
Open letter with a proposal
Dear chess friends,
 I am writing this open letter, addressed both to FIDE and the entire chess playing    world, due to a certain crisis, in which our noble game finds itself lately.    This crisis is not only defined by a general dissatisfaction, coming from sponsors,    organizers and amateurs; also among the professionals there has been some growing    distress. Quite a number of traditional tournaments are no longer organized;    in those still out there an ever growing number of extremely strong players    is competing for the same money. At the same time voices from all around are    expressing serious concern about lackluster play in some top tournaments, and    notorious short draws.
 To understand the reasons why our sport has never made it to the heights it    deserves I find it useful to take a look at a sport very similar to ours –    tennis. Both games feature the battle of two personalities, showing a whole    array of technical weapons in their fight, competing in speed and precision,    in patience and wisdom. Why, despite this apparent similarities, despite the    fact that many more people worldwide are capable of playing chess properly,    do we stand light-years behind tennis in everything that defines success in    professional sport?
 The reasons are numerous, no doubt, but the main problem, as I see it, is an    existence of a draw as a result in chess. Short draws (and I also have made    a number of those) make our game look more like an insider academic activity,    rather than sport; but they can't be avoided – the preparation of today    and the inherent qualities of chess are such, that a draw, and in fact a short    draw, is a most likely result in a game between strong well-prepared players.    Still, in a well-organized tournament, top players, getting up to go to their    hotel rooms after a ten minute draw, do not add attractiveness to chess. 
Returning to tennis, the main attraction is, as I see it, the fact that every    single fight produces a result; a winner and a loser at the end of the day.    And there is a thrill for every spectator to see, say, Nadal and Federer, come    to court, and know with certainty that one of them will triumph and the other    one will lose. In short, to put it figuratively, there will be blood. And there    will be great champions.
 In our game, however, things are different. We also have great champions, but    their greatness is sometimes limited to insiders of the game. In order to be    successful outside of our little world, in order to make front pages and TV,    and thereby also the finance that comes in a parcel, we need champions that    appeal to a general public, even to a public far from intricacies of chess.    Such was a winning streak of Novak Djokovic this year, for instance. Something    that a win in a chess super tournament with 8 out of 13 simply cannot match.
 And now comes my proposal. If we want success, sponsors, public and the rest    of the parcel, we need to abolish those draws in classical tournaments. And    not by Sofia rules – tournaments with Sofia rules produced as many draws    as any other; and not by 30 move rule, where players are often just waiting    for move 30. We need something entirely different. Like a tie-break in tennis.    We need a result. Every single day.
 And here is how it works. We play classical chess, say with a time control of    four to five hours. Draw? No problem – change the colours, give us 20    minutes each and replay. Draw again? Ten minutes each, change the colours and    replay. Until there is a winner of that day. And the winner wins the game and    gets one point and the loser gets zero; and the game is rated accordingly, irrelevant    of whether it came in a classical game, rapid or blitz.
 This way the expectations of the crowd will never be deceived. There will always    be a winner, there will always be blood. There will come an age of great champions,    since with this system there will be times when Vishy or Magnus will win Wijk-aan-Zee    with 13 out 13; and there will be winning streaks, when some of the great champions    will win 50 games in a row. We'll make front pages.
 And much more than that. It will be good for our sport. Not just sponsors and    attention and prizes. It will be essentially good for our game. People will    try extremely hard with white, in order to decide the issue now, and not in    a black rapid game. Instead offering a draw in a slightly better ending in order    to save energy and catch a movie, chess players will show their whole ability    and will win these endings. As a matter of fact this will develop classical    chess.
 And there is so much more. Often players, playing white, feeling rough in the    morning, get to the game with an attitude "I'll just make a draw today"    Imagine, what will happen to this attitude? Chess will become a true sport.    We'll wake up to win or to lose that day. We'll come tho the board, ready to    play chess. And just like when we come to see Federer play – we see his    whipping forehand, his effortless slice, his hammer serve and immaculate return    – same will happen in chess. Every single day we'll see players like Aronian    or Grischuk pressing with white, wriggling out of trouble with black and showing    some blitz skills to an ever larger public. That is something I would like to    watch and play.
Grandmaster Rustam Kasimdzhanov
Source: ChessBase.com