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My understanding is that Morphy didn't learn to play chess until he was 10. This article states that Morphy played Winfield Scott when Paul was 8.] 03:47, 13 August 2006 (UTC) | |||
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== "Unofficial world champion" == | |||
Is there a source for this? I can't help feeling it's somewhat unlikely to be true, given his relatively short career and playing in a time when a top player's schedule was not as busy as in the 20th century. --] | |||
This term is basically bullshit. If you're talking about the strongest player in the world, there were plenty of "unofficial world champions" before him (e.g. Philidor, Labourdonnais). I propose we excise it from the lead. ] (]) 08:30, 14 January 2023 (UTC) | |||
:One source so far: chessgames.com. Morphy's record: +181 -20 =15 (87.3%). I don't see any master with higher percentage. | |||
:The cited reference says: "According to David Lawson, in ''Paul Morphy, The Pride and Sorrow of Chess'', Mckay, 1976. Lawson says that Morphy was the first world champion to be so acclaimed at the time he was playing. Most chess historians, however, place the first official world chess championship in 1886." | |||
::Ah, percentage - I was taking "winningest" to mean "won the most games". I'll fiddle with the article. (I'm not sure chessgames.com is completely 100% reliable, by the way, so I will state them as the source to cover ourselves) --] | |||
:In old edits, the lead paragraph said "He is considered to have been the greatest chess master of his era and is often considered the unofficial World Chess Champion." I agree that's clunky and vague and doesn't really say anything. Therefore I changed the sentence to: "He is considered to have been the greatest chess master of his era. He was the first player to have been regarded as the World Chess Champion, despite the first official world championship taking place in 1886." (This leaves no room for interpretation.) | |||
* | |||
:Currently the user ] is arguing that the entire segment should be removed, but it's been there since at least 2012 uncontested until my edit. | |||
<br> | |||
:] is also pushing for ]'s revision on grounds that the source is unreliable. ] (]) 08:53, 14 January 2023 (UTC) | |||
::''match/tournament results'' | |||
::Length of time is irrelevant. "Unofficial world champion" is still meaningless. "World's leading chess player" means something. ] (]) 10:12, 14 January 2023 (UTC) | |||
*::Match | |||
:::The current contested revision of the article doesn't actually use the wording "unofficial world champion". It explains he was regarded by people as being the world champion at the time of his career, despite the official world championships not existing yet. This was the true sentiment of the time as explained by Lawson. People actually called him the World Champion as competitive chess existed back then. It was partly his influence in the sport that gave rise to official world championships, so his life is inexorably tied together with the world championship title. ] (]) 10:21, 14 January 2023 (UTC) | |||
*Löwenthal +9 -3 =2 | |||
::::I kicked over this hornet's nest (with ), and I think that my edit was correct, but it will be at least half a day, if not more, before I can get around to defending it in this space. ] (]) 12:04, 14 January 2023 (UTC) | |||
*Owen (P&move) +5 0 =2 | |||
:::::My only problem with your version is that it says he "was sometimes described" as the World Chess Champion but links the page for the actual objective concept of the ]. At least when it says he was "the first player to have been regarded as the World Chess Champion", it matches the cited reference, and it feels ''less'' like a general description and ''more'' like the actual thing that he was, which the official championships were built to formalize. World Champion was not a nickname or anything, he was actually regarded as the world champion of chess as a competitive sport before the title was formalized. ] (]) 12:35, 14 January 2023 (UTC) | |||
*Harrwitz +5 -2 =1 | |||
::::::Your point about the wikilink to ] is well taken. This article is a biography of Morphy, not a history of the WCC. It doesn't help the reader, and may even confuse the reader, to refer to the Steinitz-Zukertort match of 1886, and to link to the article about events that proceeded from that match. | |||
*Anderssen +7 -2 =2 | |||
::::::I also don't think the words "official" and "unofficial" belong here. We tend to take for granted that we have a governing body for chess and that it jealously guards the rights to the World Champion title, but that's only since 1948. The only thing Steinitz and Zukertort could use to back up up their claim that it was a WC match was their own credibility. That, and the fact that world travel was by then slightly less time-consuming, arduous, risky, and expensive than it had been before. Zukertort actually traveled to the United States for the match. Before then, e.g. at the time of Staunton's match with St. Amant, the claim that it was a World Championship match was occasionally made, but it didn't get traction. What about the Germans? Or even the Russians? | |||
*Mongredien +7 0 =1 | |||
::::::Any sport is more prestigious if it is organized enough to have a World Champion. As noted by Lawson, various people claimed that Morphy was the World Champion, and in doing so, they were not just saying how strong he was, but how well-developed the chess scene was. Morphy made great strides toward creating a World Championship, not only by beating everybody, but also by crossing the Atlantic, {{strike|and then even going to Germany}}. But for his own reasons, he didn't want the title, and so things generally lapsed until after he had died. | |||
*Thompson (Knight) +5 -3 =1 | |||
::::::Lastly, the word "first" is not accurate. See for examples of people claiming that Staunton was WC, or (in 1850) that the winner of the upcoming 1851 tournament would be WC. I don't know if this inaccuracy is due to Lawson, or whether we are just misquoting him, as I don't have Lawson's book handy, but in any case, we can't use that word. ] (]) 20:51, 14 January 2023 (UTC) | |||
*::Tournament | |||
:::::::Perhaps the information should not be removed or softened, but rather moved further down into the article. It would be more interesting to include it alongside Morphy's own apprehension about the title, since, like you said, it's an article about Morphy, not the WCC. I think at this point there's at least enough consensus to keep the information in the article, the form it's in doesn't matter much. ] (]) 02:07, 15 January 2023 (UTC) | |||
*Thompson +3 0 0 | |||
::::::::I have edited the opening paragraphs. I didn't add anything (about, for example, the later Steinitz-Zukertort match) to the body of the article, but you are welcome to try to do it in a way that helps the reader to understand Morphy's legacy. ] (]) 05:41, 15 January 2023 (UTC) | |||
*Meek +3 0 0 | |||
:::::::::I'm unhappy with the edit, I feel it removes a lot of information, and the reference was completely gutted. I disagree that what you removed was unjustified. "Sometimes described as" (described by who?) is far too vague without the specific claims from the reference. But I'll leave it to someone else to fix it if they wish. There are too many cooks now, all I originally wanted to do with my original edit was touch up the wording. ] (]) 09:39, 15 January 2023 (UTC) | |||
*Lichtenhein +3 0 =1 | |||
::::::::::I've went ahead and removed the sentence altogether, since it's been diluted by these edits to the point where it's vague and unfocused, and I feel like the previous sentence (that he was considered the greatest chess master of his era) is sufficient. I just don't feel comfortable with the statement in its current form being in the introduction, it feels sloppy. | |||
*Paulsen +5 -1 =2 | |||
::::::::::For what it's worth, I believe there's evidence that this whole debate was useless. I've found a page titled ]. It turns out "unofficial world champion" was perfectly fine all along (despite ]'s protests) since that is an actual specification used when describing the history of chess. I of course never had any problem with this language. | |||
::::::::::I will therefore suggest that another editor restores one of the earlier versions of the lead paragraph if there's consensus in the future. But I say the controversial sentence should just be removed for now, since it's negatively affecting the quality of the article. ] (]) 00:52, 16 January 2023 (UTC) | |||
:::::::::::This outcome is OK with me. I was no fan of the stuff about "was sometimes described as the World Champion", I was only trying to make it less obtrusive, but I didn't have the nerve to remove it altogether as you have done. ] (]) 03:28, 16 January 2023 (UTC) | |||
== Working on the article == | |||
+52 -11 =12 total=75 | |||
69.3% 14.6% 16%<br> | |||
according to Morphy's Games of Chess by Philip W. Sergeant--] | |||
* | |||
I have acquired a copy of the 2010 edition of Lawson, and I am trying to use it to improve the citations in the article. | |||
One thing to consider in naming Greco as having the highest percentage of winning games, is that no one knows if Greco's games are real games, or analysis. His games do not have opponents listed; and I think most authorities feel they are not real contests. The games themselves look like they were invented, not played. I also feel that chessgames.com is an incomplete source. There are over 400 known Morphy games. Finally, many of the games are exhibition or casual games played against non-masters, and one can't really judge Morphy on his games against non-masters while other players are judged on their record playing masters. --] | |||
Other things being equal, a secondary source such as Lawson is a better reference than a tertiary source. However, the first edition of Lawson, which was published in 1976, may have been harder to obtain when this article was first written than some tertiary sources. So at that time, editors may have been tempted to cite tertiary sources, but now, Lawson should be routinely cited. | |||
True, Greco and some other players (Ruy Lopez, Polerio, etc.) have the highest percentage of winning games (100%) according to chessgames.com, which does not have complete archive of games to date. However, since Morphy and Greco have dozens of their games already archived by chessgames.com, their winning percentages are significant enough to be calculated and published. After all, no statistic, not even ratings, is 100% accurate. Today's players are judged mostly by their ratings, but great players from centuries ago didn't have the luxury of ratings to compare their strength. Therefore, lacking ratings, Morphy's and Greco's winning percentages are the best statistics we can use. --] | |||
As detailed by Lawson on pages 226-7, the pamphlet by Buck about Morphy introduced a number of historical errors, which have been widely copied (even by Sergeant), and can be found in some of our tertiary sources; for example, as I write this, we are quoting some article that gave 1882 as the date of the incident in which Morphy's family tried to take him to the "Louisiana Retreat". This is another reason to cite Lawson whenever possible. ] (]) 02:02, 7 March 2023 (UTC) | |||
:I've removed mention of Greco from the article. It's silly to talk of him having a 100% record when we don't know whether he actually played any of the games with his name on them, and when many games that he ''did'' play must have been lost to posterity. I've left the mention of chessgames.com percentage score for Morphy in, however, as it's sourced and readers can make their own minds up whether they want to take it seriously or not (that said, I wouldn't be too distraught if it was removed, though it is good to have an indication of Morphy's dominance). | |||
* | |||
:::<br>There's one more thing to keep in mind when discussing the games of . Whether Greco actually played the preserved games or not is somewhat moot. But what is important is that they don't represent his play as such. Greco was a professional, itinerant chess player who taught chess and played for money. He sold, or presented as gifts, his "secrets", mostly traps, to wealthy benefactors. While in England, he got the idea to not only record openings or positions, but entire games, which he kept on manuscripts. Later, after his death, many of these manuscripts were published as a collection. Since the games were intended to be instructional, even from the start, they only included his successful games (real or created). --] | |||
