Tami wrote:HermanHiddema wrote:And it doesn't matter anyway. Your playing strength includes the way you play when tired and when your opponent is tired. It includes stupid blunders and brilliant tesuji. It includes your whole game, not just the parts you like. Many players seem to have this notion of their "real strength", which is usually how strong they would be if they removed all the parts of their play they don't like. And it is nonsense. Being able to play well even when you are tired, even when you in byoyomi, even when the game is decisive to win a large prize, all of that is part of your playing strength.I know several players that are stronger than myself not because they read deeper, or know more about the game, but because they are able to play more consistently, because they have more stamina, because they never give up, and will grab any chance I give them. That does not mean I am "actually just as strong". No, those players are stronger than me. They win more games. If you win more of your games against the same opponents, you are stronger, it is as simple as that. No excuses, no illusions.
There`s a flaw with this argument too.
What if you DO get stronger? Is the past still relevant?
If some 70-year-old retiree, let`s call him Trevor, who`s been 5k all his life became stronger in his new-found free time, would you insist on basing his rank on all the games he ever played, from up to 60+ years before his improvement? He might be better at go now than his friends Bob and Sosuke...oh, but by your reckoning Bob and Sosuke are stronger because they have won several thousand more games than Trevor. Does Trevor have to win several thousand more games from this point to prove that he has improved?
People CHANGE. When people change, this should be recognised.
An ideal rating system would enable people to rank up on the basis of good results or rank down on bad ones. Exactly how easy or difficult changing rank should be is admittedly hard to determine, but my opinion is KGS errs too far on the conservative side. You real level would be shown by the level you can maintain, not by your peaks or troughs.
Where did I say that all his old games should be relevant?
Of course your playing strength can change. And of course your rating should be based on more recent data. I would consider that entirely obvious.
All I am arguing against is people who want their "tired" games to somehow not count.