Fromper wrote on 03/14/11 at 15:25:02:
I find it interesting that this is a completely different conversation than the one started by this article on the USCF web site a couple of years ago (and continued in the forum discussion there):
http://main.uschess.org/content/view/7854/381 Interesting, the author writes:
Quote:"Because we have been born in a world where the Swiss is the only way, people have simply accepted it and don't seem to realize all the tremendous flaws behind the system."
and I agree with him, we just take it for granted that the Swiss System is the only way nowadays and nobody thinks to question it.
Fromper wrote on 03/14/11 at 15:25:02:
In open tournaments, players in the middle bounce back and forth between playing guys rated way above them and those rated way below them, rarely getting games against those around their own level.
Yes, this yo-yo effect is another very common problem: you play a much weaker player and win, then a much stronger player and lose, then a much weaker player ... etc. The result is you learn nothing and get no interesting games.
Anyway, the point of starting this thread was to question the monopoly of the Swiss System, we've raised a lot of problems, but what is the solution? Knock-out events?