Board   E4EC
 
Events, public tournaments in the club
 
Send the link of this page to a friend of yours.

Your email address:
Recipient's email address:
Your optional message:


Please give the two security words shown on the image bellow:

 Cancel   Preview >> 

Events


You can find events of the club on this page, which may be interesting for the public.
The club may shoulder arranging other organizations' tournaments, usually these events are listed here. Club level tournaments do not appear on the web yet.



March 1, 2006: E4EC-IECC Team Match
Team match started with IECC: www.e4ec.org/IECC-95-E4EC-1/english/



Jan 1, 2004: The Hungarian E-mail Chess Championship
The Hungarian Chess Federation organizes these events among Hungarian email chess players. From 2004 the server arranges this tournament. It runs as an invitation based tournament in the club, players with their ICCF rating.
Has more events, semi finals and finals, which all can be reached at the links below.
Tournament director: Zsolt Szabo





 
Link to E4EC

Yes, we'd appreciate it if you want to link to e4ec.org from your own website.
You can use this graphic and link if you want to create a graphical link...

LinkImage


http://www.e4ec.org/
 
Scoring

In competitive chess, a player scores one point for a win, a half-point for a draw, and zero points for a loss. So the rankings at the end of a tournament are easy to calculate by simple addition.

In the early 19th century, when modern competitive play began, draws were ignored, and a match was won by the player who first scored an agreed number of wins, or who had the most wins after an agreed number of games. With the advent of all-play-all tournaments (the first international all-play-all was held in London in 1851) draws became more important. At first, rules were devised to discourage draws, which were very unpopular with the chess public, but gradually these were dropped and draws were counted as a half-point.
 
zazen5 wrote this notice on May 19, 2013:

sorry stanleyrandomchess.com, typo above, using tablet.


zazen5 wrote this notice on May 19, 2013:

I found about this site at stableyrandomchess.com. I was playing at chessmaniac but quit due to the ads. this email format of simplicity and having Fischer random is pure chess without nonsense as it should be. the parallel server in the Go game, wei-chi world is www.dragon go server.net, based in Sweden.


Post Your Notice

Voice your opinion about this page to the other visitors.

Your name:


 Send notice 

 
Tools

For easier printing of this page there is a printer friendly version of it:

 Print view 

To suggest this page someone:

 Send to a friend 

To view this page with another font size:



 Update 

 


    This is a dynamic page, took 34 milliseconds to generate it.