* | |||
:I've also moved mention of Morphy being World Champion out of the intro paragraph into the article proper. To put it in the intro gives it a little too much prominence, I think - Morphy himself didn't like being labelled world champion, and his championship is regarded today as unofficial. I think it could be confusing to readers who see elsewhere that Steinitz is regarded as the first world champion (which he is) to then read here that Morphy was world champion before him. In any case, the suggestion that was in the article that Morphy may have been champion beyond 1859 is mildly odd, as he basically retired after 1859. | |||
== Löwenthal game score issue == | |||
:I've also fiddled with the score the twelve-year old Morphy had against Lowenthal, changing it from 3-0 to 2.5-0.5. As I said at ], I don't have anything definitive to check this against right now, but I'm pretty sure it's correct, and (first paragraph below the second picture) and for example seem to back it up. --] | |||
Two different scores for a game played between Morphy and Löwenthal in 1850 have been published. In one score, submitted by Ernest Morphy to various chess periodicals in 1856, Morphy won the game; in the other score, published by Löwenthal in his collection of Morphy's games in 1860, Morphy achieved a winning endgame but went astray and allowed a draw. | |||
I am sorry to see that the score between Morphy and Lowenthal has been fiddled with, though I suspected it would eventually, as its incorrectly reported going as far back as 1860, and most works since then have simply repeated the untrue version. Lawson, Morphy's biographer, has a chapter dedicated to telling the story of both Lowenthal's visit, and how the score came to be misreported. I suppose I will have to recount Lawson's chapter in order to support the fact that the true score was 3-0. As the story is too long to include on the Morphy page, I guess I need to create a new page specifically devoted to the history of Morphy's relations with Lowenthal, and how later books simply copied Lowenthal's false claim in his 1860 book that one of the games was a draw. | |||
Sergeant (Sergeant 1957, pp. 210-212) uses the version published by Löwenthal. Lawson (Lawson 2010, pp. 21-32) discusses the discrepancy at length, strenuously arguing that Löwenthal's version must be incorrect, and referring to it as a "gross error", while implying that it may not have been just an error, but the result of outright dishonesty. But Lawson apparently does not even consider the possibility that it might have been Ernest Morphy, not Löwenthal, who fudged the game score. | |||
As for the change in the statement that Morphy was the first pre-eminent American in an intellectual field, the key idea here is "pre-eminent" as opposed to just "eminent". Franklin was perhaps the first American to be regarded as an eminent intellect by Europeans, but they did not regard him as the greatest intellect in the world. They simply regarded him as worthy of inclusion in the list of the world's top men of art and science. Morphy was different. Morphy was universally hailed as better than anyone else. He was pre-eminent. | |||
I have modified the article to take a neutral position between Sergeant and Lawson on this question, in accordance with ]. ] (]) 03:44, 20 June 2023 (UTC) | |||
Finally, it pains me how people want to demote Morphy from the list of world champions. Morphy clearly showed that he was much better than anyone else during his 1858-1859 European tour. If this doesn't mean "World Champion", I don't know what does. The fact that he never went around calling himself world champion, and others did not use the term, was simply cause the state of chess was such that the idea was not like it is today. Steinitz CALLED himself "World Champion"..., and popular opinion supports him as the first World Champion simply cause he was bold enough to proclaim himself so; he also asked for money when he played, and such things where considered vulgar by Morphy. But its fair to look at the match record. Morphy destroyed Anderssen, while Steinitz only defeated him by a very close margin. Similarly, Steinitz struggled in tournament play against his contemporaries, not winning first prizes, while Morphy beat everyone everytime he played. I am not saying that Steinitz, especially after 1884 when Morphy was dead, does not deserve his title. But Morphy was stronger than Steinitz, and to call Steinitz world champion and not say the same about Morphy is to punish Morphy for his genteel behavior and lack of self-promotion. Morphy was a natural genius on the level of a Capablanca, and Capablanca was one of his most devoted admirers --] | |||
== Tables of results == | |||
:On the Lowenthal score - no, you don't need to recount Lawson's story if you don't want to, but where a fact is widely misreported, it is often a good idea to say something along the lines of "contrary to many sources which say the score was X, it was in fact Y, as recounted by David Lawson in ''Whatever the Book Is''" (''Pride and Sorrow'', I assume - I've not read it). That way, people can be confident the article is correct and check up on sources themselves to confirm it if they're so inclined - otherwise they'll think, as I did, that it was an error. | |||
I have organized the single table of results into several tables, while trying to verify entries against reliable sources. I have removed entries about blindfold games and consultation games. The following entries have been changed or removed: | |||
:On the World Championship thing: I agree, of course, that Morphy was very strong, I agree that he was very probably the strongest player in the world in 1859, but the fact remains that virtually no commentators whatsoever consider him to have been an official world champion, so it's completely wrong for us to present him as one. It's mentioned in the article that he's considered an unofficial champion, and I've now added a brief mention of the fact back to the opening paragraph. I hope that's OK for you. --] | |||
:T. Ayers -- We were calling him "A.D. Ayers", presumably copied from chessgames.com. The link indirected to an article mentioning a baseball umpire by that name of the 1870's. Lawson identifies him only as "Dr. Ayers". Edo identifies him as "T. Ayers"; I do not know which primary source, if any, they got that name from. | |||
:Fiske, Fuller, and Perrin -- This was of course a consultation game. | |||
:Jean Adolphe Laroche -- We were calling him "H. Laroche", and Lawson identifies him only as "Laroche" or "M. Laroche", but Edo identifies him as "J.A. Laroche", and chessgames.com has an entry for "Jean Adolphe Laroche" that aligns him with Lawson's references to Laroche. | |||
:Chamouillet -- This was a blindfold consultation game (mentioned by Edge). | |||
:St. Amant -- The only known game is a consultation game. | |||
:De Riviere and Journoud -- A consultation game. | |||
:Bousserolles -- A blindfold game. | |||
:Schrüfer -- I have corrected the spelling by adding an umlaut, and by spelling his first name. Sergeant does not give his full name, only quoting a source that calls him "S---r", but chessgames.com identifies him as Schrüfer. | |||
:George Hammond, 1859 -- this was a consultation game. | |||
:Augustus Mongredien, 1863 -- Lawson says that Morphy played games with Mongredien in Paris in 1863, but I cannot find a source for the results and/or scores. | |||
:(added later:) | |||
:Löwenthal, 1859 -- We were giving a score of 1 win, 1 loss, and 2 draws, but I do not see any source that gives that score; I have gone with 1 win, 1 loss, and 1 draw. | |||
:Arnous de Rivière, 1863 -- We were giving a score of 9-3, but Edo scorns this in favor of 13-5. The games presented in Sergeant are 9 wins and 2 losses. | |||
I have avoided using the term "casual". Nowadays this means any game not played for stakes or played in a tournament or formal match. But in Morphy's day, tournaments were not common. Games serious enough to warrant keeping score, and publishing the score in a magazine, were played in settings that we would now call "casual". ] (]) 02:05, 9 October 2023 (UTC) | |||
Franklin was preeminent in electricity (and meteorology) in the 1750's. He deservedly won the Copley Medal in 1753. --] | |||
== Further reading == | |||
Giftlite: I am not an expert on Franklin, so I will defer to your statement that Franklin was regarded by Europeans as the greatest expert on electricity and meteorology of his day...if you are saying he was universally hailed as more knowledgable than anyone else. | |||
{{ping|AirshipJungleman29}} Thanks for bringing this to my attention. I will restore some of the sources you have removed, but I will bring the section into line with ], which is not official policy, but looks reasonable to me. | |||
Camembert - You are right that Morphy's score against Lowenthal deserved a footnote. I would have included one, except I didn't know how to do it, and I was more interested in adding new material than going into the fairly long story of how the error got to be. If you or others feel its worthy of inclusion in Misplaced Pages, I will present Lawson's material, in my own words to avoid any copyright infringement - ] | |||
:I will put all the "Further reading" items standard citation format, using citation templates. | |||
Why credit Steinitz with being an "official" champion? There was no officiating body then. Is somebody the "official" champion because they say so and few argue? Is the reason Morphy is not an "official" champion is he didn't announce that he was "world champion"? | |||
:Items that are cited in the text, such as Beim, will be moved up to the "References" section. This includes the pamphlet by Regina Morphy-Voitier. | |||
Why say that Morphy himself did not like being called World Champion? Its true that he didn't like being called a chess professional, but I don't think he ever disliked being called a world chess champion. I took the liberty of deleting this assertion, and would like to know what its based on if its wanted back. In all my research, I only could find that his only concern was that people didn't equate him with professional chess players, who played for money not love of the game. | |||
:I will not restore the fictional items, nor the tertiary histories (Schonberg and Fine), nor the foreign language works (Maroczy, Vazquez, Caparros). Caparros is a complete game collection, and I thought of restoring it, but Shibut is also a complete game collection, and is in English. | |||
About the book that was listed as by Morphy. Does anybody have a copy of it? Is it just a reprint of the book published in 1860 by Löwenthal, or does it have other material added to it from Morphy's sparse other writings, that didn't appear in L's book? That book, which I have, purportedly has an introduction by Morphy, but Lawson has established that Morphy did not actually write it. Instead, he simply "signed" it, as a favor to Löwenthal in order to help him sell the book. | |||
:I am inclined to restore Sergeant's "Morphy Gleanings". I haven't read it, but Sergeant's earlier book is an important source. The fact that "Morphy Gleanings" was reprinted by Dover suggests that it is important. | |||
PS - I recognize I am new on Misplaced Pages. I don't know the customs here. I pose some of these questions here rather than simply amending the article, as I am guessing its better to discuss first and change later, and people should be allowed to change their own material, rather than it being deleted for them. I welcome any education from old hands here. - ] | |||
:I am also inclined to restore Löwenthal, because it is historically important (it is mentioned in footnote 12), and is easily available online. | |||
ChessPlayer: About the book in question, I haven't read it myself. I got the book info from bn.com. I think it's unlikely Morphy was a co-author because he didn't want to be known as a professional chess player. I agree with you to not explicitly say Morphy co-authored it. --] | |||
:I am inclined to remove Frisco Del Rosario. I haven't read it, but I suspect that it is tangential to this biographical article. | |||
Page looks much nicer now with the image moved right! ] 18:25, 29 Feb 2004 (UTC) | |||
] (]) 22:15, 4 December 2023 (UTC) | |||
:While not policy, ] is part of ], a guideline required for GA status, which I see this article is nominated for. ] (]) 23:51, 4 December 2023 (UTC) | |||
:A couple of corrections: | |||
::The book by Chris Ward, contrary to our earlier annotation, is not fiction, but is a biography. I have not read it myself, nor evaluated it for suitability for this "Further reading" section. | |||
