Chrish
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Two giants of the game.. If they played each other at their peak, who would win?
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you need to specify the sport man?
havent heard of either
you need to specify the sport man?
havent heard of either
Chess.
do you follow it?
@OP and others - What do you mean by 'peak'? Isnt peak indefinite in a way till late 50s atleast
Sorry to bore you with a longish post.
Classical: In a match format Garry Kasparov would win, Carlsen hasn't yet shown much in his matches. Psychologically Garry is much tougher and he will prepare much better, that will make the biggest difference. The ELO ratings are inflated and I wouldn't read too much into that. Kasparov dominated the 80s/90s more than what Carlsen has done in this era and that era featured 3 top shelf ATGs in Karpov, Anand and Kramnik. Carlsen was lucky that as he hit his peak the mighty older generation (Anand, Kramnik, Topalov, Ivanchuk etc) was too old to keep up and his generation was yet to bloom. Now in the last 3 years as Caruana, Karjakin, Giri, MVL, So, Naka, Nepo, Ding etc are hitting their strides he is not dominating that much even in super tournaments. What worked in Carlsen's favour was that players born in the 80s didn't achieve their potential and those that did become elite were late bloomers, chokers, unmotivated etc like Aronian, Grischuk, Mamedyarov. After all that remember Carlsen was 1 move away from getting into a very difficult situation against a 45 year old Anand in Sochi (G6), 1 move from disaster against the inferior Karjakin and didn't win a single classical game against Caruana. Contrast that to Kasparov's matches in the 80s and 90s against other ATGs. Kasparov also was not just dominating those days but his creative ideas left a mark on the game, he was the man who took forward Botvinik's philosophy and his work with computers is for all to see. In a hypothetical match up he will make much better use of silicon monsters. Magnus doesn't have the creative juices and that will be a huge handicap against a potential match up against peak Kasparov. Kasparov faced a proto-Carlsen (Karpov) and triumphed but Carlsen has never faced a proto-Kasparov. Carlsen won't be able to make the game physical because Kasparov was one of the fittest persons in his time and those K-K clashes were as physical as it gets. Kasparov has a clear edge in opening, tactical vision, calculation, psychology while Carlsen has an edge in endgame and positional understanding. And I am sure the match will be fought on Kasparov's turf more often than not.
Rapid/blitz: Magnus would be favorite, shorter the time control the more beastly he gets. All players suffer a drop in level with shorter time, but in case of Carlsen the dip is quite small. And players who depend a lot on calculation (Kasparov, Topalov, Caruana) are always at a disadvantage in speed chess. The more intuitive a player is, the easier it is to manage the clock.
you need to specify the sport man?
havent heard of either
Carlson I can understand but you never heard of Kasparov?
Even the non chess fans know about him because of that famous match against IBM computer.
Sorry to bore you with a longish post.
Classical: In a match format Garry Kasparov would win, Carlsen hasn't yet shown much in his matches. Psychologically Garry is much tougher and he will prepare much better, that will make the biggest difference. The ELO ratings are inflated and I wouldn't read too much into that. Kasparov dominated the 80s/90s more than what Carlsen has done in this era and that era featured 3 top shelf ATGs in Karpov, Anand and Kramnik. Carlsen was lucky that as he hit his peak the mighty older generation (Anand, Kramnik, Topalov, Ivanchuk etc) was too old to keep up and his generation was yet to bloom. Now in the last 3 years as Caruana, Karjakin, Giri, MVL, So, Naka, Nepo, Ding etc are hitting their strides he is not dominating that much even in super tournaments. What worked in Carlsen's favour was that players born in the 80s didn't achieve their potential and those that did become elite were late bloomers, chokers, unmotivated etc like Aronian, Grischuk, Mamedyarov. After all that remember Carlsen was 1 move away from getting into a very difficult situation against a 45 year old Anand in Sochi (G6), 1 move from disaster against the inferior Karjakin and didn't win a single classical game against Caruana. Contrast that to Kasparov's matches in the 80s and 90s against other ATGs. Kasparov also was not just dominating those days but his creative ideas left a mark on the game, he was the man who took forward Botvinik's philosophy and his work with computers is for all to see. In a hypothetical match up he will make much better use of silicon monsters. Magnus doesn't have the creative juices and that will be a huge handicap against a potential match up against peak Kasparov. Kasparov faced a proto-Carlsen (Karpov) and triumphed but Carlsen has never faced a proto-Kasparov. Carlsen won't be able to make the game physical because Kasparov was one of the fittest persons in his time and those K-K clashes were as physical as it gets. Kasparov has a clear edge in opening, tactical vision, calculation, psychology while Carlsen has an edge in endgame and positional understanding. And I am sure the match will be fought on Kasparov's turf more often than not.
Rapid/blitz: Magnus would be favorite, shorter the time control the more beastly he gets. All players suffer a drop in level with shorter time, but in case of Carlsen the dip is quite small. And players who depend a lot on calculation (Kasparov, Topalov, Caruana) are always at a disadvantage in speed chess. The more intuitive a player is, the easier it is to manage the clock.
How? Based on last title defense against Carauna? It isn't as easy to dominate the classical format now because studies are so extensive and this is obviously leading to draws being much easier to achieve. You think peak Kasparov would force wins against these opponents and their preparation?
Kasparov has a clear edge in opening, tactical vision, calculation, psychology while Carlsen has an edge in endgame and positional understanding.
@OP and others - What do you mean by 'peak'? Isnt peak indefinite in a way till late 50s atleast
Nope. I’m sure I must have read the name somewhere but doesn’t a ring a bell. It’s not really on my radar
I know there was one famous Indian chess player in last decade. Remember a thread
So there's a hypothetical match scenario between peak Kasparov (I would choose 1999 when he had a brief resurgent peak even though it was short lived, at the age of 36) and peak Carlsen (2012-13 at age 22/23). Put both of them in a time machine, transport them to a particular year in the future. I say future because Carlsen was brought up with computers, he learnt his chess with the help of powerful chess engines, Magnus Carlsen is a product of the computer age. That is a big advantage over Kasparov who for most part learnt via other means and was instrumental in ushering in computer chess era. Likes of Carlsen benefited because of Kasparov's work and got more out of it because they grew up with their silicon friends. Also the engines keep on getting more powerful thus making analysis more concrete every passing year. Kasparov enjoyed the fruits of his work over his peers in the form of an intimidating opening repertoire but 1999 to 2012-13 means computing power and chess theory has advanced a great deal and analysis is more rigorous than it has ever been in the past.
