davidmoodychess ([info]davidmoodychess) wrote,
@ 2006-05-13 13:33:00
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Chess for no good reason, part 32
Sheer disgust

My Most Faithful Reader has requested that I publish more of my wins. Unfortunately, there's not a whole lot of them at this point in my career. In fact, MFR might want to skip this painful loss completely. However, it does allow a quick discussion of the question: When should you resign?

There is a school--in Michigan, it's Kearsley High School in Flint--which holds that you should never resign. Let's say your position is so bad that your chess judgment tells you it's time to resign. However, to get into such a fix, your chess judgment must be lousy, so why should you trust it by resigning?

If that's the way you're going to play, fine with me. With all the lost positions I get, it's a pleasure playing one that's dead won. In fact, I prefer that you fight tooth and nail for every pawn and square till the bitter end. If you're just going to make random moves and try to get the game over with quickly, you're just wasting both of our times.

Generally, I have these criteria for resigning:

1) Lost position. This is not too important, since I get one nearly every game.
2) No counterplay.
3) Opponent has shown the ability to win the game.
4) Most importantly, I'm no longer having fun playing. I can resist a lot longer in interesting positions.

Of course, these can mean different things to different levels of players. But for me, at least, there is a fifth factor.

5) Sheer Disgust, which I can best explain by finally getting to the following game. By the way, if my opponent's name seems vaguely familiar, he would later become a Master and edit a collection of Reshevsky's games.

Moody,David (1640) - Gordon,Stephen W. (1808) [B08]
U.S. Open Lincoln, Neb. (11), 21.08.1975
1.e4 d6 2.d4 Nf6 3.Nc3 g6 4.Nf3 Bg7 5.Bc4 0–0 6.Be3 c6 7.Qd2 b5 8.Bb3 Ng4 9.Bg5 Nd7 10.h3 Ngf6 11.Bh6

A rather singleminded continuation.

11...a6 12.Bxg7 Kxg7 13.e5 dxe5 14.dxe5 Nd5?

No, I can't explain this move, nor why I just didn't take the free pawn with 15.Nxd5 and 16.Bxd5. This is just another indication of my mood on this day.

15.0–0–0 e6 16.Ne4 Qc7 17.Nd6? Nxe5

Black, on the other hand, does nt miss his chance.

18.Nxe5 Qxd6 19.f4 f6 0–1?

My resignation can only be blamed on Sheer Disgust. I was still mad at myself for blowing the pawn, and now thought that 20.Nf3 Qxf4 would win a second pawn and force the queens off the board--completely missing that 20.Nd3 would save the pawn. Hence, the premature resignation--though it seems with the way that I was playing perhaps it wasn't such a bad idea after all.



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(Anonymous)
2006-05-17 07:45 pm UTC (link)
In my first tournament I resigned after an exchange I thought was unfavorable. It was complicated and my simple math about piece value told me that it was unequal, when really in terms of position and pieces exchanged, I was in fact fine. I thought I'd screwed up 'cause I'd miscalculated where the exchanges would end up and promptly threw in the towel out of as much despair as disgust. My much more experienced opponent accepted my resignation, then steered me straight to the skittles room where he ascertained why I resigned a perfectly playable position, explained why I was still OK after the exchanges and counselled me not to be so quick to resign in the future.

It seems to me that you sometimes suffer not just from impulse moves, but from impulse resignations. You need to sit tight until the impulse passes. ;-)

I won't resign a bad position if I've still got (or at least *think* I've got) some way to continue fighting. There is a school of thought that if your opponent is really good you shouldn't play on in the hope that he'll blunder...but I played a game against a guy who was rated about 600 points above me. I blundered a *piece* in the opening. I was sick at heart, mortified, rattled...but not so rattled that I didn't see a sleezy tactical shot as I desperately scanned the shambles on the board. It depended on my opponent also screwing up, but it worked. I made what appeared to be another bad move and he, seeing as how I was rated around 1100, had just blundered a simple opening and was now throwing more material away...walked straight into my sleezy desperate trap. And lost his queen. I think when the dust settled from the resulting exchanges it was something like a knight and a couple of pawns for his queen. :-) Losing that Q drove him crazy...and then I fought like a tiger, bolstered by my miraculous recovery. Afterward he told me just how maddeningly frustrated he was during the game, because although he was a much better player than I was, I had a material advantage for most of the game. In the end we drew. He struggled mightily, but could not win. I had learned my lesson about impulsive resignations well: I salvaged half a point and picked up some rating points by drawing a player rated so far above me.

I don't think that every game has to be played out to the bitter end; if you've stumbled into a forced mate or have lost so much material that the only way you'll win is if your opponent drops dead, or if your opponent is just methodicaly taking you apart and there just isn't *anything* you can do to stop the bleeding, then yeah, go ahead and resign. But, FIRST, lock your jaw, sit on your hands, clear your mind and look at the position on the board *hard*---look for *anything* that might give you a fighting chance.

There's a line from an old Al Stewart song called "Almost Lucy" that comes to mind: "It sharpens your perception when your back's against the wall." :-)

-----Scheherazade

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