::I do not plan to add the pamphlet by Regina Morphy-Voitier to the "References" section. Keeping it in the "Notes" section should be fine. | |||
:] (]) 21:17, 6 December 2023 (UTC) | |||
== Euwe on Morphy == | |||
A few points. | |||
We are quoting Euwe saying that Morphy was "... a chessgenius in the complete sense of the word." However, we aren't citing Euwe directly, but are citing him as quoted by Valery Beim. I would like to find the original source of this quotation -- perhaps it is in Euwe's book "The Development of Chess Style"? It would be better to cite something by Euwe than to cite somebody else quoting Euwe, because one could be sure that Euwe's words were correctly quoted, and one would have a publication date and other context. ] (]) 20:03, 6 December 2023 (UTC) | |||
Re: Löwenthal's "Morphy's Games of Chess," Morphy wrote an intro to it (http://batgirl.atspace.com/Morphypreface.html) but didn't contribute directly. | |||
:Well, I see from re-reading Beim that he cites a 1937 issue of the Soviet periodical ''64'' to quote Euwe. As a practical matter, this may not be easily accessible to readers, so it would be OK that we are citing Beim instead. ] (]) 20:21, 6 December 2023 (UTC) | |||
Morphy was, in fact, hailed as World Champion on more than one occasion, the most notable of which was by Martin van Buren's son, John Van Buren, at the New York testimonial banquet on May 25, 1859: | |||
{{Talk:Paul Morphy/GA1}} | |||
"Ladies and Gentlemen, I ask you to unite with me in welcoming with all the honors, Paul Morphy, Chess Champion of the World!" | |||
== World Championship == | |||
Morphy didn't defeat all the great players of his day, but he defeated all the players he contended with. I think that's an important distinction. There were quite a few he never had the opportunity (nor, perhaps, the inclination) to play. | |||
{{ping|Quale}} Upon reflection, I agree that the lead paragraph should not mention future events like the chess world championship, but should concentrate on what made Morphy notable. I correct people all the time about putting inappropriate things in lead paragraphs. | |||
I agree that there is no indication that Morphy ever had qualms about being considered World Champion, though he never claimed it outright. --] | |||
I am not entirely comfortable with the phrase "world's greatest", but I will let it sit for a while, maybe someone else can think of something better. | |||
---- | |||
It might be appropriate to bring up the World Championship in the body of the article, perhaps in the "Hailed as champion" section. First, because readers and other editors are always bringing it up. The grating phrase "unofficial world champion" frequently appears in this article and others. Second, because I have been struck by the fact that organized and professional chess were just getting started in this part of the 19th century: the first international tournament in 1851; national championships; the world championship formally in 1886; successful professional players and writers such as Steinitz and Blackburne. Sports, such as American baseball, were likewise starting to get organized and professionalized in the late 19th century. When Morphy told his audience during the New York testimonial dinner that "Chess never has been and never can be aught but a recreation", he wasn't taking an extreme or eccentric position, but was giving his listeners what he and they thought was hard-headed career advice; but the advice seems strange to us nowadays, because people have routinely made serious careers out of chess and sport, and that started happening soon after Morphy's retirement from chess. ] (]) 03:14, 20 December 2023 (UTC) | |||
Excellent article! Kudos to all who contributed. I have only one criticism, relating to the following snippet of text: | |||
:I don't see why it wouldn't be appropriate. Historical figures and events are placed in proper retrospect all the time in sources, and therefore in an encyclopedia. His prefiguring of the WCC is a really important part of his legacy. ]] 03:40, 20 December 2023 (UTC) | |||
"A match therefore was set up where he was pitted against five of the leading English masters simultaneously. Morphy won two games, lost one, and one game was drawn." | |||
::Well maybe "inappropriate" was not the most exact word. | |||
::The general rule, as noted in ], is that "significant information should not appear in the lead if it is not covered in the remainder of the article." So when I dropped that bit about the World Championship into the first paragraph, I should at minimum have put a discussion of the future World Championship into the body of the article, as I suggested above. | |||
::But that has its own problems. As also noted in ], "The lead is the first thing most people will read upon arriving at an article, and may be the only portion of the article that they read." I might add that many, many readers can be expected to know nothing about Morphy except his first and last name, and while those readers are annoyingly difficult to write for, they are the ones who have the keenest need for what Misplaced Pages has to offer. One must be extraordinarily careful about what goes into a lead section and in what order, in order that it be accessible to, and useful for, readers who are starting entirely from scratch. In particular, I am not sure I want to talk at this early part of the article about the distinction between having a "world's best chess player" and having a formal World Champion. | |||
::I like your word "prefiguring". I guess that by taking chess as seriously as he did, Morphy enabled his contemporaries, and later chess players, to contemplate seriously the idea of a formal World Championship. I do not know if one can make this point in the lead section. ] (]) 05:44, 20 December 2023 (UTC) | |||
== Morphy and 1.e4 == | |||
The numbers don't add up: five opponents, but only four results reported... -- ] 03:15, 2 Mar 2004 (UTC) | |||
In the 'Style of Play' section it states that Morphy 'usually opted for '. My understanding was that Morphy was ''exclusively'' a 1.e4 player, and reference to the databases at chesstempo.com and chessgames.com supports this idea. | |||
: Oops! .... score corrected.. :-) ] 05:45, 2 Mar 2004 (UTC) | |||
I wonder if any editors have access to a definite source for the complete games of Paul Morphy and can confirm the issue one way or the other? Or, failing that, if anyone knows of any games where Morphy did not open with 1.e4? ] (]) 22:18, 21 February 2024 (UTC) | |||
:You are probably right. I'm looking at the "Index of Openings" at the end of Sergeant. Nothing but 1.e4 among the games in which he played White, except possibly those classified as "Irregular" -- I will look them up later when I have time. | |||
:Of course, to be prudent, one would have to look at the complete collection. There is a link to Krabbe's complete collection in the External Links, but it does not have an opening index, it's just a .PGN file. ] (]) 22:58, 21 February 2024 (UTC) | |||
::I have Sergeant's book on Morphy's games, which I believe is fairly comprehensive. I'll check to see if there's any record of Morphy ever playing a move other than 1.e4. ] (]) 23:32, 21 February 2024 (UTC) | |||
:::Thanks for the responses above. Just a brief note to say that I've located some Morphy games where he played non 1.e4 openings when playing at odds. Others may disagree, but my feeling is that odds games don't really count for the purposes of the discussion here (on the basis that the 'Style of Play' section is talking about standard games, or at least would be construed to be doing so by most readers). ] (]) 23:56, 21 February 2024 (UTC) | |||
::::He played 1.f4 in a few games against Thompson and 1.b3 in a few games against Maurian. Apparently he didn't like facing 1.e4 e6 when giving knight odds. ] (]) 23:58, 21 February 2024 (UTC) | |||
:::::Yes, those were the casual odds games I was referring to. I'm not convinced that they would invalidate a minor re-write along the lines of 'With the White pieces, Morphy opted exclusively for the King's Pawn Game ' (current version says 'usually opted'). ] (]) 00:11, 22 February 2024 (UTC) | |||
::::::I generally agree that "odds games don't count" in evaluating the claim that he always played 1.e4. It's good that you have brought this up, because it is pretty silly for us to be saying that he "usually" opted for 1.e4. (I probably wrote that.) In those days, 1.d4 and 1.c4 were much less frequently seen than they are now, and Morphy may not have been the only leading player who always used 1.e4. ] (]) 01:55, 22 February 2024 (UTC) | |||
:::::::Thanks Bruce (and thanks for all your work on this page). Before making the suggestion above I made a not unrelated point about the White repertoire of ]. If yourself and Max have the time to look at the suggestion on Zuckertort's talk page it would be appreciated. ] (]) 03:46, 22 February 2024 (UTC) | |||
== "Kings Pawn Game", "Queen's Pawn Game", "Open Game" == | |||
These are not so much the names of openings as umbrella terms for whole families of openings. Saying "I played the King's Pawn Game" instead of just "I played 1.e4" sounds very odd to a chess player. It's like saying "I have a pet mammal" instead of "I have a pet dog". ] (]) 00:34, 22 February 2024 (UTC) | |||
A few more nitpicky observations: | |||
:Yes, I tend to agree. In this case (prior to your edit) it used to say something like 'Morphy usually opted for the King's Pawn Game, often favouring gambits like the King's Gambit and Evans Gambit', which I suppose is sufficiently specific. If it had just said 'King's Pawn Game' then that wouldn't have been very helpful. | |||
"Morphy's mother, Louis Therese Felicite Thelcide Le Carpentier, was the musically talented daughter of a prominent French Creole family." | |||
:Seems to be a wider issue on Misplaced Pages. Perhaps it relates to the fact that there are articles called ] and ], which as article titles are probably better than '1.e4' and '1.d4'. But that shouldn't get in the way of stating in natural language that 'a certain player played 1.e4', with a link to ] as you have done in your edit. | |||
:I do have slight reservations however, on the basis that most Misplaced Pages readers probably don't know algebraic notation. In which case 'Morphy usually opened with the King's Pawn' may be more accessible than 'usually opened with 1.e4'. | |||
Louise Thérèse Felicite Thelcide Le Carpentier. | |||
:Agree however that 'King's Pawn GAME' is now probably an antiquated term that ought not to appear in article text when more natural alternatives are available. ] (]) 04:06, 22 February 2024 (UTC) | |||
Telcide's parents weren't Creoles. That would be impossible by the definition of Creole. However, by the same definition, Telcide herself would have been Creole. | |||
::I wrote "King's pawn game" in this article. I do not remember clearly why I wrote it that way, but I may well have been concerned that, as suggested above, algebraic notation is not self-explanatory and not understandable to most Misplaced Pages readers. But that's what Wikilinks are for, so calling it "1.e4" and wikilinking to King's Pawn Game at least ameliorates that problem. In retrospect I agree that "king's pawn game" is not a suitable thing to say here, for the reason given by {{u|MaxBrowne2}}. ] (]) 05:05, 22 February 2024 (UTC) | |||
"Staunton later was criticised for failing to meet Morphy." | |||
The main criticism against Staunton was never his failure to play Morphy. | |||
As Lord Lyttleton put it: | |||
"In the general circumstances of the case, I conceive that Mr. Staunton was quite justified in declining the match." | |||
His futher statements explain Stauton's failings: | |||
"...I cannot but think, that in all fairness and considerate-ness, Mr. Staunton might have told you of this long before he did. I know no reason why he might not have ascertained it, and informed you of it in answer to your first letter from America. Instead of this, it seems to me plain, both as to the interview at which I myself was present, and as to all the other communications which have passed, that Mr. Staunton gave you every reason to suppose that he would be ready to play the match within no long time...." | |||
"When asked about his defeat, Anderssen claimed to be out of practice, but also admitted that Morphy was in any event the stronger player and that he was fairly beaten." | |||
This is false. | |||
From Max Lange: | |||