Give them equal resources (money, seconds, books, computers, training centres etc) to prepare for their match. But before that Kasparov needs to catch up with Carlsen in terms of knowledge. Since his peak is 1999 version, he has missed out on latest theory developments and analysis available to Carlsen. Also he needs some top level sparring partners (elite GMs who faced Carlsen regularly in supertournaments) to get a better understanding of the modern game. That will make the fight fair. Decide on a time frame for him to get into shape and once both parties agree implement the same. For example if Kasparov 1999 is the candidate and he needs 2 years to catch up with Carlsen of 2012-13, use the time machine to put him in the past and ensure he arrives to the match not just at his peak but with no handicap. I am not sure of the physics/maths but what I am trying to convey is that peak Kasparov shouldn't suffer because he doesn't have access to theory development in the game due to the time gap. Remember Carlsen gained not just only by growing up with computers but also having readymade opening analysis in his database created by fellow elite GMs post 1999, most notably Kramnik, Anand but also others. Garry has to have access to that database. Another issue is Kasparov coached Carlsen in 2009-10 period and gave him access to his own database and tricks/ideas/experiences, so someone will have to wipe out that memory from Carlsen since 1999 Kasparov would have no insights about Carlsen's mind and hence would be at a disadvantage. So many things to consider here !!!
Now both are at equal footing and the match commences. Kasparov realizes that getting a big opening advantage isn't that easy anymore. He also realizes his potential weaknesses eg Berlin Defence against which he suffered in the Kramnik match a year later. Likewise with the rest of his opening repertoire. He has more knowledge of holes/flaws in his opening preparation and hence can decide on the optimum strategy to conduct the match. Carlsen loses the surprise element (Berlin) Kramnik had in 2000 and that will be a huge blow to the Norwegian. Kasparov's creativity in the opening phase is part of folklore. His work ethic is unmatched and his ability to come up with ideas will never be paralleled. Carlsen gets overawed by Kramnik and Anand's opening prep, well Kasparov was their guru. Meanwhile Carlsen always aims to get a playable position out of opening, not an advantage meaning he will play most games after surrendering opening advantage (slight to moderate). Kasparov won't have the same advantage out of opening like in 80s and 90s but he would do better and a catastrophe like the 2000 match will be totally avoided. Kasparov was the greatest tactician in his playing days and with engines available in training he will be invincible in that department. His calculation would get slightly better and by sparring with Carlsen's contemporaries his endgame (flavor of this era, greatest legacy of Carlsen) too will improve though he would never be as good as the Viking. What I said in the previous post holds true.
While as you rightly said his opening advantage would diminish, his tactics, calculation and endgame would marginally improve thus the total package will still be formidable. Of course Carlsen's positional mastery will be a big plus for him and he will navigate complex strategic middlegames better, I am sure Kasparov will try his level best to decide the turf of battle. It is like tennis, if you have the GOAT serve (white opening) and GOAT return of serve (black opening) on an average you will always get a headstart (service game, white) or be neutral (return game, black) in the rally (middlegame). Now Kasparov will hold an advantage in messy tactical middlegames plus wherever a great deal of calculation is required, also open play is preferrable. Carlsen will want strategically complex positions and closed positions where he can do his maneuvering that only he has the full grasp of. Again in endgames Kasparov has an advantage in heavy piece endgames while Carlsen prefers light piece endgames, rook and pawn endgames, minor piece plus pawn etc. Now it isn't like Kasparov is hopeless in such endgames but he can go wrong and that is what his opponent will hope for. If at all Carlsen has to win the match he will need his endgame form to click. But IMO more often than not Kasparov will avoid playing to Carlsen's strengths successfully. Kasparov is psychologically the toughest warrior in the history of chess (check 1984 against Karpov), he won't choke like most of Carlsen's tough opponents. Their auras will cancel out but Carlsen is still made of weaker nerves relatively speaking (Candidates 2011 pullout, Candidates 2013 final round choke, G12 against Caruana, many other examples where his nerves collapsed). Carlsen can't hope to outlast Kasparov by making the battle physical (check GK's 1984 match and other duels with Karpov).
All things considered I stand by my prediction: if such a match were to occur, Kasparov will emerge victorious after a bloody tough fight.
Wow thanks for the detailed post. Very interesting.Peak=combination of many factors: highest rating, level of play, decision making ability, creativity, tournament performances, experience, energy, technique, motivation
In chess a player these days peaks between early 20s to mid 30s. The peak ages keep coming down with every successive era, for example in the 70s and 80s many top players would continue to be contenders in their late 30s and 40s, some even in 50s. Now chess is a young man's game and barring a few outliers all the top players are youngsters, the average age of top 10 is 20 something and there are only 2 oldies in top 10: Anand (49) and Kramnik (43), same trend in top 100. Only 1 player Boris Gelfand is 50 years old and he is world number 70 !!!!
Even if you don't know his chess career Kasparov must be a familiar name, for instance his political career. At one point of time he was the leading voice against Putin in Russia, a champion of democracy and human rights there, entered the Presidential race, faced a high profile jail time which created worldwide ripples a few years back. He was involved in that Pu*sy Riot controversy. Later he was forced to leave Russia due to threats, his good friend and fellow Putin critic Boris Nemstov was assassinated shortly after that. While I don't agree with his world views and politics, he has established himself as a reasonably famous human rights activist, political expert and author. Has written some good non chess books and articles, mainly about AI. Remarkable man of modern times !!!
The famous Indian player is Viswanathan Anand and he has been elite level grandmaster for the last 3 decades. In fact he has been in decline this decade due to growing age.
What do you think about Capablanca vs Kasparov?
Bro please check out a documentary called 'Alpha Go'; it's not about chess but I am 100% sure you will love it!
Wow thanks for the detailed post. Very interesting.
Why has age been decreasing? Any reason? You would think since it is a game of mind and maturity peak should extend to late 30s early 40s at the very least
Wow thanks for the detailed post. Very interesting.
Why has age been decreasing? Any reason? You would think since it is a game of mind and maturity peak should extend to late 30s early 40s at the very least
Yep. He is the one
[MENTION=143530]Swashbuckler[/MENTION] ,
I wasn't expecting to come across a chess enthusiast on here. I have just begun to learn about professional Chess and have few questions. I understand there are three formats of the game: Classical, rapid and blitz. How are they seen in terms of importance? I would assume Classical format is valued the most?
Also, I already know of your opinion on Kasparov vs Carlsen. What do you think about Kasparov vs Fischer? How would Fischer have gone in current era?
On Carlsen I do think he is being underrated due to his young age. I mean he has a universal game and has been a no. 1 in all three formats. He is kinda like a vastly enhanced version of Karpov. Next 5 years would determine his legacy. His opponents like Caruana are steadily improving but none has come close to reaching his height.
Hmm I guess being from India the Chess players have occupied positions in our newspapers, wonder if anyone heard of GO, apparently only recently could "DeepMind" beat the GO champion, unlike Chess where the computer would beat the Chess Champion.
Not just India, except East Asia chess is more popular than Go in every single country. FIDE Olympiad in terms of participation is second only to Summer Olympics and the number of chess players number in tens of millions.
