Two important similarities come to mind to me: Having a great memory, and having the ability to anticipate many moves ahead.
Two important similarities come to mind to me: Having a great memory, and having the ability to anticipate many moves ahead.
Both games usually take an unfathomable amount of time to master, for someone to be at the top levels in both would be nearly impossible.
I have no idea what Efrens rating is but I would think that he is at a higher level att both games than anyone else I have heard of.
I know Steve Davis was the President of a British Chess Organisation but I thinbk I read somewhere that he was rated about 1400. I have watched Efren play a few games and he is at least 400 points higher than that, probably more.
I thought he was asking if anyone knew if Karpov was a good pool player?
Chess is better for nerves than pool because element of luck is removed.
Unless weak moves by opponent are considered luck.
ShootingArts,
That would be reducing chess to pure memory game and it is not.
Over the century of competition the theory has progressed and memory started to play bigger and bigger part.
However, there is room for novelty and surprise.
What the strong players know is the typical responses in typical situation but even in those situation they are solving complex problems as not all situations can be covered.
A small nuance as a pawn on a different square can make a world of difference.
Novelties are played everyday and lines are refuted in heat of the battle, although more and more often within previous home preparation.
Sad but true.
On lower not world championship level the chess game is still dark and shadowy.
Pool is more infinite.
Thanks to the wonders of the edit button you replied to my post two minutes before I posted! Or at least your original post was two minutes sooner. Actually there is a hell of a difference between playing ahead the likely lines, common lines, or every possible move. At one time I played three to five moves ahead, any possible move. I also regularly defeated a player that would be ranked far above me simply because I knew his play very well and knew he was playing five to seven moves ahead or more, for any conventional play. Making an unconventional move fairly often kept him off balance. The trick was to make unconventional moves that weren't costly.
I never reduced chess or pool to only memory, far from it. If memory alone was all it took the computers would have beaten all humans consistently long long ago.
Hu
There is one possibility for luck to enter a chess game: the "touch it you move it" rule. So, when say reaching for a pawn, you touch a bishop by accident, you're required to move the bishop. That's bad luck, or poor depth perception.
Otherwise, I agree that chess is as free of luck as any game I can fathom.
Still, when you think about it, in pool you set about all the actions that take place after striking the cue ball. If you don't anticipate an unfortunate outcome, whose fault is that?
God's, maybe?
Define 'touch', as it grabbing it? If your hand touches a bishop on the way to the pawn there is no penalty for it. There is such thing as intent in chess. If you grab a wrong piece that's another story. I will go with poor depth perception.
9 ball - the guy misses the pocket and the 9 ball goes into another one winning the game, pure luck. No such thing in chess. Many other examples are possible.
It was weird, I saw your post and responded then went back and could not find my post then saw it ahead of yours so I added ShootingArts. hehehe.
I spent most of my life playing chess became a master, provincial champion and have finished top 10 in a couple of national championships.
26 years of tournament battles but have retired 10 years ago as it was too mentally draining.
Memory or lack of it was a stumbling block for sure.
I could play 3 blindfold games at once but still had trouble remembering things.
Playing the opponent is a good strategy used often when you know someone’s likes and dislikes as long as there is a sound positional bases to it. For most part strong moves that’s all it takes.![]()
9BallPaul,
Ohh, Eric Schiller I have not heard that name in many many years.
Nobody has written more bad books on chess than this guy.