"...an impartial presentation of facts, devoid of national vanity, can only be in favour of the youthful champion who came off victorious; and, therefore, we will add here a few expressions of Anderssen's, which we can warrant to be authentic. He was asked if the American was superior in coolness and self-possession, and if his play in general had seemed to him superior to his own. The first part of the question was not strictly answered, for Anderssen merely replied to it as follows :— 'I cannot say I believe so; for, in my own opinion, I was quite cool, but still I have overlooked the most simple moves.' The second question was answered without reserve:— 'He did not even in his dreams,' he said, 'believe in the superiority of his opponent; it is, however, impossible to keep one's excellence in a little glass casket, like a jewel, to take it out whenever wanted; on the contrary, it can only be conserved by continuous and good practice.'" | |||
"Prior to his getting home, Morphy had issued an open challenge to anyone in the world to play a match where he would give odds of pawn and move." | |||
All indications seem to put this challenge in January, 1859 from New Orleans (not prior to getting home) | |||
Morphy also refused to play any American at odds less than a knight. | |||
"He lived for a time in Paris to avoid the war" | |||
It might be more accurate, though debatable, to say "to avoid the humiliation of the occupation of New Orleans." | |||
"His principled stance against the war was unpopular in his native South.." | |||
As hinted in the previous paragraph, Morphy's objection wasn't to the war but to secession. | |||
"Chess professionals in the 1860s were looked upon as akin to professional gamblers and other disreputable types" | |||
Is there some source to support this assertation? | |||
"Morphy's final years were tragic. Depressed, he spent his last years wandering around the French Quarter of New Orleans, talking to people no one else could see, and having irrational feelings of persecution." | |||
This seems more than a bit over-dramatic. It's the type of unsupportable statement that contributes nothing to our understanding of Morphy and perpetuates the tabloid-like innuendo of his later life. | |||
--] | |||
---- | |||
==Morphy/Staunton Match== | |||
It is to simple to state just that Staunton ducked. Althought it is true that Staunton probably no appetite for the match, he had his reasons not to play (he was retired and very busy working on his Shakespeare-works). | |||
See for instance http://www.johntownsend.demon.co.uk/page7.html: | |||
''Later, Staunton was criticised for failing to meet the American master, Paul Morphy, in a match in 1858, but by then he had effectively retired from competitive chess. But Morphy regarded him as "the man to beat". Staunton was flattered and at first he intended to prepare for a match in which he had little chance of success. There is no doubt that he was a very busy man in 1858, as he was under pressure to produce his edition of the complete works of Shakespeare. These circumstances, together with imperfect health, probably frustrated Staunton as much as Morphy. He should have told Morphy once he had decided not to play a match. He did invite Morphy to play some casual games at his Streatham home.'' | |||
Other sources: http://markofwestminster.com/chess/staunton.html | |||
== Grammar == | |||
The latest change, substituting pronouns for nouns has not always been for the better, in my opinion, and in some places has in fact introduced errors of grammar, especially in the paragraph on how Morphy learned chess, where the use of "him" I believe is grammatically incorrect. However, I am not so positive I wish to make corrections, but instead invite anyone strong in grammar to look at this paragraph closely and make changes. | |||
Here is a section that seems to me to be made very unclear by the substitution of pronouns for nouns: "His uncle recounted how Morphy, after watching one game for several hours between his father and him, told him afterwards that he should have won the game. They both were surprised, as they didn't think that young Morphy knew the moves, let alone any chess strategy." | |||
Between his father and "him"? Who is "him"? Morphy? The uncle? Even if this is grammatically correct, it certainly seems to me that its unclear writing. | |||
I hope this doesn't sound harsh to the person who wrote this; if it is in any way offensive, I apologise...my sole interest is in making the text of the article as clear and well written as possible. ] 06:20, 15 Apr 2004 (UTC) | |||
== Chess Terminology == | |||
"Open game"? "Combinative player"? "Positional systems"? I'm not ragging on the article, but is there any possible way non-geeks can play, too? | |||
:That stuff is in a section titled "Morphy's cless play". If you don't play chess, you skip that section. ] 06:12, 15 Apr 2004 (UTC) | |||
== NPOV == | |||
Does this sentence need to be revised? "He was also the first American superstar, acknowledged by the entire world as the preeminent figure in a cultural or intellectual field." | |||
:I completely agree, and will change it to be more moderate (and accurate). I mean, really, Ben Franklin was considered pretty amazing overseas 80 years earlier. --] 00:28, 23 February 2006 (UTC) | |||
:: The original statement is correct. Morphy was the chess champion on both sides of the Atlantic in 1859; the first American to be acknowledged by Europeans and Americans alike as the pre-eminient figure in his cultural field. Ben Franklin was never universally accepted as the world champion of science. --] 06:12, 1 March 2006 (UTC) | |||
::: It is probably also accurate that Morphy was never universally accepted or acknowledged as the preeminent figure of intellectual games (or board games, if you really want to limit the field - it is necessary to make this broad a comparison, as Chess is but one game and 'science', as you use, is many fields). Even in the mid-1700's, it was desperately difficult to become a universal polymath in the sciences (enough to be the preeminent figure in all of the scientific disciplines). It may be accurate, though, that he was the first American 'Superstar'. | |||
::: Was chess a cultural field back then? I know it is now, but back then it seemed mostly to be a game played for amusement or stakes (would it be right to call roulette a cultural field, even though analysis and strategies have been developed around it?). There is active culture, and then there are 'cultural fields'. ] 02:46, 6 July 2006 (UTC) (Formerly ]) | |||
== Morphy's college commencement == | |||
I read, years ago, in a novel, that Spring Hill College in its early years had an unusual academic schedule, and held its commencements in the fall, not the spring; can anyone address this question? ] 23:42, 24 November 2005 (UTC) | |||
:You may have more luck in the talk page of the ] article or on the ]. ''']]]''' <sup>]</sup> 00:11, 24 March 2006 (UTC) | |||
== Neutrality == | |||
This article is ridiculously flattering. No doubt he was a great chess player, but comments on his general demeanour do not belong in an encyclopaedia. If such material must be included, it must be quoted verbatim and sourced appropriately. ] 15:48, 11 April 2006 (UTC) | |||
:The article is written according to the source..biographer David Lawson. What do you want, "Lawson says" put in front of every sentence? The article is actually balanced. Flattering would be removing the material stating that he was mentally imbalanced and spent most of his life doing nothing. Mostly only chessbooks discuss Morphy, and they are equally "flattering", if not more, as they will omit to discuss his insanity and simply discuss his outstanding chess ability. Your tagging this is unjustified. ] 16:06, 11 April 2006 (UTC) | |||
::If you're going to say things like "his combination of brilliant play and personal modesty made him a welcome guest everywhere" then yes, you need to make explicit who had that opinion, probably with an inline citation. Describing books as "an invaluable resource" and "a great book" is also POV. The fact that some books about him are also biased has no relevance. ] 16:09, 11 April 2006 (UTC) | |||
:::There is only one POV expressed in this article, that of biographer David Lawson. If you can find another, be my guest and enter it. NPOV requires that all sides of an issue be given...and Lawson's is the only side you'll find. Seach the literature if you like. You won't find anybody saying that Morphy was not polite to a fault. As to the books, if you feel what is said is not true, then take it out....if you have read the books. ] 16:17, 11 April 2006 (UTC) | |||
::::"POV" does not mean "untrue", it means "expressing a personal opinion". Clearly you think the books are great; maybe I would too if I'd read them, but that's still POV. I'll put the article up for Peer Review if you still don't believe me. ] 16:27, 11 April 2006 (UTC) | |||
:::::Lawson's book is the only full length, carefully researched, biography of Paul Morphy. To call it an "invaluable resource" is to state a fact, in my mind. There is no other resource availible in English, and Lawson is very authoritative, and its doing the reader a service to say so. Again, if you think the book is not all this, then by all means, change the article. But there is no reason to argue or object or change the article if you have not read it. ] 16:40, 11 April 2006 (UTC) | |||
::::::I've marked the article for Peer Review. ] 16:55, 11 April 2006 (UTC) | |||
:::::::So what? Does that have anything to do with the issue of this article's neutrality? Is there some POV you feel is not being expressed on this page? By all means add it in. Is the article not telling some side of the story? Tell it. The POV tag is not warranted if nothing is being disputed. You are complaining about POV, but offering no clue as to what other side of the story there is. ] 17:06, 11 April 2006 (UTC) | |||
::::::::I'm not getting into an edit war over this. You claim I am not raising any actionable objections and yet I have highlighted specific sentences that show blatant POV, and there are plenty more. However I am not bothering to edit the article if you're just going to revert my edits on the basis that I haven't read these books. I don't think you really understand ] or ], so there's no point arguing any further. Nevertheless I still dispute the neutrality of this article for the reasons already outlined, and the tag is staying on the page until those issues are resolved. ] 11:07, 13 April 2006 (UTC) | |||
Your objection is that the article is too favorable to Morphy, yet you don't have any sources that give an alternative view. The article is all supported by David Lawson. Numerous editors have over the years visited the page, and you are the only one to have suggested that the article as a whole violates NPOV. I think the problem here is you, not the article. You simply don't like articles that are say good things about people. If you object to material, then put in "Lawson says" in the sentences you don't like, to make clear whose opinion is being expressed. If you don't like that Lawson's is the only POV on the page, then find another. But don't just carp and demand a tag be permanently on the article, that is not the purpose of the tag. ] 11:19, 13 April 2006 (UTC) | |||
:Understand that I'm objecting to the article ''because I want it to be better'', not to annoy you or because I have some kind of pathological aversion to complimentary articles. And I don't want the tag to stay on the article permanently - just until the dispute is resolved, and that certainly is the purpose of the tag. Your combative attitude is not helping resolve anything. ] 11:35, 13 April 2006 (UTC) | |||
::But there is no POV dispute going on. We arn't debating POV's or arguing whose is correct. The fact that only one POV is given in the article does not make the article a POV dispute, nor is it a violation of the NPOV policy. There is nothing in the policy that says one side cannot predominate, if it is the predominate POV. Here it is the ONLY one, cause no other scholar has an opposing view. That is not a POV dispute. ] 11:40, 13 April 2006 (UTC) | |||
You accuse me of not knowing what the NPOV policy is. Let me quote from the policy page: | |||
:''The neutral point of view is a means of dealing with conflicting views. The policy requires that, where there are or have been conflicting views, these are fairly presented, but not asserted. All significant points of view are presented, not just the most popular one. It is not asserted that the most popular view or some sort of intermediate view among the different views is the correct one. Readers are left to form their own opinions.'' | |||