In Japan Shogi is much more popular than Go.
In China Go has competition in the form of Xiangqi, Chess, Mahjong, Draughts etc.
Only in South Korea can you say that Go is the most popular mind sport.
There is simply no comparison with chess in terms of global popularity, and even when it comes to famous chess players or its status in culture and society. How many Hollywood movies have we seen with chess as a theme (Seventh Seal, Pawn Sacrifice, Searching for Bobby Fischer, Queen of Katwe, The Dark Horse and many more) or as a tool to offer insights into the human brain (Bond, Magneto, Professor X, Dr Strange, Sherlock Holmes, some Kubrick and Woody Allen characters etc)!!! I am not disrespecting Go or other mind sports but this is the truth. They all have their beauty and complexity but chess has occupied the status of being the eminent mental game for centuries now. Chess games (slightly different rules depending on origin) from ancient era have been recorded and studied. The theory and analysis is unmatchable. I doubt similar work has been carried out by humans in analyzing Go or Shogi.
Programmers have been working with chess players since 80s. Chess programs (by people like Turing, McCarthy, Levy, Ken Thompson, Mestel, Nunn etc ) were written much much before Go programs and it shaped the world of computers, from brute force method earlier to AI today like the ones DeepMind is creating. Famous chess programmers have collaborated with the likes of Botvinik, Larsen, Kasparov, Karpov, Anand, Kramnik and the theory and decision algorithm was quite extensive and handy. How many Go players volunteered to help develop Go programs 25 years ago?
Still that IBM match (Deep Blue vs Kasparov) is very controversial where there are serious question marks about human intervention. Deep Blue was hastily dismantled before an investigation, IBM wanted to defeat the world chess champion to revive sagging fortunes those days. Kasparov wasn't in the best frame of mind, started seeing ghosts. In my estimate computers objectively overtook the best human player only 6-7 years later. You are free to believe or disbelieve my assertion.
Besides DeepMind itself was founded by a chess player, Demis Hassabis and involved those who had earlier worked on computer chess. And you can't judge games based on programs, till date there is no computer program that can master poker![]()
Isn't professional chess all about memorizing moves and counter-moves and nothing about in the spot strategy thinking. I think that's what puts me off
In recent years, StarCraft, considered to be one of the most challenging Real-Time Strategy (RTS) games and one of the longest-played esports of all time, has emerged by consensus as a “grand challenge” for AI research.
Our StarCraft II program AlphaStar is the first Artificial Intelligence to defeat a top professional player. In a series of test matches held on 19 December 2018, AlphaStar decisively beat Team Liquid’s Grzegorz "MaNa" Komincz, one of the world’s strongest professional StarCraft players, 5-0, following a successful benchmark match against his team-mate Dario “TLO” Wünsch. The matches took place under professional match conditions on a competitive ladder map and without any game restrictions.
This is unrelated to chess but relevant to this discussion.
[MENTION=143530]Swashbuckler[/MENTION] Check Deep Mind's AlphaStar owning world's best Starcraft players
PS: AI is scaryit might be a better batsman than Don himself
![]()
This is unrelated to chess but relevant to this discussion.
[MENTION=143530]Swashbuckler[/MENTION] Check Deep Mind's AlphaStar owning world's best Starcraft players
PS: AI is scaryit might be a better batsman than Don himself
![]()
Sorry to bore you with a longish post.
Classical: In a match format Garry Kasparov would win, Carlsen hasn't yet shown much in his matches. Psychologically Garry is much tougher and he will prepare much better, that will make the biggest difference. The ELO ratings are inflated and I wouldn't read too much into that. Kasparov dominated the 80s/90s more than what Carlsen has done in this era and that era featured 3 top shelf ATGs in Karpov, Anand and Kramnik. Carlsen was lucky that as he hit his peak the mighty older generation (Anand, Kramnik, Topalov, Ivanchuk etc) was too old to keep up and his generation was yet to bloom. Now in the last 3 years as Caruana, Karjakin, Giri, MVL, So, Naka, Nepo, Ding etc are hitting their strides he is not dominating that much even in super tournaments. What worked in Carlsen's favour was that players born in the 80s didn't achieve their potential and those that did become elite were late bloomers, chokers, unmotivated etc like Aronian, Grischuk, Mamedyarov. After all that remember Carlsen was 1 move away from getting into a very difficult situation against a 45 year old Anand in Sochi (G6), 1 move from disaster against the inferior Karjakin and didn't win a single classical game against Caruana. Contrast that to Kasparov's matches in the 80s and 90s against other ATGs. Kasparov also was not just dominating those days but his creative ideas left a mark on the game, he was the man who took forward Botvinik's philosophy and his work with computers is for all to see. In a hypothetical match up he will make much better use of silicon monsters. Magnus doesn't have the creative juices and that will be a huge handicap against a potential match up against peak Kasparov. Kasparov faced a proto-Carlsen (Karpov) and triumphed but Carlsen has never faced a proto-Kasparov. Carlsen won't be able to make the game physical because Kasparov was one of the fittest persons in his time and those K-K clashes were as physical as it gets. Kasparov has a clear edge in opening, tactical vision, calculation, psychology while Carlsen has an edge in endgame and positional understanding. And I am sure the match will be fought on Kasparov's turf more often than not.
Rapid/blitz: Magnus would be favorite, shorter the time control the more beastly he gets. All players suffer a drop in level with shorter time, but in case of Carlsen the dip is quite small. And players who depend a lot on calculation (Kasparov, Topalov, Caruana) are always at a disadvantage in speed chess. The more intuitive a player is, the easier it is to manage the clock.
How? Based on last title defense against Carauna? It isn't as easy to dominate the classical format now because studies are so extensive and this is obviously leading to draws being much easier to achieve. You think peak Kasparov would force wins against these opponents and their preparation?
Good to see our Norwegian hero being discussed here. There was another good norwegian Chess player who also was a very good football player; Simen Agdestein. It was actually he who made Chess popular in Norway amongst youngsters.
I see many indians have a lot of knowledge of this game, is Anand the biggest hero there?
Chess has moved on from two decades ago. Not only Carlsen, but also Carauna would probably beat Kasparov (who incidentally was beaten 2-0 by Kramnik in the last match he played). The reason why Carlsen hasn't won his last couple of matches in Classical is that 1) the opponents were very well prepared 2) the matches were ended in 12 games. In contrast Kasparov's matches went on for 30 games or more.
The sort of strength Carlsen has shown in the last couple of months is simply incredible, Kasparov even at his height could not match that. Only 1994 Karpov at Linares showed such strength.
you need to specify the sport man?
havent heard of either
To use cricketing analogies:
Bobby Fischer: Don Bradman
Gary Kasparov: Sachin Tendulkar
Vishwanathan Anand: Ricky Ponting
Magnus Carlsen: Virat Kohli
Hey [MENTION=143530]Swashbuckler[/MENTION] check it out: 16 years old Iranian prodigy Alireza Firouzja beating the champion!
