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Michael Nelson wrote on Wed, Aug 31, 2005 04:20 AM EDT:
The grandmaster strategy is blameless--it is legitimate to sacrifice a possible win to enhance your chances of success in the event. But it doesn't feel legitimate.

The problem is in a scoring system the rates two draws as good as a win and possibly the tiebreaker method. The conditions of the contest create incentives to play for draws.

Other games have done worse--I can cite examples in bridge, football, and hockey where the conditions of contest created incentives to lose certain matches.

But then this can happen in Chess in any kind of elimination event. Say I'm assured of qualifying for the next round and in my final game of this round I'm playing A who is 1/2 point ahead of B for the last spot. Now let's say that based on past experience, I just can't beat B. It is to my advantage to dump my game to A to make sure B does not qualify.


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