Duncan Suttles is one of only a handful of players to hold GM titles at both forms of the game, OTB and CC. He was awarded his OTB GM title in 1972 and his CC GM title in 1982 after winning the Heilimo Memorial, played from 1978–1981 (pre computers so there is no suggestion of silicon being used). I decided, because i'm a geek, to analyse his games from that tournament using Houdini to see what his matchups would be. 10 games from that tournament fit the criteria -
Houdini 1.5a 32bit - 15ply
{ Top 1 Match: 160/274 ( 58.4% )
{ Top 2 Match: 205/274 ( 74.8% )
{ Top 3 Match: 233/274 ( 85.0% )
{ Top 4 Match: 251/274 ( 91.6% )
and his opponents
{ Top 1 Match: 152/273 ( 55.7% )
{ Top 2 Match: 198/273 ( 72.5% )
{ Top 3 Match: 227/273 ( 83.1% )
{ Top 4 Match: 240/273 ( 87.9% )
He falls bang on the limits with his precentages, which is what you'd expect from a GM playing 20 or so games over a 3 year period.
Originally posted by Proper Knob Duncan Suttles is one of only a handful of players to hold GM titles at both forms of the game, OTB and CC. He was awarded his OTB GM title in 1972 and his CC GM title in 1982 after winning the Heilimo Memorial, played from 1978–1981 (pre computers so there is no suggestion of silicon being used). I decided, because i'm a geek, to analyse his games from ...[text shortened]... precentages, which is what you'd expect from a GM playing 20 or so games over a 3 year period.
Suttles (playing black) beating Larsen in an interzonal tournament:
Originally posted by Proper Knob Duncan Suttles is one of only a handful of players to hold GM titles at both forms of the game, OTB and CC. He was awarded his OTB GM title in 1972 and his CC GM title in 1982 after winning the Heilimo Memorial, played from 1978–1981 (pre computers so there is no suggestion of silicon being used)..
Just to be clear - the Heilimo Memorial is a correspondence tournament?
Originally posted by Paul Leggett Seeing Duncan Suttles's name in a thread title made my day! I love his games, and I love his getting a "shout out". Thanks for this!
Originally posted by Proper Knob As Chess Praxis said, it was a correspondence tournament. I should have made that clearer.
I thought it was. Most of the comparisons that have been published here over the years have been with OTB players. There have been a few correspondence tournaments run through their matchups and published at RHP somewhere, but not too many. I do think its better to compare the 60's and 70's correspondance players when obtaining a baseline, just as you are doing here.
Originally posted by Proper Knob Duncan Suttles is one of only a handful of players to hold GM titles at both forms of the game, OTB and CC. He was awarded his OTB GM title in 1972 and his CC GM title in 1982 after winning the Heilimo Memorial, played from 1978–1981 (pre computers so there is no suggestion of silicon being used). I decided, because i'm a geek, to analyse his games from ...[text shortened]... precentages, which is what you'd expect from a GM playing 20 or so games over a 3 year period.
...but he didn't have sticky notes or access to the RHP Magic Analysis Board.
Originally posted by Phlabibit ...but he didn't have sticky notes or access to the RHP Magic Analysis Board.
According to wikipedia sticky notes were invented in 1974. This seems to be a time when Suttles was at the height of his powers so indeed they could have played a large part. It was also around this time that the personal computer was starting to emerge so in fact Suttles may have been the first person to employ a sticky note on his monitor. I'm not sure who the second was.. the name escapes me.
Originally posted by thaughbaer According to wikipedia sticky notes were invented in 1974. This seems to be a time when Suttles was at the height of his powers so indeed they could have played a large part. It was also around this time that the personal computer was starting to emerge so in fact Suttles may have been the first person to employ a sticky note on his monitor. I'm not sure who the second was.. the name escapes me.
Vishy Anand, of course. He's currently using it, evilly, to avoid being beaten by future world champion Gelfand.
Or so one could think if one were to believe everything written in that other thread.
Originally posted by thaughbaer According to wikipedia sticky notes were invented in 1974. This seems to be a time when Suttles was at the height of his powers so indeed they could have played a large part. It was also around this time that the personal computer was starting to emerge so in fact Suttles may have been the first person to employ a sticky note on his monitor. I'm not sure who the second was.. the name escapes me.