Remember the name!
One can observe some sort of pattern in chess: the adherents of a dry, positional style are succeeded by tacticians. These two extremes have been swaying to and fro for the last 40 years. Karpov (positional) lost to Garry (tactical), Garry lost to Kramnik (positional), Kramnik lost to Anand (tactical), Anand lost to Carlsen (positional). Anand (like Spassky and Fischer) strictly doesn't come under either of these 2 broad categories, he is what we can call a universal player. Universal meaning chameleon like, Anand played a tactical match against Vlad in 2008 but then shifted to positional chess against the highly tactical and more in-form Topalov in 2010. Practically it is easier to win against someone stronger but of the opposite style and very difficult to win against a similar style better player.
*exciting, not exiting
Coming to why I believe Firouzja-Carlsen could be a defining rivalry is the contrast in playing style. While he may never match Carlsen's positional understanding he can surpass him in tactical abilities. Also he is 13 years younger (massive advantage when he peaks and MC starts declining) and no slouch in rapid/blitz in case the match goes to tie-breaks. What we could be looking at is a a redux of Karpov-Kasparov rivalry 40 years later, history repeating itself. Hopefully minus the toxicity we saw back then with the internal politics in USSR.
What I wrote earlier rings true.
So far, no one has been able to give any real fight to Magnus. Guy dominates his opponents from the get-go!
PS: Where are Pakistani chess players?
Carlsen beat Firouzja in the 4 game rapid match in MC invitational on chess24. But all this is online, quality is low, players can't focus like how they do in proper tournaments.
Firouzja beat him in the Banter blitz and another online tourney winning both events, hes very strong in blitz and bullet. Only 16 so not as good in slower time formats but he'll learn.
I got tot learn about the brilliance of Bobby Fischer many decades after his extraordinary feats. If you include chess as a sport then I would rank Fischer's match against Spassky at the World Chess Championships in 1972 as one of the all time sporting peaks.
Why? Well you have to remember that the Soviet players dominated chess in those days and the Soviet Union was an absolute power house in the world of chess. The US, from which Fischer hailed wasn't really known for producing the top players in the world.
So what you really had was like an element of the cold war being played out on the chess boards of Iceland - the location of the match. Against this background, Fischer emerged victorious finally reaching the pinnacle of the game for which he had been swatting aside all that appeared before him.
Sadly, we we never got to see him in the rematch in 1975 or in another official WC Championship for that matter as he wasn't happy with some conditions for the 1975 World Championship. He had always been an eccentric fella but went completely nuts after 1975 and then disappeared.
[MENTION=143530]Swashbuckler[/MENTION], apologies if I have missed any comments regarding Fischer as I have kind of just skimmed through the thread, what are your thoughts on Fischer? I regard him as a true genius of the game and rank him the highest. Carlsen could may well beat him but then again if Carlsen played in the 60's or 70's then it could be argued that Fischer would be the favourite.
Robert James Fischer, the eleventh World Champion ranks among the greatest chess masters of all time. All world champions are part of a tradition which has no parallel in any other sport or game, even Euwe who wasn't of the class as the other champs (and many perennial princes most notably Keres and to a lesser extent Korchnoi). Among those who held the crown, Fischer ranks in the top tier, more on that later.
To my mind his greatest legacy was that during his playing career he popularized chess more than any other person in history. Most of it was because of unique circumstances which overlapped with his career but nevertheless even the harshest critic can't argue against him being the reason why money and fan following (beyond the Iron Curtain) flowed into the game, indeed he was the foremost union leader for all chess professionals. His 1972 triumph during peak Cold War still ranks as among the greatest achievements of USA, it won't be an exaggeration to say that at that time, for a couple of years his popularity dwarfed that of all the other leading sportsmen and celebs of America. After all for the first time since the Space Race, USA had the chance to outshine USSR at the latter's area of strength. For long, the Soviets had maintained hegemony over the chess crown and mockingly bemoaned the decadent West's inability to challenge the intellectual superiority nurtured by the Soviet communist regime, away from battlefields and diplomatic meets the playing field had shifted to the chess board. How else can one explain how a certain American recluse's daily activity and mood swings became a topic of fervent discussion in the Oval Office? What else can make sense of Kissinger's frenetic phone calls to Fischer's camp begging, pleading that he go to Iceland when he had threatened to walk out of the match? It was a match like no other, a moment in history like no other, when the pride of the two superpowers rested on two chess masters, a board of 64 squares, 16 pieces, one clock and an arbiter.
Coming to the match, we all know how it unfolded. Fischer won 12.5-8.5 and displaced Spassky to become eleventh world champion, thus ending the Soviet's long stranglehold on the crown. What followed was a period of national mourning in USSR, for the communists the world champion was equivalent of Czar of Imperial Russia. To see that crown slip into the hands of the arch-enemy was something they couldn't cope with. Till then the prize money from chess tournaments wasn't taxed, but Kremlin authorities were so aghast after this humiliation that they created a law which took a huge part of the prize money as tax, something like 90%. Privileges to chess players too were diminished as collective punishment. For the Americans it was a golden highlight of the Cold War, a rare triumph against a fearsome opponent in a discipline where historically they were the weaker party. So many Hollywood movies, documentaries, musicals and books discuss Fischer's life and that triumph, not without reason. In Fischer's words, "Nobody has single-handedly done more for the U.S. than me. When I won the world championship, in 1972, the United States had an image of, you know, a football country, a baseball country, but nobody thought of it as an intellectual country. I turned all that around single-handedly, right?"
But I would like to clear some misconceptions about Fischer's triumph and the many myths that get attached to this seminal event.
Firstly USSR was the superpower of chess but USA was no slouch as many would like to believe. It is often casually remarked that Fischer was the first great American master. Nothing could be further from the truth. After all Paul Morphy was an American, the greatest master of the 19th century and someone who was more ahead of his peers than any other player in history. Chess history didn't start with Steinitz, even Fischer mentioned the Romantic Morphy as his childhood hero and someone who was the first to play modern chess. Then you had Reshevsky, Marshall, Evans and someone who has most influence on the current champion, Reuben Fine. Fine is more known for his work on psychology than chess but no doubt he was a chess genius. During the Holocaust, many Jewish chess players found refuge in USA, one only has to read about the Chess Olympiads of early 20th century to understand the chess legacy of USA many decades before 1972.Even in the 50s and 60s US was consistently the best chess country west of the Eastern Bloc, usually 2nd or 3rd best in the world. There was a thriving chess culture in the country with numerous strong players just in the city of New York. Those who make these frivolous claims about US being a non-entity usually do so to deify Fischer, it has no factual basis. It is like saying Pakistan had no cricket legacy before 1992, utter nonsense.