Now, there are no conflicting views about Paul Morphy. The article gives David Lawson's views, such as that his combination of brilliant play and personal modesty made him a welcome guest everywhere. There are no conflicting views about this. I know of no source that disputes this. NPOV is about articles presenting both sides...if there are two sides. Here there is only one side, and until you find another, and editors refuse to allow it in the article, the NPOV tag is unwarranted. ] 11:31, 13 April 2006 (UTC) | |||
:So whose POV is "This is a great book for anyone interested in not only Paul Morphy, but information about the First American Chess Congress"? Is that Lawson speaking again, or is that just you? ] 11:37, 13 April 2006 (UTC) | |||
::I notice you removed the dispute tag yet again. Well, I said no edit war and I'm sticking to that. If removing the tag helps you feel better about this awful article then that's okay with me. ] 11:43, 13 April 2006 (UTC) | |||
::Is that your only objection? Then take it out, or modify it to suit your tastes. Putting up a POV tag indicates an impasse. You've made no edits that anyone has objected to. You can't go slapping tags on every article that has something you don't like. Fix it. ] 11:44, 13 April 2006 (UTC) | |||
:::I don't care enough about this article to debate it any longer. I'll hand over to someone who does. ] 12:12, 13 April 2006 (UTC) | |||
::::I've done some preliminary removal of POV through the article, but I still don't think it's all gone yet - the tone is still too similar to that of an unencyclopaedic biography. But this is a start, I hope. ] 12:39, 13 April 2006 (UTC) | |||
== Some say Greatest Ever? == | |||
The article in its introduction says, "Some chess grandmasters consider Morphy to have been the greatest chessplayer who has ever lived." Really? I know Fischer once put him first, but are there any others who have seriously said that? Without more evidence, I propose removing the sentence. ] 02:15, 12 April 2006 (UTC) | |||
:This page used to have a long listing of quotes attesting to Morphy's chess strength, but it was removed and put on Wikiquote. ] 06:52, 12 April 2006 (UTC) | |||
::Thanks for that. But, aside from Fischer, I can't see anyone in that list later than Capablanca calling him the greatest ever. (Soltis calls him the "greatest genius", which isn't the same thing). ] 07:39, 12 April 2006 (UTC) | |||
:::It is the same thing, since Soltis was refering to his chess play, not his intelligence. ] 08:03, 12 April 2006 (UTC) | |||
::::I'm not convinced, but without the context I can't say for sure either way. What I'd really like is rather than it be a single line in the intro, is have a whole section on his standing among the chess greats, because it is a greatly debated and interesting point w.r.t. Morphy. I could get it started but my library on the subject is very small. | |||
== Prince Galitzine == | |||
Why the removal of this colorful story? ] 12:45, 13 April 2006 (UTC) | |||
:It's a good story, but it's a bit out of tone with the rest of the article. I'm sure there were other equally colourful episodes from Morphy's life but they don't necessarily need to be detailed. But mainly it's the tonal issue, which I believe does not befit that of an encyclopaedia. ] 12:48, 13 April 2006 (UTC) | |||
::Yes, encyclopedias must be dry, devoid of all color, written so that they resemble phone books, being a bare recital of facts. If possible, be sure to avoid any connection of those facts so that they make an interesting essay, if two possible ways of saying something, choose the most banal. If the facts are still interesting, delete them entirely and say they are "unencyclopedic". Make bare assertions that someone is famous, rather than give a story illustrating it. Very good, Misplaced Pages no doubt will be more successful this way. Finally, state that in doing this, you are eliminating "POV", as if that is something desireable. Ignore that NPOV is about giving all POV's their say, not about eliminating any of them. ] 13:00, 13 April 2006 (UTC) | |||
:::As adept as you are at mercilessly exhibiting the lowest form of wit, I still don't think this trivially pathetic anecdote is worthy of the article at all, really. It's not even that interesting in it's full glory. If it had any significance in terms of his global movements, then that might give me an incentive to keep it in. But it doesn't, just like almost every other unimportant event in Morphy's life. The story adds as much to the article as your frustrated talk page rambling does to the success of Misplaced Pages. ] 13:18, 13 April 2006 (UTC) | |||
The material you removed from the article: | |||
:''While in Paris, he was sitting in his hotel room one evening, chatting with his companion Frederick Edge, when they had an unexpected visitor. "I am Prince ]; I wish to see Mr. Morphy," the visitor said, according to Edge. Morphy then stated that he was Mr. Morphy. "No, it is not possible!" the prince exclaimed, "You are too young!" Prince Galitzine then explained that he was in the frontiers of Siberia when he had first heard of his "wonderful deeds." He explained, "One of my suite had a copy of the chess paper published in Berlin, the ''Schachzeitung'', and ever since that time I have been wanting to see you." He then told Morphy that he must go to St. Petersburg, Russia, because the chess club in the Imperial Palace would receive him with enthusiasm.'' | |||
replacing it with: | |||
:''While in Paris, Prince ] (having read Morphy chess paper entitled ''Schachzeitung'') told Morphy that his presence would be welcomed at the chess club in the Imperial Palace in St. Petersburg, Russia.'' | |||
Not only do you shorten it, but you change what it says, toning it down so that its less complimentary to Morphy...and against the facts. Galitzine did NOT say that Morphy would simply be welcomed if he came to St Petersburg; he promised that he would be recieved with enthusiasm. You toned it down. By ommitting the details of this story, you remove the point of it, which is to illustrate the extent of Morphy's fame, that nobles in Siberia where enthusiastic over him, wanting to meet him. You are censoring this information about Morphy, and replacing it with nothing. You don't add alternate material..you simply delete what you don't like to hear said. You do nothing to improve the article, unless improving the article is, in your mind, changing or eliminating the facts given by Lawson and Frederick Edge. ] 13:30, 13 April 2006 (UTC) | |||
A few remarks: There was nothing like "Morphy chess paper entitled ''Schachzeitung''" ("Schachzeitung" can mean "Chess News" or "chess newspaper" in German) - so the JonONeill's edit replaced a colorful (but perhaps true) story with a nonsense. Similarly it is not true that St Petersburg is in Siberia. | |||
In my opinion, these colorful stories are good for showing how enthusiastic were chess fans about Morphy in 1859 - which is an undisputable fact. They can be cited in the Misplaced Pages article, but they should be cited as examples, sourced, and clearly divided from the normal text of the article. --] 13:47, 13 April 2006 (UTC) | |||
:I did the best I could with what was there. But if the story must return, then I agree that it should be divided from the normal text. ] 13:54, 13 April 2006 (UTC) | |||
::By "nobles in Siberia where enthusiastic over him" I was refering to that Prince G. himself was a noble in Siberia, and that he had wanted to meet Morphy. Nobody said that St P was in Siberia. The purpose of the anecdote is to illustrate Morphy's fame, as recommended in the style guide for Misplaced Pages, rather than dryly saying "Morphy was a well-recognized name" which is factually false by way of being an understatement. ] 14:12, 13 April 2006 (UTC) | |||
:::As far as I know, the Galitzine family always lived in the western part of Russian Empire, its roots being Lithaunian. In the time, Siberia was populated with prisoners, not with the high nobility :-) -- But I agree with you: to be a good encyclopedia does not mean to be dry and without wit. --] 19:51, 13 April 2006 (UTC) | |||
::::I have replaced this point of conflict for the time being in an act of appeasement. Hopefully the paragraph will become the best it can be during the Peer Review. Also, I don't appreciate the implication that I am against Morphy adulation ("you simply delete what you don't like to hear said") - he is my favourite chess player. ] 20:10, 13 April 2006 (UTC) | |||
==GA failed== | |||
I dont believe that this article is well sourced enough, the references consist of two books one of which (the main one) is out of print so im not too sure how accurate this article is. | |||
==Supposed odds challenge to the world== | |||
The only quote (from Morphy's time) cited as such a supposed challenge is on page 183 of David Lawson's famous biography of Morphy. Rather than get into a lengthy argument over whether or not the quote amounts to a challenge, it is probably sensible to compromise and adopt a wording that reflects what was actually reported: "Paul Morphy had declared that he will play no more matches with anyone unless accepting Pawn and move from him." - Louis Blair (June 21, 2006) |
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"Unofficial world champion"
This term is basically bullshit. If you're talking about the strongest player in the world, there were plenty of "unofficial world champions" before him (e.g. Philidor, Labourdonnais). I propose we excise it from the lead. MaxBrowne2 (talk) 08:30, 14 January 2023 (UTC)
- The cited reference says: "According to David Lawson, in Paul Morphy, The Pride and Sorrow of Chess, Mckay, 1976. Lawson says that Morphy was the first world champion to be so acclaimed at the time he was playing. Most chess historians, however, place the first official world chess championship in 1886."
- In old edits, the lead paragraph said "He is considered to have been the greatest chess master of his era and is often considered the unofficial World Chess Champion." I agree that's clunky and vague and doesn't really say anything. Therefore I changed the sentence to: "He is considered to have been the greatest chess master of his era. He was the first player to have been regarded as the World Chess Champion, despite the first official world championship taking place in 1886." (This leaves no room for interpretation.)
- Currently the user MaxBrowne2 is arguing that the entire segment should be removed, but it's been there since at least 2012 uncontested until my edit.
- IAmNobody24 is also pushing for MaxBrowne2's revision on grounds that the source is unreliable. 24.68.69.54 (talk) 08:53, 14 January 2023 (UTC)
- Length of time is irrelevant. "Unofficial world champion" is still meaningless. "World's leading chess player" means something. MaxBrowne2 (talk) 10:12, 14 January 2023 (UTC)
- The current contested revision of the article doesn't actually use the wording "unofficial world champion". It explains he was regarded by people as being the world champion at the time of his career, despite the official world championships not existing yet. This was the true sentiment of the time as explained by Lawson. People actually called him the World Champion as competitive chess existed back then. It was partly his influence in the sport that gave rise to official world championships, so his life is inexorably tied together with the world championship title. 24.68.69.54 (talk) 10:21, 14 January 2023 (UTC)
- I kicked over this hornet's nest (with this edit), and I think that my edit was correct, but it will be at least half a day, if not more, before I can get around to defending it in this space. Bruce leverett (talk) 12:04, 14 January 2023 (UTC)
- My only problem with your version is that it says he "was sometimes described" as the World Chess Champion but links the page for the actual objective concept of the World Chess Champion. At least when it says he was "the first player to have been regarded as the World Chess Champion", it matches the cited reference, and it feels less like a general description and more like the actual thing that he was, which the official championships were built to formalize. World Champion was not a nickname or anything, he was actually regarded as the world champion of chess as a competitive sport before the title was formalized. 24.68.69.54 (talk) 12:35, 14 January 2023 (UTC)
- Your point about the wikilink to World Chess Championship is well taken. This article is a biography of Morphy, not a history of the WCC. It doesn't help the reader, and may even confuse the reader, to refer to the Steinitz-Zukertort match of 1886, and to link to the article about events that proceeded from that match.
