At the same time, scholastic chess took off, leading to many thousands of players going through the system very quickly. Many of these young players had dramatic rating gains, so a lot of rating points exited the system. Result: rapid deflation in the later 1990s.
Since then, USCF fiddled with the system a little more, and ratings seem to be more stable overall now.
So, if you stopped playing tournaments in 1995-2000 and just came back, part of your rating decline might be attributable to the general deflation.