The second misconception is that Fischer was a lone warrior against the might of Soviet Union. Well, again not accurate. He was well assisted by a group of super strong chess players, physicians, fitness coaches, psychologists, friends, nutritionists and generous donors. Kavalek and Lombardy were his main men, more than enough because Fischer didn't trust people much, always paranoid that his secrets would leak he preferred a small coterie. Spassky didn't enjoy the support of many seconds either, mainly because that was his style, he was someone who preferred to work everything out over the board. He had a team of 3 in Reykjavic: Geller, Nei, Krogius and Krogius was invited not for his chess but because of his degree in psychology. Spassky made a very big mistake before the match when he ended his relations with Bondarevsky who had been his main trainer for many years. Moreover he suffered serious motivation problems before that match because he had dominated the American until then and had already realized his goal of becoming WC. He cancelled his training match against young Karpov and spent most of the time in his camp playing tennis. By then he was a very lazy person, relying only on natural talent and hardly putting the requisite effort. Against any other Soviet player Fischer would have faced the full might of their team of seconds, not so against Spassky. Those days games would be frequently adjourned with resumption the following day. One of the games where Spassky had a winning position, his seconds found the forced execution overnight and when they went with the information to brief him in the morning, he shooed them away assuring that he would find it over the board. It can be argued that Fischer utilized his team better than Spassky and the opening battles proved it.
Thirdly the match was fought as per terms and conditions of the Americans. First they shifted the match to Iceland, then Fischer started his mind games about whether he would participate or not. Till the eleventh hour he remained non-committal and that took its mental toll on Spassky. The match was close to being called off many times, Fischer arrived late for game 1 and gave a walkover in game 2. A walkover meant full point for Spassky but he wasn't someone who liked to win that way. Being a fair guy and a thorough gentleman, that default win threw him off his game for rest of the match. He agreed to Fischer's demands and played with reduced number of spectators, in a small room, without cameras, basically he bent over to all crazy demands of his opponent, a serious psychological blunder. But then again, that was Spassky, someone who joined the audience in clapping for Fischer after the latter's spectacular win in G6. This after Fischer's remark that he wanted to crush the Ruskie's hands till it was reduced to bone powder. We had a gentleman who faced off against a ruthless, psychologically bulletproof maniac who was known for his gamesmanship and Spassky is the bad guy? Western revisionism at its best.
Last point I would make is regarding the quality of the match. People call it the 'Match of the Century' but IMO chess-wise it wasn't so. It was held at a unique junction in history when any American and Russian facing off would have recorded massive interest. I know for a fact that this match was discussed in a small village in Tamil Nadu over the morning paper and tea, my father developed his interest in chess due to this event. But history demands a search for truth, nobody can analyse the course of the match in depth with objectivity and call it Fischer's greatest moment of genius. The blunder he made in G1 where he trapped his own bishop would rank as one of the worst moves in top level chess let alone a World Championship match. Both players missed many wins and ultimately Spassky lost rather than Fischer winning, first because of overconfidence and as the match progressed because he wasn't in a frame of mind to fight. Pressure was huge and it would have made an impact, in cricket terms it was like the Mohali 2011 SF, a low quality match which was decided by who held his nerves better. It must also be noted that Spassky remains one of the weakest champions, certainly the joint weakest from the Soviet side alongside Smyslov. He had a positive H2H against Fischer prior to the match but not a better player by any stretch of imagination, at least in the 1969-72 cycle.
Well then what was Fischer's peak? That is the obvious question. In my mind it was his demolition job of Petrosian a year earlier, final of the candidates cycle to determine Spassky's challenger. In the run up to that match he massacred Taimanov (fun fact: one of the greatest pianists of 20th century apart from being a great chess player) and Bent Larsen 6-0 each. Taimanov was so much in shock that he wrote a book 'How I Became Fischer's Victim' after that match. Soviet officials accused Taimanov of disgracing his motherland, then stripped him of his titles and forbade him from going abroad for a year and a half, even banned his participation in concerts making it impossible for him to earn a living. Bent Larsen who was the West's second strongest player thankfully didn't have to endure any punitive action from Danish authorities. 12-0 was impressive no doubt but what happened next must rank as the greatest chess performance ever. Up next was the Armenian giant Tigran Petrosian, the previous world champ. The greatest defender the game had seen, he was the first to demonstrate that it was possible to defend almost any position. Petrosian brought the defensive element to chess, the element that gains more and more prominence now. He showed that chess is the game with a lot of resources, including defensive resources. He wasn't an ambitious player but even if he lost, it would be by a narrow margin. Petrosian could sense danger from far, far away but against Fischer the great defender couldn't summon his resources as he was swept away by waves of relentless attack. His defence was breached 5 times as Fischer won 6.5-2.5 (5 wins, 1 loss), that was Fischer's greatest chess achievement IMO. His early career had some amazing highs (for want of time I won't discuss them here, maybe a topic for another day) but 1971 against Petrosian was the highest point.
Why Fischer left the chess world after winning the title is an open-ended question. Of course he was a deeply troubled individual. Identity of his father remained a secret till late in his life, his mother had a 900 pages long FBI file, childhood wasn't kind on him and because of his maniacal obsession with chess his mental health wasn't akin to that of a normal person. He strived for perfection in chess all the time and the game is a mental prison if one immerses oneself too deeply. Allegations of Soviet collusion didn't help, he was convinced they were fixing games among themselves to prevent his rise. Whether he was right or wrong about that can be left to interpretation but there was some level of understanding among the Soviet players to help out their fellow comrades, pressure came from the very top. So a great deal of mental trauma for him. Fischer followed the footsteps of his great predecessor Morphy when it came to walking away from the game when he was 29 years old, at the professional summit and when he was at his creative peak. His chapter post 1972 makes for sad reading, less to do with chess and more to do with crazy conspiracy theories, abuses both to others and his own body/mind, a continuous fall towards irrelevance. He made one last attempt at comeback in 1992 against Spassky but that match was like two aged boxers having a bout in the circus, In Kasparov's words that match shattered whatever myth of Fischer that still remained.
We know his mental problems, we know about his terms for the 1975 match against Karpov. The latter was eager to play the American and even met with Fischer many times to seal the match contract. Karpov agreed with almost all demands but Fischer simply made more excuses and walked away. He started believing his myth and in the young Karpov saw a threat that could unseat him. Fischer hated losing and as the chess proverb goes 'He who never plays never loses'. If you ask me I'll tell you he was afraid of Karpov and hence chose to go down as undefeated champion. If not 1975, Karpov would have been favorite in 1977-78, that is my opinion but unfortunately the historically necessary match didn't take place. Fischer lost, chess lost and importantly Karpov lost. Karpov needed a few challenging assignments against Fischer to improve his game, get battle-hardened and prepare himself against a future threat in Kasparov (10 years later), Korchnoi wasn't that big a test. So history would have turned out very differently had Fischer stayed. I think the whole timeline of chess would have shifted by at least 5 years and Kasparov would have become WC only in the early 90s thus shortening his reign. Kasparov benefitted the most, Fischer is rightly seen as someone who never once defended his crown while Karpov is seen as someone who got his crown for cheap and made hay in a weak era (in the 1972-84 period).