- I also don't think the words "official" and "unofficial" belong here. We tend to take for granted that we have a governing body for chess and that it jealously guards the rights to the World Champion title, but that's only since 1948. The only thing Steinitz and Zukertort could use to back up up their claim that it was a WC match was their own credibility. That, and the fact that world travel was by then slightly less time-consuming, arduous, risky, and expensive than it had been before. Zukertort actually traveled to the United States for the match. Before then, e.g. at the time of Staunton's match with St. Amant, the claim that it was a World Championship match was occasionally made, but it didn't get traction. What about the Germans? Or even the Russians?
- Any sport is more prestigious if it is organized enough to have a World Champion. As noted by Lawson, various people claimed that Morphy was the World Champion, and in doing so, they were not just saying how strong he was, but how well-developed the chess scene was. Morphy made great strides toward creating a World Championship, not only by beating everybody, but also by crossing the Atlantic,
and then even going to Germany. But for his own reasons, he didn't want the title, and so things generally lapsed until after he had died. - Lastly, the word "first" is not accurate. See Winter's article for examples of people claiming that Staunton was WC, or (in 1850) that the winner of the upcoming 1851 tournament would be WC. I don't know if this inaccuracy is due to Lawson, or whether we are just misquoting him, as I don't have Lawson's book handy, but in any case, we can't use that word. Bruce leverett (talk) 20:51, 14 January 2023 (UTC)
- Perhaps the information should not be removed or softened, but rather moved further down into the article. It would be more interesting to include it alongside Morphy's own apprehension about the title, since, like you said, it's an article about Morphy, not the WCC. I think at this point there's at least enough consensus to keep the information in the article, the form it's in doesn't matter much. 24.68.69.54 (talk) 02:07, 15 January 2023 (UTC)
- I have edited the opening paragraphs. I didn't add anything (about, for example, the later Steinitz-Zukertort match) to the body of the article, but you are welcome to try to do it in a way that helps the reader to understand Morphy's legacy. Bruce leverett (talk) 05:41, 15 January 2023 (UTC)
- I'm unhappy with the edit, I feel it removes a lot of information, and the reference was completely gutted. I disagree that what you removed was unjustified. "Sometimes described as" (described by who?) is far too vague without the specific claims from the reference. But I'll leave it to someone else to fix it if they wish. There are too many cooks now, all I originally wanted to do with my original edit was touch up the wording. 24.68.69.54 (talk) 09:39, 15 January 2023 (UTC)
- I've went ahead and removed the sentence altogether, since it's been diluted by these edits to the point where it's vague and unfocused, and I feel like the previous sentence (that he was considered the greatest chess master of his era) is sufficient. I just don't feel comfortable with the statement in its current form being in the introduction, it feels sloppy.
- For what it's worth, I believe there's evidence that this whole debate was useless. I've found a page titled List of World Chess Championships#Unofficial Championships (before 1886). It turns out "unofficial world champion" was perfectly fine all along (despite MaxBrowne2's protests) since that is an actual specification used when describing the history of chess. I of course never had any problem with this language.
- I will therefore suggest that another editor restores one of the earlier versions of the lead paragraph if there's consensus in the future. But I say the controversial sentence should just be removed for now, since it's negatively affecting the quality of the article. 24.68.69.54 (talk) 00:52, 16 January 2023 (UTC)
- This outcome is OK with me. I was no fan of the stuff about "was sometimes described as the World Champion", I was only trying to make it less obtrusive, but I didn't have the nerve to remove it altogether as you have done. Bruce leverett (talk) 03:28, 16 January 2023 (UTC)
- I'm unhappy with the edit, I feel it removes a lot of information, and the reference was completely gutted. I disagree that what you removed was unjustified. "Sometimes described as" (described by who?) is far too vague without the specific claims from the reference. But I'll leave it to someone else to fix it if they wish. There are too many cooks now, all I originally wanted to do with my original edit was touch up the wording. 24.68.69.54 (talk) 09:39, 15 January 2023 (UTC)
- I have edited the opening paragraphs. I didn't add anything (about, for example, the later Steinitz-Zukertort match) to the body of the article, but you are welcome to try to do it in a way that helps the reader to understand Morphy's legacy. Bruce leverett (talk) 05:41, 15 January 2023 (UTC)
- Perhaps the information should not be removed or softened, but rather moved further down into the article. It would be more interesting to include it alongside Morphy's own apprehension about the title, since, like you said, it's an article about Morphy, not the WCC. I think at this point there's at least enough consensus to keep the information in the article, the form it's in doesn't matter much. 24.68.69.54 (talk) 02:07, 15 January 2023 (UTC)
- My only problem with your version is that it says he "was sometimes described" as the World Chess Champion but links the page for the actual objective concept of the World Chess Champion. At least when it says he was "the first player to have been regarded as the World Chess Champion", it matches the cited reference, and it feels less like a general description and more like the actual thing that he was, which the official championships were built to formalize. World Champion was not a nickname or anything, he was actually regarded as the world champion of chess as a competitive sport before the title was formalized. 24.68.69.54 (talk) 12:35, 14 January 2023 (UTC)
- I kicked over this hornet's nest (with this edit), and I think that my edit was correct, but it will be at least half a day, if not more, before I can get around to defending it in this space. Bruce leverett (talk) 12:04, 14 January 2023 (UTC)
- The current contested revision of the article doesn't actually use the wording "unofficial world champion". It explains he was regarded by people as being the world champion at the time of his career, despite the official world championships not existing yet. This was the true sentiment of the time as explained by Lawson. People actually called him the World Champion as competitive chess existed back then. It was partly his influence in the sport that gave rise to official world championships, so his life is inexorably tied together with the world championship title. 24.68.69.54 (talk) 10:21, 14 January 2023 (UTC)
- Length of time is irrelevant. "Unofficial world champion" is still meaningless. "World's leading chess player" means something. MaxBrowne2 (talk) 10:12, 14 January 2023 (UTC)
Working on the article
I have acquired a copy of the 2010 edition of Lawson, and I am trying to use it to improve the citations in the article.
Other things being equal, a secondary source such as Lawson is a better reference than a tertiary source. However, the first edition of Lawson, which was published in 1976, may have been harder to obtain when this article was first written than some tertiary sources. So at that time, editors may have been tempted to cite tertiary sources, but now, Lawson should be routinely cited.
As detailed by Lawson on pages 226-7, the pamphlet by Buck about Morphy introduced a number of historical errors, which have been widely copied (even by Sergeant), and can be found in some of our tertiary sources; for example, as I write this, we are quoting some article that gave 1882 as the date of the incident in which Morphy's family tried to take him to the "Louisiana Retreat". This is another reason to cite Lawson whenever possible. Bruce leverett (talk) 02:02, 7 March 2023 (UTC)
Löwenthal game score issue
Two different scores for a game played between Morphy and Löwenthal in 1850 have been published. In one score, submitted by Ernest Morphy to various chess periodicals in 1856, Morphy won the game; in the other score, published by Löwenthal in his collection of Morphy's games in 1860, Morphy achieved a winning endgame but went astray and allowed a draw.
Sergeant (Sergeant 1957, pp. 210-212) uses the version published by Löwenthal. Lawson (Lawson 2010, pp. 21-32) discusses the discrepancy at length, strenuously arguing that Löwenthal's version must be incorrect, and referring to it as a "gross error", while implying that it may not have been just an error, but the result of outright dishonesty. But Lawson apparently does not even consider the possibility that it might have been Ernest Morphy, not Löwenthal, who fudged the game score.
I have modified the article to take a neutral position between Sergeant and Lawson on this question, in accordance with WP:N. Bruce leverett (talk) 03:44, 20 June 2023 (UTC)
Tables of results
I have organized the single table of results into several tables, while trying to verify entries against reliable sources. I have removed entries about blindfold games and consultation games. The following entries have been changed or removed:
- T. Ayers -- We were calling him "A.D. Ayers", presumably copied from chessgames.com. The link indirected to an article mentioning a baseball umpire by that name of the 1870's. Lawson identifies him only as "Dr. Ayers". Edo identifies him as "T. Ayers"; I do not know which primary source, if any, they got that name from.
- Fiske, Fuller, and Perrin -- This was of course a consultation game.
- Jean Adolphe Laroche -- We were calling him "H. Laroche", and Lawson identifies him only as "Laroche" or "M. Laroche", but Edo identifies him as "J.A. Laroche", and chessgames.com has an entry for "Jean Adolphe Laroche" that aligns him with Lawson's references to Laroche.
- Chamouillet -- This was a blindfold consultation game (mentioned by Edge).
- St. Amant -- The only known game is a consultation game.
- De Riviere and Journoud -- A consultation game.
- Bousserolles -- A blindfold game.
- Schrüfer -- I have corrected the spelling by adding an umlaut, and by spelling his first name. Sergeant does not give his full name, only quoting a source that calls him "S---r", but chessgames.com identifies him as Schrüfer.
- George Hammond, 1859 -- this was a consultation game.
- Augustus Mongredien, 1863 -- Lawson says that Morphy played games with Mongredien in Paris in 1863, but I cannot find a source for the results and/or scores.
- (added later:)
- Löwenthal, 1859 -- We were giving a score of 1 win, 1 loss, and 2 draws, but I do not see any source that gives that score; I have gone with 1 win, 1 loss, and 1 draw.
- Arnous de Rivière, 1863 -- We were giving a score of 9-3, but Edo scorns this in favor of 13-5. The games presented in Sergeant are 9 wins and 2 losses.
I have avoided using the term "casual". Nowadays this means any game not played for stakes or played in a tournament or formal match. But in Morphy's day, tournaments were not common. Games serious enough to warrant keeping score, and publishing the score in a magazine, were played in settings that we would now call "casual". Bruce leverett (talk) 02:05, 9 October 2023 (UTC)
Further reading
@AirshipJungleman29: Thanks for bringing this to my attention. I will restore some of the sources you have removed, but I will bring the section into line with WP:Further reading, which is not official policy, but looks reasonable to me.
