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The team that manages and develops the club can be reached via the following four methods.
Please take into consideration that we process many messages a day, be clear, short, and leave all previous discussion quoted in your message.

1. Contact us via email

Please find the following email addresses to send a message to us:

Field Person Email
Send email to the Support Team if you are in trouble with the usage of the server or you have any question, or problem Support Team support@e4ec.org
Please contact Andras Galos in general subjects, if you have any trouble using the server, and in every question that isn't covered below Andras Galos galosa@e4ec.org
Write our webmaster, if you have any trouble with this site, with its content or design Webmaster webmaster@e4ec.org
Write our postmaster, if you have any trouble with sending email messages for us, or to the chess server, or if you have any trouble receiving messages sent by us or by the chess server Postmaster postmaster@e4ec.org


2. Contact us via form

You can also use the following form to send us a message. This method is useful if you can't use your email client or in case of an email delivery trouble.
To: (The person who you want to send the message to)
Your name: (Your real name or nickname)
Your email: (The email address we can send our reply to)
Subject: (What your message talks about)
Your message:

3. Contact us via the forums

You can use the forums also to reach us.
Forums are more public: all the visitors can read your message.
This method is useful if you have serious email problem either sending messages, receiving or both, or you want your message to be public and read (or either replied) by others too.
Find the forums here: http://www.e4ec.org/forum.html
Don't click here.



Scoring

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

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

There are chess tournaments in the club continously.
Now single round-robin, class based tournaments run only. They are class based that ensures players in similar ratings play each other. The games run simultaneously in round-robin tournaments, so a seven player event means 6 games in one time.
There are single class tournaments, where players of each 200 points class play each other. These events are always for 7 players.
And there are multiclass tournaments also, where players from 3 neigbour classes can play in. These are always for 9 players.

Whenever a tournamet fills up, another one starts with the same parameters.

To protect serious players, new members can enter for tournaments after they have finished 5 games in order, and if their reliability factor is not below the value of 5.

In more details on the Tournaments page.
 
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