Fischer's reluctance to defend his crown determines his legacy. Great peak, ATG player but someone who didn't conquer his younger generation. In any sport to become GOAT it isn't enough to push away the previous generation and dominate same age-group peers, it is more important to do well against the next generation since they have studied your game, understood your strengths/weaknesses and modified themselves accordingly, plus the age advantage. Fischer failed miserably on this front and hence can never be GOAT at least from chess playing pov. As an influential figure he may be top, as an ambassador of chess (long term) little doubtful since after his road to madness many started associating chess with an eventual path towards insanity and its popularity decreased, certain negative stereotypes took centre stage.
Regarding your question about Carlsen vs Fischer it is very difficult to compare a pre-computer era player to someone born in the 90s. You can compare Fischer with Kramnik/Anand but not beyond that. Carslen was born with a chess engine readily available, we have no idea how he would have been moulded 50 years back. Similarities are that both are great fighters, both have immense psychological toughness (even Fischer once he has committed to battle), endgame technique (MC slight edge) and while Fischer's opening repertoire was narrow but deep, Carslen has a wide range but not necessarily very deep. Fischer holds the edge in calculating forced lines, MC has better positional understanding, both excel in shorter time control. Difficult for me to judge them because as I said computers have changed our game forever and MC is a child of this era. Similar players with both holding small edges in certain areas, too tough to call. 1972 Fischer and 2013 Carlsen is 50:50, over a 4 years period Fischer (1969-72) has the edge over MC (2012-15) but in a 5-10 years period MC has the edge. A more interesting match-up is Fischer vs Kasparov (should have happened in early 80s) and I will give the edge to Kaspy, made some points about that previously on this thread. Basing this on how Fischer at his peak fared against Tal and Geller, Kaspy was an upgraded version of Tal with limitless stamina, more hunger/ambition and better psychology. But I can assure you Fischer would make so many preconditions that such matches would never take place. Kasparov and Carlsen don't mind gamesmanship and always look at their own interests, no way would they succumb as easily to his crazy demands like Spassky.
Wonderful.
I did play the Reykjavik games on laptop several times and you are absolutely spot on - those were just not a chess game; those were part of that Cold War. But me of the games that Fischer won with black in 27 (or 29) moves (probably 12th game), was one that only a tactical genius like Fischer could master.
I think, Chess ranking is a bit relative - players earn their ranking points playing against contemporary players, therefore it’s difficult to judge players only from ranking points. Carlsen indeed holds the highest ever point (& guy is good with his calculations- he was at 4th spot till lock down in EPL fantasy league among millions), but I don’t think at their prime Carlsen will beat Fischer, Kasparov and May be even Karpov in a say 12 game series. Head to head is different thing in chess where you fight with the person, not only his game.
Fischer was not as good as Karpov
Anyway Carlsen is like Capablanca in being an endgame genius at grinding but his last 2 WCCs have been disappointing, 1 win, 1 loss and 22 draws do not make for inspiring reading and he plays too safe trying to get to rapid and blitz. As Grischuk said of the 12th game last year, RIP Classical Chess
Oldies like Spassky, Tal, Larsen, Petrosian, Geller?
Wonderful.
I did play the Reykjavik games on laptop several times and you are absolutely spot on - those were just not a chess game; those were part of that Cold War. But me of the games that Fischer won with black in 27 (or 29) moves (probably 12th game), was one that only a tactical genius like Fischer could master.
I think, Chess ranking is a bit relative - players earn their ranking points playing against contemporary players, therefore it’s difficult to judge players only from ranking points. Carlsen indeed holds the highest ever point (& guy is good with his calculations- he was at 4th spot till lock down in EPL fantasy league among millions), but I don’t think at their prime Carlsen will beat Fischer, Kasparov and May be even Karpov in a say 12 game series. Head to head is different thing in chess where you fight with the person, not only his game.
You are entitled to your opinion buddy but Fischer's peak was something else. I know you will bring up Linares 1994 but what Fischer did in the run up to the Spassky match is unmatched in chess history. Karpov dominated in the post-Fischer and pre-GK period sweeping away all tournaments but what was the competition? Oldies like Spassky, Tal, Larsen, Petrosian, Geller? His generation comprising Timman, Hort, Beliavsky, Mecking, Hubner, Ulf etc. not strong enough compared to Fischer's rivals. No wonder Karpov had so many tournament victories, all started drying up when a 19 year old Kasparov took the number one spot in 1982. Not to forget FIDE throwing all its weight behind him, after all he was Kremlin's darling and still is to this day. His matches against Korchnoi, then Kaspy and later against Anand in Lausanne were all rigged in his favor (off the board) by FIDE crooks like Campomanes and later Ilyumzhinov.
Not attempting to change your mind, just a casual discussion. Not often that I interact with dedicated Karpov fans. He is an acquired taste, very subtle. Even the 'Soviet School of Chess' Patriarch Botvinnik didn't understand his playing style when he enrolled under his tutelage. Once famously remarked "The boy doesn't have a clue about chess, and there's no future at all for him in this profession". Very tough to understand his game, just makes some moves without forcing anything and soon the opponent runs out of good squares. Great technique, great intuition about which piece must be in which square, truest successor of Capablanca and predecessor of Kramnik, later his style taken forward and improved by Carlsen.
Personally not a fan of dry, technical positional play, I like dynamic chess. But the game is moving more towards a positional nature, the trend is visible at the top level. As Nakamura said at last year's Sinquefield Cup the game has petered out tactically and it is really hard to create significant imbalances. In that way Karpov's legacy is more striking than Kasparov's, many of the latter's ideas will now be refuted by strong engines.
He wasn't his usual self in classical in the 2016-18 period but last year was in scary form (closest to 2012-14 Maximus Magnus), he was finding his mojo in the long format, dominating supertournaments and also a record unbeaten streak. A pity the WCC most probably won't take place this year, who knows by next year his red hot form may desert him !!!
Im no dedicated Karpov fan da, no idea who told you thatI just wanna say that Fischer going on a tear before the Spassky match doesnt make him better than Karpov. He finished miles behind the top 3 in 62 and then went on a crying spree (as he often did) just cuz the Russians were drawing with Petrosian even though he lost 1 game to Petrosian and had 3 draws himself. He also lost 3 games to Geller and Keres. The other allegation about Korchnoi throwing games was shot down by everyone including Korchnoi himself. If Spassky hadnt given in to his stupid demands, he'd have been a footnote in history. Anyway Karpov beat Spassky worse in the next candidates then Fischer in the WCC. My fav player is Capa (check out his saga by agadmator on YT) but I also love Tal's games (MatoJelic has you covered on that) Peace out machan
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Robert James Fischer, the eleventh World Champion ranks among the greatest chess masters of all time. All world champions are part of a tradition which has no parallel in any other sport or game, even Euwe who wasn't of the class as the other champs (and many perennial princes most notably Keres and to a lesser extent Korchnoi). Among those who held the crown, Fischer ranks in the top tier, more on that later.
