Tony, I think you misunderstood my references to GM Tal and GM Fischer. I was drawing a distinction between two very different players. One being radically offensive and sacrificial with the other having a conservative, defensive style of play. This in no way undermines, as you put it, my respect or understanding of the game. You seem to suggest that by choosing to play more obscure unorthodox openings somehow displays disrespect and ignorance. That is ludicrous and actually more a reflection of your level of understanding of the game.
IM Michael Basman for example, was ridiculed and still is to this day for playing the Grob Attack at top level tournaments. But you can't dispute his winning record with it. An opening that was once considered dubious like so many other unorthodox openings. I read that GM Nakamura recently played it at a tournament and won with it as well. Games are not determined by opening play anyway. It all comes down to the endgame. If you understood the game, you would know that.
Further, I have respect for anyone that sponsors a chess tournament, despite their rating. I don't have deep pockets, I sacrificed alot to sponsor my Edgewater tournaments out of sheer love for the game and as a contribution to my hometown. And not to boast, but my rating is significantly higher than 1600, thank you.
God, I hate trolls. Especially ones dressed in sheeps clothing.
TonyRo wrote on 08/17/14 at 17:51:59:
Grobmeister wrote on 08/15/14 at 19:43:52:
Hi Tony, being from Cleveland, you probably have heard of IM Calvin Blocker who is a close friend of mine and a personal mentor for over 10 years. He taught me alot about chess and I owe a large part of my success in the game to him. Perhaps you have even participated in some of my chess tournaments I sponsored for 15 years at Edgewater Beach? Calvin also instilled in me a deep respect for the game, of which I take quite seriously and is not just a "phase" that I am going through. So I wouldn't be so quick to judge a person off the cuff, especially when you know virtually nothing about them, as it is indeed very disrespectful homeboy.
I know Calvin well. I've never played in the Edgewater tournaments (I don't play in many, but I heard good things about these). None of this means a particularly large amount with respect to the current topic - you can have a chess playing friend and sponsor tournaments out of a love for the game without ever amounting to anything as a player, and that's not bad! Rex Sinquefield is one of the richest people in the US and has done more for the game in this country than perhaps anyone else, and he's a 1600 player.
When you say things like,
"For me, conventional lines are redundant and boring", and
"But gambits, for the most part, do not appeal to more sensible, defensive, "prophalactic" (sic) styled players such as GM Fisher, whose approach was to sit back and defend while waiting for an opportunity to strike...", it undermines your point about respecting the game and knowing a lot about it.
There are non-gambit openings far, far richer than anything the Englund has to offer, e.g. the KID Mar Del Plata, any of the popular Open Sicilians like the Najdorf, Dragon, Sveshnikov, Taimanov, the entire Semi-Slav Complex, the Ruy Lopez, the list goes on and on. To call those redundant and boring is an absolute abomination and an insult to the game. And to call Fischer a defensive, lurking player shows you've never studied his games seriously. You've certainly got a fascinating perspective on the game, that's for sure.