in chess it can make sense. if you want to learn from the "best".
most grandmasters have many games recorded with explanation therefore you can go over the games with notation and learn a lot.
you can also look at a look of video which walk you through the games.
but if you do not use the information to any thing you might as well argue who is stronger batman or superman.
i taught my seven year old nephew a couple of years ago how to move the chess pieces. now, a couple of years later he plays in the chess club at his school. Nowadays he is obsessed with the question "Who is the best chess player of all time?' a reverential glow fills his eyes when he hears the name of capablanca or morphy. i explained to him that asking who the best chess player of all time is is rather like asking what the coolest breeze of all time was, or what the most beautiful sunset of all time was. or like asking "why are we here" or "what is the meaning of life?" at any rate i always find this tendency in human nature most instructive. we always want to know who is the best this or who is the best that. why is this?