To my mind his greatest legacy was that during his playing career he popularized chess more than any other person in history. Most of it was because of unique circumstances which overlapped with his career but nevertheless even the harshest critic can't argue against him being the reason why money and fan following (beyond the Iron Curtain) flowed into the game, indeed he was the foremost union leader for all chess professionals. His 1972 triumph during peak Cold War still ranks as among the greatest achievements of USA, it won't be an exaggeration to say that at that time, for a couple of years his popularity dwarfed that of all the other leading sportsmen and celebs of America. After all for the first time since the Space Race, USA had the chance to outshine USSR at the latter's area of strength. For long, the Soviets had maintained hegemony over the chess crown and mockingly bemoaned the decadent West's inability to challenge the intellectual superiority nurtured by the Soviet communist regime, away from battlefields and diplomatic meets the playing field had shifted to the chess board. How else can one explain how a certain American recluse's daily activity and mood swings became a topic of fervent discussion in the Oval Office? What else can make sense of Kissinger's frenetic phone calls to Fischer's camp begging, pleading that he go to Iceland when he had threatened to walk out of the match? It was a match like no other, a moment in history like no other, when the pride of the two superpowers rested on two chess masters, a board of 64 squares, 16 pieces, one clock and an arbiter.
Coming to the match, we all know how it unfolded. Fischer won 12.5-8.5 and displaced Spassky to become eleventh world champion, thus ending the Soviet's long stranglehold on the crown. What followed was a period of national mourning in USSR, for the communists the world champion was equivalent of Czar of Imperial Russia. To see that crown slip into the hands of the arch-enemy was something they couldn't cope with. Till then the prize money from chess tournaments wasn't taxed, but Kremlin authorities were so aghast after this humiliation that they created a law which took a huge part of the prize money as tax, something like 90%. Privileges to chess players too were diminished as collective punishment. For the Americans it was a golden highlight of the Cold War, a rare triumph against a fearsome opponent in a discipline where historically they were the weaker party. So many Hollywood movies, documentaries, musicals and books discuss Fischer's life and that triumph, not without reason. In Fischer's words, "Nobody has single-handedly done more for the U.S. than me. When I won the world championship, in 1972, the United States had an image of, you know, a football country, a baseball country, but nobody thought of it as an intellectual country. I turned all that around single-handedly, right?"
But I would like to clear some misconceptions about Fischer's triumph and the many myths that get attached to this seminal event.
Firstly USSR was the superpower of chess but USA was no slouch as many would like to believe. It is often casually remarked that Fischer was the first great American master. Nothing could be further from the truth. After all Paul Morphy was an American, the greatest master of the 19th century and someone who was more ahead of his peers than any other player in history. Chess history didn't start with Steinitz, even Fischer mentioned the Romantic Morphy as his childhood hero and someone who was the first to play modern chess. Then you had Reshevsky, Marshall, Evans and someone who has most influence on the current champion, Reuben Fine. Fine is more known for his work on psychology than chess but no doubt he was a chess genius. During the Holocaust, many Jewish chess players found refuge in USA, one only has to read about the Chess Olympiads of early 20th century to understand the chess legacy of USA many decades before 1972.Even in the 50s and 60s US was consistently the best chess country west of the Eastern Bloc, usually 2nd or 3rd best in the world. There was a thriving chess culture in the country with numerous strong players just in the city of New York. Those who make these frivolous claims about US being a non-entity usually do so to deify Fischer, it has no factual basis. It is like saying Pakistan had no cricket legacy before 1992, utter nonsense.
The second misconception is that Fischer was a lone warrior against the might of Soviet Union. Well, again not accurate. He was well assisted by a group of super strong chess players, physicians, fitness coaches, psychologists, friends, nutritionists and generous donors. Kavalek and Lombardy were his main men, more than enough because Fischer didn't trust people much, always paranoid that his secrets would leak he preferred a small coterie. Spassky didn't enjoy the support of many seconds either, mainly because that was his style, he was someone who preferred to work everything out over the board. He had a team of 3 in Reykjavic: Geller, Nei, Krogius and Krogius was invited not for his chess but because of his degree in psychology. Spassky made a very big mistake before the match when he ended his relations with Bondarevsky who had been his main trainer for many years. Moreover he suffered serious motivation problems before that match because he had dominated the American until then and had already realized his goal of becoming WC. He cancelled his training match against young Karpov and spent most of the time in his camp playing tennis. By then he was a very lazy person, relying only on natural talent and hardly putting the requisite effort. Against any other Soviet player Fischer would have faced the full might of their team of seconds, not so against Spassky. Those days games would be frequently adjourned with resumption the following day. One of the games where Spassky had a winning position, his seconds found the forced execution overnight and when they went with the information to brief him in the morning, he shooed them away assuring that he would find it over the board. It can be argued that Fischer utilized his team better than Spassky and the opening battles proved it.
Thirdly the match was fought as per terms and conditions of the Americans. First they shifted the match to Iceland, then Fischer started his mind games about whether he would participate or not. Till the eleventh hour he remained non-committal and that took its mental toll on Spassky. The match was close to being called off many times, Fischer arrived late for game 1 and gave a walkover in game 2. A walkover meant full point for Spassky but he wasn't someone who liked to win that way. Being a fair guy and a thorough gentleman, that default win threw him off his game for rest of the match. He agreed to Fischer's demands and played with reduced number of spectators, in a small room, without cameras, basically he bent over to all crazy demands of his opponent, a serious psychological blunder. But then again, that was Spassky, someone who joined the audience in clapping for Fischer after the latter's spectacular win in G6. This after Fischer's remark that he wanted to crush the Ruskie's hands till it was reduced to bone powder. We had a gentleman who faced off against a ruthless, psychologically bulletproof maniac who was known for his gamesmanship and Spassky is the bad guy? Western revisionism at its best.
Last point I would make is regarding the quality of the match. People call it the 'Match of the Century' but IMO chess-wise it wasn't so. It was held at a unique junction in history when any American and Russian facing off would have recorded massive interest. I know for a fact that this match was discussed in a small village in Tamil Nadu over the morning paper and tea, my father developed his interest in chess due to this event. But history demands a search for truth, nobody can analyse the course of the match in depth with objectivity and call it Fischer's greatest moment of genius. The blunder he made in G1 where he trapped his own bishop would rank as one of the worst moves in top level chess let alone a World Championship match. Both players missed many wins and ultimately Spassky lost rather than Fischer winning, first because of overconfidence and as the match progressed because he wasn't in a frame of mind to fight. Pressure was huge and it would have made an impact, in cricket terms it was like the Mohali 2011 SF, a low quality match which was decided by who held his nerves better. It must also be noted that Spassky remains one of the weakest champions, certainly the joint weakest from the Soviet side alongside Smyslov. He had a positive H2H against Fischer prior to the match but not a better player by any stretch of imagination, at least in the 1969-72 cycle.
