I'm truly horrified.
Quote:Yermolinsky still remembers that lesson because Zak acted with character.
A trainer isn't here to offer candies by result.
Unfortunately, I was unable to find the old article (posted when Yermo was working in-house at the Mechanics Institute in San Francisco).
He remembered the story, though, not because of a "lesson" but because he truly hated Zak. I am shocked that anyone can describe this incident as exhibiting "character." He, Yermo, showed that he had applied positonal principles and outplayed his Master opponent (and this is a Russian Master bear in mind) over the course of a long game.
What reward did this deserve? Certainly it wasn't comparable to telling your Catholic GrandFather that you just fell in love with a man! It also showed the tremendous narow-minded appraoch of the St Petersburg school, which doubtless works for some but not for all. No, Zak came across as a real
A*^

%$

# HOLE, if you ask me.
Quote:If a student of mine played 1.g3 against a Master,
he'd better have a very good explanation, otherwise I would take it as FEAR.
And that's bad.
Fear is bad, but how g3 = fear is lost on me. You can't have it both ways. On the one hand, the student is too stupid to know how to chose openings, on the other he's smart enough to try to avoid theory!! In anycase, your jumping to conclusions.
Also the young teenager who related Synder's regime (at the behest of his new coach, I played training matches with him) to me was a Najdorf player. Your ideas are little hard to fathom, as it calls for the authority figure either to determine who's talented enough to get dispensation from 1...e5 and who is mundane enough to remain tethered to it or else (as in Synder's case) everybody has to do it OR ELSE. I happen to regard this attitude as pedantic in the worst way, and basically as child abuse. I don't think it's a coincidence what Robert Snyder turned out to be later.
Ever ask your self why the Monty Python Group produced Life of Brian, and where do their their attitudes on religion come from?
They were indoctrinated in religion and it was "taught" to them. Consequently their view is that if you really want to stamp out religion, you should force feed it down the throats of our young as part of the curriculum!
According to some here, it matters not what the personal preferences of these youngsters are! So what you're really saying is play e5, or else!
Quote:So when the occasional dad or uncle teaches his kid to play the Sicilian, I tell them right away to cut it out.
There's nothing wrong with learning the Sicilian, particularly since it's a defense to e4, which they'll see a lot. It's an open question whether the kid can understand how the Sicilian can lead to better endgames due to pawn structure, etc...but to treat it as a priori invalid strikes me as authoritarian.
A couple of years ago I observed a young Armenian talent (probably 6 or 7 years old) playing a French defense as Black. So I asked his coach, IM Armen Ambartsoumian:
Wow, he's good. And he plays the French? Was that your idea, or because he's Armenian? [ And keep in mind the Curse of Petrosian, the tendency for Armenians to play the French as its called, could be used by the Armenian equivalent of a Snyder or Zak to FORCE kids to play strategic chess] Armen answered: Actually, we're going through all the openings so he can chose which defense he likes best, that suits him.