- I will put all the "Further reading" items standard citation format, using citation templates.
- Items that are cited in the text, such as Beim, will be moved up to the "References" section. This includes the pamphlet by Regina Morphy-Voitier.
- I will not restore the fictional items, nor the tertiary histories (Schonberg and Fine), nor the foreign language works (Maroczy, Vazquez, Caparros). Caparros is a complete game collection, and I thought of restoring it, but Shibut is also a complete game collection, and is in English.
- I am inclined to restore Sergeant's "Morphy Gleanings". I haven't read it, but Sergeant's earlier book is an important source. The fact that "Morphy Gleanings" was reprinted by Dover suggests that it is important.
- I am also inclined to restore Löwenthal, because it is historically important (it is mentioned in footnote 12), and is easily available online.
- I am inclined to remove Frisco Del Rosario. I haven't read it, but I suspect that it is tangential to this biographical article.
Bruce leverett (talk) 22:15, 4 December 2023 (UTC)
- While not policy, MOS:FURTHER is part of MOS:LAYOUT, a guideline required for GA status, which I see this article is nominated for. ~~ AirshipJungleman29 (talk) 23:51, 4 December 2023 (UTC)
- A couple of corrections:
- The book by Chris Ward, contrary to our earlier annotation, is not fiction, but is a biography. I have not read it myself, nor evaluated it for suitability for this "Further reading" section.
- I do not plan to add the pamphlet by Regina Morphy-Voitier to the "References" section. Keeping it in the "Notes" section should be fine.
- Bruce leverett (talk) 21:17, 6 December 2023 (UTC)
Euwe on Morphy
We are quoting Euwe saying that Morphy was "... a chessgenius in the complete sense of the word." However, we aren't citing Euwe directly, but are citing him as quoted by Valery Beim. I would like to find the original source of this quotation -- perhaps it is in Euwe's book "The Development of Chess Style"? It would be better to cite something by Euwe than to cite somebody else quoting Euwe, because one could be sure that Euwe's words were correctly quoted, and one would have a publication date and other context. Bruce leverett (talk) 20:03, 6 December 2023 (UTC)
- Well, I see from re-reading Beim that he cites a 1937 issue of the Soviet periodical 64 to quote Euwe. As a practical matter, this may not be easily accessible to readers, so it would be OK that we are citing Beim instead. Bruce leverett (talk) 20:21, 6 December 2023 (UTC)
GA Review
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- This review is transcluded from Talk:Paul Morphy/GA1. The edit link for this section can be used to add comments to the review.
Reviewer: Remsense (talk · contribs) 07:34, 10 December 2023 (UTC)
As a subject that I've done more than a bit of personal off-wiki research on, I'm snapping this up as my first GAN review with considerable pleasure.
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Remsense留 07:34, 10 December 2023 (UTC)
formatting/cosmetic tweaks
I'm doing some while I review, to the reference list, tables, and so on. of course, they are not necessary to the review, I just can't help myself. if they are in any way objectionable please don't hesitate to let me know! Remsense留 09:08, 10 December 2023 (UTC)
- Some comments or objections:
- I prefer "games played at odds" to "games featuring odds". The former is closer to the terminology used back when chess was frequently played at odds.
- "winning each match by lopsided margins" -- this is a singular vs. plural mismatch, which is why I used "winning matches ... by lopsided margins". That needs to be fixed, but you don't have to fix it the way I did.
- "by his contemporaries and later generations alike" -- verbose and generally unnecessary, or were you really trying to say something here?
- "A chess prodigy lacking formal training, Morphy emerged onto the nascent semi-professional chess scene in 1857 by dominating ..." -- a couple of problems here. We don't know if Morphy had "formal training"; Lawson doesn't mention any, but one can't prove a negative. Since we have already noted that there wasn't yet a world championship, "nascent semi-professional" is redundant, and distracting. I don't mind the use of the word "dominating"; but altogether, this whole sentence looks too florid. I believe in letting the facts speak for themselves.
- It is misleading to say that Morphy spent "several years" touring England and France, etc. The actual time during which he was challenging his peers was less than a whole year. True, he went back to Europe in the 1860's, but he was long past his actual chess career by then.
- Switching from "called" to "dubbed" is artificial, not exactly a violation of MOS:SAID but comparable.
- "tempestuous" -- where did this come from? I thought Morphy just dropped out of chess. Indeed his tour of the U.S. upon returning in 1859 was more like a graceful farewell.
- Notable games -- I am uncomfortable with not giving the first names of the opponents here. This section is not part of the narrative, so one can't assume that a reader coming to it has read the rest of the article and knows who is who.
- I may take more than a day reviewing your changes, so for now I am just commenting, rather than going in and reverting, but I will be happy to do the latter eventually. Bruce leverett (talk) 03:33, 11 December 2023 (UTC)
- I'll do my best to fix all my own changes—I'm supposed to be the reviewer here, and while I can't help myself, I don't want to make a bigger mess for others. Remsense留 04:18, 11 December 2023 (UTC)
- Apologies if my initial flurry was a bit overeager, I hope you don't mind the initial back and forth. I think you're right for most of these, excepting that I think "games featuring odds" or another modern phraseology is the proper move—while it's not the terminology used at the time, we are writing for a modern audience and use comparably updated terms elsewhere. If you're not convinced, I'll happily revert those too and get on with reviewing.
- For additional style considerations: in the transcripts of the games, i'm concerned by the use of MOS:BOLD, would you mind if I attempt to tweak it, keeping it equally distinctive and information-dense? Remsense留 04:31, 11 December 2023 (UTC)
- Also, you'll have to forgive my bad habit of going from memory of sources in this particularly bad context for it—I should've had taken out my copy of Lawson from the start, but had neglected to do so while I was still "copy editing"—I'll be more immediately scrupulous from here. Remsense留 21:48, 11 December 2023 (UTC)
- For some reason I neglected to reply to this. I definitely prefer "at odds", and I don't think it's old-fashioned, but I'll try to find some more modern examples of it before I do anything. Regarding the typefaces in the notable games, I do not feel like I am an authority on this; the most recent tweaks to them before this GA review were by Ihardlythinkso (talk · contribs), but I don't think that the recommendations in WP:CHESS#Conventions are much help with those issues. Bruce leverett (talk) 18:00, 14 December 2023 (UTC)
- The reference editor ProveIt seems to sometimes incorrectly replace "author=X Y" with "last=X Y". (The correct replacement would be "last=Y | first=X".) Bruce leverett (talk) 04:04, 11 December 2023 (UTC)
- Oh, I see that you caught this, thanks. Bruce leverett (talk) 04:06, 11 December 2023 (UTC)
- Bruce leverett, yes! it's given me trouble before, so usually I remember to check for it. I think a patch for this is waiting to be implemented. Remsense留 04:15, 11 December 2023 (UTC)
- Oh, I see that you caught this, thanks. Bruce leverett (talk) 04:06, 11 December 2023 (UTC)
- In the citation of Fischer's article "The Ten Greatest Masters in History", note that the cited source, which is Brady's magazine "ChessWorld", gives Fischer's name as "Bobby Fischer". I think we have to adhere to this in our citation, and not change it to "Robert James Fischer". Bruce leverett (talk) 04:12, 11 December 2023 (UTC)
- You're right—I suppose I just felt weird about having the hypocorism in the citation. Remsense留 04:16, 11 December 2023 (UTC)
- I'm still going through the article line by line—but tonight I got distracted and added the book published by Fiske on the First American Chess Congress, among other things—there's an awful lot in this book that could be added to the article! It should be available to peruse via the Internet Archive url provided in the citation. What do you think? Remsense留 07:55, 12 December 2023 (UTC)
- I hit the thank button before I looked at this. Can't wait to get around to looking at Fiske.
- Need to think some more about that long sentence about Morphy's "legacy" in the lead pgph. I will go along with your judgment that it isn't encyclopedic to proclaim that he was far ahead of his time. If it looks like puffery to you, it's probably puffery. But at the same time, it is trivial, and doesn't require "agreement", to say that he was far ahead of his contemporaries. Bruce leverett (talk) 15:10, 12 December 2023 (UTC)
- I think the point there is directly to ensure that it's keeping with the previous statement about disagreements. Perhaps it would make sense to swap the order of the two statements, so that the statement of his ability versus his peers can be plain, with disagreements about exactly what it means outside his era coming later? Remsense留 23:14, 12 December 2023 (UTC)
Brooklyn Daily Eagle quote
There is some discussion in Lawson of how Morphy's reputation had reached New York well before he did, which I found thought-provoking, considering it was before the days of organized tournaments, let alone rating systems, etc. This can be seen on pp. 45-46 and 50-51. I would prefer to cite Lawson, rather than the Eagle, because (1) it is a (reliable) secondary source, and (2) one does not need to subscribe to Newspapers.com. Also, I would prefer to keep things chronological, by discussing this before the paragraph giving the results of the tournament, instead of at the end of that paragraph. Will get around to this late tomorrow. Bruce leverett (talk) 03:32, 13 December 2023 (UTC)
- I think it is fairly healthy to include secondary sources sometimes (newspaper articles are secondary sources, it's just a secondary source from the period), especially when we are relying particularly strongly on a specific work like with Lawson. Would you like to include a cite for Lawson as well, perhaps bundled in the citation? Remsense留 03:38, 13 December 2023 (UTC)
Steinitz
I have already been told to fix a "citation needed" tag in order to get to GA, so I figure that we must fix our own "verification needed" tag, too.
The question is, did Steinitz see Morphy in New Orleans in the 1860s, or did he not? Lawson says nothing about this, and suggests (p. 300) that they had not met until 1883. But from this edit , and this earlier edit , apparently Landsberger's biography of Steinitz claims that Steinitz met Morphy "in the 1860s". Without having read Landsberger, I would guess that he indeed made that claim, since another experienced editor put in a proper citation for it. But I have no way to evaluate Landsberger's claim, without seeing his book and looking at his sources.
