Look around the Bolyston Chess Club. Take a good look around and name me the one thing you see everywhere. Yes, you could answer the chess books of our rather extensive library (and, indeed, I might have to accept that answer) but the one I was going for was the "TDs WANTED" flyer that is seemingly on every bulletin board and door and wall in the club. I mean, you'd think they were serious or something!
It is with those flyers in mind that I presented my newly-renewed Club Arbiter qualifications to Bernardo at a small lull during my first tournament last month and said, "I'd like to help." And thus was born a second beautiful mentorship!
As I mentioned before, the first person to teach me tournament direction was Joe Ball in Syracuse, NY, decades ago and light years away. You didn't have to worry about cell phones. Anyone could beat a computer. There were no laptops. All the clocks were analog clocks. There were no such things as half-point byes. It certainly is a different world now!
Bernardo Finally Able to Concentrate on Playing. His New TD protégé, Doc Kinne, Takes the Reigns for the Sept. Thursday Night Swiss |
One of my favorite aspects of computer pairings is the computer printing out the wall chart and pairings for you! And, honestly, when I direct, this aspect of computer pairings will be your favorite aspect as well - you won't have to decypher my writing!
Digital Clocks: Chess Savior or TD Nemesis? You Decide! |
Digital clocks as a class, I think, have revolutionized chess timing for the better, all things considered. But they certainly have complicated matters! As limiting, perhaps, as analog clocks are, they certainly were simple - two dials, two wind-up keys, and two buttons. That was it. Now certainly the Chronos Digital Clocks are simple - three buttons across the top - but they're anything but simple or obvious, at least to me so far.
So, this month, for the first time since 1992, I am the Chief Arbiter at a chess tournament - specifically our September Thursday Night Swiss. I can't imagine a better introduction! The Thursday Night Swiss, of course, is a tournament held one night a week for a month under Classic time controls. Once the round starts you have time to retype the financial record sheet, make sure about your money balance, etc. And you have time make sure everything is set up correctly for the eventual USCF ratings submission which takes place in three weeks instead of three hours. Due to these factors I'd certainly recommend the Thursday Night Swiss as an introduction to anyone who wants to direct. At the risk of jinxing myself (FM Chris Chase's comment: "The night is still young!"), the first round went swimmingly, so I look forward now to the rest of Thursday nights in September!
2 comments:
Even if you didn't have half-point byes in your area of NY back then, I thought we had them in this area even back in the mid-1980's, but perhaps someone else remembers more clearly. I don't remember ever requesting one -- I go to tournaments to play....
Bernardo's rating is expected to rocket upward now that he can concentrate on his game.
:-)
The Thursday Night Swiss is the club's flagship tournament in many ways. If someone were returning to this area after decades away, I believe they'd expect the dependable TNS to be running still.
I always understood that one of the points of digital clocks was to reduce the tournament director's time pressure work because two players using time-delay might be able to avoid the need for intervention. I do believe that is true. I did recently lose a game to Harold because I couldn't program my own digital clock in time for the round start, so we played with an analog one, and of course I lost on time, just seconds short of checkmating him. Ah well, that taught me to always pre-program my clock for future events.
Hi Doc
Thanks so much for taking up TD-ing again with such enthusiasm -- it is a real help to the club.
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