Markovich wrote on 05/23/12 at 02:50:22:
But hey, I have no doubt that making people play on and on in drawn positions will produce utterly brilliant chess. I can hardly wait for the issues of New in Chess with their scintillating analyses out to move 168, or further, in the average game. What a triumph of creativity it will be.
But wait, don't we have short time limits these days?? Oh no!!!
Surely players will have enough common sense to repeat moves three times in completely drawn positions.
And a draw offer doesn't necessarily end the game - your opponent can still decline and force you to play for the 50-move rule, creating a tiresome ode to persistency...
Besides, removing draw offers also removes the etiquette of draw offers, which players only seem to remember when they want to complain about their opponent...
e.g.
You can only offer once per game (according an Israeli GM/IM I talked to at a tm +10 years ago; most other players seem to find 2-3 offers feasible if 10-20 moves apart)
The clearly weaker side can never offer unless he's clearly better or winning
The clearly stronger side can offer if he's clearly worse or losing
A draw offer in a much worse position vs an equal or stronger opponent is an insult
You should make your move, offer the draw, then press the clock - in that order and in no other order ever (this one seems particularly difficult to adhere, even for titled players)