If I cannot make progress with this, I would be inclined either to altogether remove the mention of Steinitz meeting Morphy in the 1860's, or to put it in a footnote, along with the "verification needed" tag. Bruce leverett (talk) 02:06, 14 December 2023 (UTC)
- Google Books did not enable me to find the reference to Steinitz meeting Morphy in Landsberger's 1993 book, but in Landsberger's 2002 compilation The Steinitz Papers, one can see in a footnote on page 39 that Landsberger thought that Steinitz had first met Morphy in 1883. So I am definitely inclined to discard the sentence that we have and the citation of Landsberger, but will wait a while to see if someone can correct me on this. Bruce leverett (talk) 02:59, 14 December 2023 (UTC)
- I will remove the statement for now. Remsense留 06:20, 14 December 2023 (UTC)
14 December – Review
This was a great pick for my first GAN, I learned a lot doing it. Thank you to Bruce leverett for fixing up this article, for fixing up my mistakes when I started reviewing, and for being engaging throughout the process, and to MaxBrowne2 for their help during the review process as well.
Understandably, the biography of this article is built on the foundation of Lawson (1976; 2010), but there is a healthy body of independent, usually earlier works about his life and times that adds dimension and backs up most of the claims made in the article.
The other primary body of claims that require sourcing are the games, which are luckily well-documented and basically canonical in the chess tradition. The article is very no-nonsense (despite my attempts) yet it is clearly very valuable for someone wanting to learn about Morphy for the first time—I wish this article was in this state when I first learned about him.
Great work! I want to continue working on this article, but I've now gone through it in its entirety, and it clearly meets the criteria. Remsense留 06:33, 14 December 2023 (UTC)
- My own first GA review was just a few months ago, Vera Menchik, and it too was one of those biographies where the author could and did rely heavily on one good book.
- Thanks for your diligent work. I was also pleasantly surprised by your spiffing up of the tables and the References and Further reading. This of course had nothing to do with the GA criteria, but it all gave me the "Why didn't I think of that?" feeling. Bruce leverett (talk) 17:46, 14 December 2023 (UTC)
- It's my specialty, the tables and tidying of cosmetics mostly for the editor—it's a real issue! :) Remsense留 22:20, 14 December 2023 (UTC)
World Championship
@Quale: Upon reflection, I agree that the lead paragraph should not mention future events like the chess world championship, but should concentrate on what made Morphy notable. I correct people all the time about putting inappropriate things in lead paragraphs.
I am not entirely comfortable with the phrase "world's greatest", but I will let it sit for a while, maybe someone else can think of something better.
It might be appropriate to bring up the World Championship in the body of the article, perhaps in the "Hailed as champion" section. First, because readers and other editors are always bringing it up. The grating phrase "unofficial world champion" frequently appears in this article and others. Second, because I have been struck by the fact that organized and professional chess were just getting started in this part of the 19th century: the first international tournament in 1851; national championships; the world championship formally in 1886; successful professional players and writers such as Steinitz and Blackburne. Sports, such as American baseball, were likewise starting to get organized and professionalized in the late 19th century. When Morphy told his audience during the New York testimonial dinner that "Chess never has been and never can be aught but a recreation", he wasn't taking an extreme or eccentric position, but was giving his listeners what he and they thought was hard-headed career advice; but the advice seems strange to us nowadays, because people have routinely made serious careers out of chess and sport, and that started happening soon after Morphy's retirement from chess. Bruce leverett (talk) 03:14, 20 December 2023 (UTC)
- I don't see why it wouldn't be appropriate. Historical figures and events are placed in proper retrospect all the time in sources, and therefore in an encyclopedia. His prefiguring of the WCC is a really important part of his legacy. Remsense留 03:40, 20 December 2023 (UTC)
- Well maybe "inappropriate" was not the most exact word.
- The general rule, as noted in MOS:LEAD, is that "significant information should not appear in the lead if it is not covered in the remainder of the article." So when I dropped that bit about the World Championship into the first paragraph, I should at minimum have put a discussion of the future World Championship into the body of the article, as I suggested above.
- But that has its own problems. As also noted in MOS:LEAD, "The lead is the first thing most people will read upon arriving at an article, and may be the only portion of the article that they read." I might add that many, many readers can be expected to know nothing about Morphy except his first and last name, and while those readers are annoyingly difficult to write for, they are the ones who have the keenest need for what Misplaced Pages has to offer. One must be extraordinarily careful about what goes into a lead section and in what order, in order that it be accessible to, and useful for, readers who are starting entirely from scratch. In particular, I am not sure I want to talk at this early part of the article about the distinction between having a "world's best chess player" and having a formal World Champion.
- I like your word "prefiguring". I guess that by taking chess as seriously as he did, Morphy enabled his contemporaries, and later chess players, to contemplate seriously the idea of a formal World Championship. I do not know if one can make this point in the lead section. Bruce leverett (talk) 05:44, 20 December 2023 (UTC)
Morphy and 1.e4
In the 'Style of Play' section it states that Morphy 'usually opted for '. My understanding was that Morphy was exclusively a 1.e4 player, and reference to the databases at chesstempo.com and chessgames.com supports this idea.
I wonder if any editors have access to a definite source for the complete games of Paul Morphy and can confirm the issue one way or the other? Or, failing that, if anyone knows of any games where Morphy did not open with 1.e4? Axad12 (talk) 22:18, 21 February 2024 (UTC)
- You are probably right. I'm looking at the "Index of Openings" at the end of Sergeant. Nothing but 1.e4 among the games in which he played White, except possibly those classified as "Irregular" -- I will look them up later when I have time.
- Of course, to be prudent, one would have to look at the complete collection. There is a link to Krabbe's complete collection in the External Links, but it does not have an opening index, it's just a .PGN file. Bruce leverett (talk) 22:58, 21 February 2024 (UTC)
- I have Sergeant's book on Morphy's games, which I believe is fairly comprehensive. I'll check to see if there's any record of Morphy ever playing a move other than 1.e4. MaxBrowne2 (talk) 23:32, 21 February 2024 (UTC)
- Thanks for the responses above. Just a brief note to say that I've located some Morphy games where he played non 1.e4 openings when playing at odds. Others may disagree, but my feeling is that odds games don't really count for the purposes of the discussion here (on the basis that the 'Style of Play' section is talking about standard games, or at least would be construed to be doing so by most readers). Axad12 (talk) 23:56, 21 February 2024 (UTC)
- He played 1.f4 in a few games against Thompson and 1.b3 in a few games against Maurian. Apparently he didn't like facing 1.e4 e6 when giving knight odds. MaxBrowne2 (talk) 23:58, 21 February 2024 (UTC)
- Yes, those were the casual odds games I was referring to. I'm not convinced that they would invalidate a minor re-write along the lines of 'With the White pieces, Morphy opted exclusively for the King's Pawn Game ' (current version says 'usually opted'). Axad12 (talk) 00:11, 22 February 2024 (UTC)
- I generally agree that "odds games don't count" in evaluating the claim that he always played 1.e4. It's good that you have brought this up, because it is pretty silly for us to be saying that he "usually" opted for 1.e4. (I probably wrote that.) In those days, 1.d4 and 1.c4 were much less frequently seen than they are now, and Morphy may not have been the only leading player who always used 1.e4. Bruce leverett (talk) 01:55, 22 February 2024 (UTC)
- Thanks Bruce (and thanks for all your work on this page). Before making the suggestion above I made a not unrelated point about the White repertoire of Johannes Zuckertort. If yourself and Max have the time to look at the suggestion on Zuckertort's talk page it would be appreciated. Axad12 (talk) 03:46, 22 February 2024 (UTC)
- I generally agree that "odds games don't count" in evaluating the claim that he always played 1.e4. It's good that you have brought this up, because it is pretty silly for us to be saying that he "usually" opted for 1.e4. (I probably wrote that.) In those days, 1.d4 and 1.c4 were much less frequently seen than they are now, and Morphy may not have been the only leading player who always used 1.e4. Bruce leverett (talk) 01:55, 22 February 2024 (UTC)
- Yes, those were the casual odds games I was referring to. I'm not convinced that they would invalidate a minor re-write along the lines of 'With the White pieces, Morphy opted exclusively for the King's Pawn Game ' (current version says 'usually opted'). Axad12 (talk) 00:11, 22 February 2024 (UTC)
- He played 1.f4 in a few games against Thompson and 1.b3 in a few games against Maurian. Apparently he didn't like facing 1.e4 e6 when giving knight odds. MaxBrowne2 (talk) 23:58, 21 February 2024 (UTC)
- Thanks for the responses above. Just a brief note to say that I've located some Morphy games where he played non 1.e4 openings when playing at odds. Others may disagree, but my feeling is that odds games don't really count for the purposes of the discussion here (on the basis that the 'Style of Play' section is talking about standard games, or at least would be construed to be doing so by most readers). Axad12 (talk) 23:56, 21 February 2024 (UTC)
- I have Sergeant's book on Morphy's games, which I believe is fairly comprehensive. I'll check to see if there's any record of Morphy ever playing a move other than 1.e4. MaxBrowne2 (talk) 23:32, 21 February 2024 (UTC)
"Kings Pawn Game", "Queen's Pawn Game", "Open Game"
These are not so much the names of openings as umbrella terms for whole families of openings. Saying "I played the King's Pawn Game" instead of just "I played 1.e4" sounds very odd to a chess player. It's like saying "I have a pet mammal" instead of "I have a pet dog". MaxBrowne2 (talk) 00:34, 22 February 2024 (UTC)
- Yes, I tend to agree. In this case (prior to your edit) it used to say something like 'Morphy usually opted for the King's Pawn Game, often favouring gambits like the King's Gambit and Evans Gambit', which I suppose is sufficiently specific. If it had just said 'King's Pawn Game' then that wouldn't have been very helpful.
- Seems to be a wider issue on Misplaced Pages. Perhaps it relates to the fact that there are articles called King's Pawn Game and Queen's Pawn Game, which as article titles are probably better than '1.e4' and '1.d4'. But that shouldn't get in the way of stating in natural language that 'a certain player played 1.e4', with a link to King's Pawn Game as you have done in your edit.
- I do have slight reservations however, on the basis that most Misplaced Pages readers probably don't know algebraic notation. In which case 'Morphy usually opened with the King's Pawn' may be more accessible than 'usually opened with 1.e4'.
- Agree however that 'King's Pawn GAME' is now probably an antiquated term that ought not to appear in article text when more natural alternatives are available. Axad12 (talk) 04:06, 22 February 2024 (UTC)
- I wrote "King's pawn game" in this article. I do not remember clearly why I wrote it that way, but I may well have been concerned that, as suggested above, algebraic notation is not self-explanatory and not understandable to most Misplaced Pages readers. But that's what Wikilinks are for, so calling it "1.e4" and wikilinking to King's Pawn Game at least ameliorates that problem. In retrospect I agree that "king's pawn game" is not a suitable thing to say here, for the reason given by MaxBrowne2. Bruce leverett (talk) 05:05, 22 February 2024 (UTC)
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