Well then what was Fischer's peak? That is the obvious question. In my mind it was his demolition job of Petrosian a year earlier, final of the candidates cycle to determine Spassky's challenger. In the run up to that match he massacred Taimanov (fun fact: one of the greatest pianists of 20th century apart from being a great chess player) and Bent Larsen 6-0 each. Taimanov was so much in shock that he wrote a book 'How I Became Fischer's Victim' after that match. Soviet officials accused Taimanov of disgracing his motherland, then stripped him of his titles and forbade him from going abroad for a year and a half, even banned his participation in concerts making it impossible for him to earn a living. Bent Larsen who was the West's second strongest player thankfully didn't have to endure any punitive action from Danish authorities. 12-0 was impressive no doubt but what happened next must rank as the greatest chess performance ever. Up next was the Armenian giant Tigran Petrosian, the previous world champ. The greatest defender the game had seen, he was the first to demonstrate that it was possible to defend almost any position. Petrosian brought the defensive element to chess, the element that gains more and more prominence now. He showed that chess is the game with a lot of resources, including defensive resources. He wasn't an ambitious player but even if he lost, it would be by a narrow margin. Petrosian could sense danger from far, far away but against Fischer the great defender couldn't summon his resources as he was swept away by waves of relentless attack. His defence was breached 5 times as Fischer won 6.5-2.5 (5 wins, 1 loss), that was Fischer's greatest chess achievement IMO. His early career had some amazing highs (for want of time I won't discuss them here, maybe a topic for another day) but 1971 against Petrosian was the highest point.
Why Fischer left the chess world after winning the title is an open-ended question. Of course he was a deeply troubled individual. Identity of his father remained a secret till late in his life, his mother had a 900 pages long FBI file, childhood wasn't kind on him and because of his maniacal obsession with chess his mental health wasn't akin to that of a normal person. He strived for perfection in chess all the time and the game is a mental prison if one immerses oneself too deeply. Allegations of Soviet collusion didn't help, he was convinced they were fixing games among themselves to prevent his rise. Whether he was right or wrong about that can be left to interpretation but there was some level of understanding among the Soviet players to help out their fellow comrades, pressure came from the very top. So a great deal of mental trauma for him. Fischer followed the footsteps of his great predecessor Morphy when it came to walking away from the game when he was 29 years old, at the professional summit and when he was at his creative peak. His chapter post 1972 makes for sad reading, less to do with chess and more to do with crazy conspiracy theories, abuses both to others and his own body/mind, a continuous fall towards irrelevance. He made one last attempt at comeback in 1992 against Spassky but that match was like two aged boxers having a bout in the circus, In Kasparov's words that match shattered whatever myth of Fischer that still remained.
We know his mental problems, we know about his terms for the 1975 match against Karpov. The latter was eager to play the American and even met with Fischer many times to seal the match contract. Karpov agreed with almost all demands but Fischer simply made more excuses and walked away. He started believing his myth and in the young Karpov saw a threat that could unseat him. Fischer hated losing and as the chess proverb goes 'He who never plays never loses'. If you ask me I'll tell you he was afraid of Karpov and hence chose to go down as undefeated champion. If not 1975, Karpov would have been favorite in 1977-78, that is my opinion but unfortunately the historically necessary match didn't take place. Fischer lost, chess lost and importantly Karpov lost. Karpov needed a few challenging assignments against Fischer to improve his game, get battle-hardened and prepare himself against a future threat in Kasparov (10 years later), Korchnoi wasn't that big a test. So history would have turned out very differently had Fischer stayed. I think the whole timeline of chess would have shifted by at least 5 years and Kasparov would have become WC only in the early 90s thus shortening his reign. Kasparov benefitted the most, Fischer is rightly seen as someone who never once defended his crown while Karpov is seen as someone who got his crown for cheap and made hay in a weak era (in the 1972-84 period).
Fischer's reluctance to defend his crown determines his legacy. Great peak, ATG player but someone who didn't conquer his younger generation. In any sport to become GOAT it isn't enough to push away the previous generation and dominate same age-group peers, it is more important to do well against the next generation since they have studied your game, understood your strengths/weaknesses and modified themselves accordingly, plus the age advantage. Fischer failed miserably on this front and hence can never be GOAT at least from chess playing pov. As an influential figure he may be top, as an ambassador of chess (long term) little doubtful since after his road to madness many started associating chess with an eventual path towards insanity and its popularity decreased, certain negative stereotypes took centre stage.
Regarding your question about Carlsen vs Fischer it is very difficult to compare a pre-computer era player to someone born in the 90s. You can compare Fischer with Kramnik/Anand but not beyond that. Carslen was born with a chess engine readily available, we have no idea how he would have been moulded 50 years back. Similarities are that both are great fighters, both have immense psychological toughness (even Fischer once he has committed to battle), endgame technique (MC slight edge) and while Fischer's opening repertoire was narrow but deep, Carslen has a wide range but not necessarily very deep. Fischer holds the edge in calculating forced lines, MC has better positional understanding, both excel in shorter time control. Difficult for me to judge them because as I said computers have changed our game forever and MC is a child of this era. Similar players with both holding small edges in certain areas, too tough to call. 1972 Fischer and 2013 Carlsen is 50:50, over a 4 years period Fischer (1969-72) has the edge over MC (2012-15) but in a 5-10 years period MC has the edge. A more interesting match-up is Fischer vs Kasparov (should have happened in early 80s) and I will give the edge to Kaspy, made some points about that previously on this thread. Basing this on how Fischer at his peak fared against Tal and Geller, Kaspy was an upgraded version of Tal with limitless stamina, more hunger/ambition and better psychology. But I can assure you Fischer would make so many preconditions that such matches would never take place. Kasparov and Carlsen don't mind gamesmanship and always look at their own interests, no way would they succumb as easily to his crazy demands like Spassky.
Fantastic post, well done! Thanks for the time and effort that went into this.
Carlsen is doing things that even great players only dream of.
During previous era, Chess was pretty much a niche; you had to train under professionals to become really good so not many people could afford that level of dedication. But now in the era of Chess engines, anyone can practice from their basement against the strongest possible opponent ie machine and become really really good.
<blockquote class="twitter-tweet"><p lang="en" dir="ltr">Garry Kasparov doesn't think Magnus Carlsen faces the same level of competition as he faced in the 1990s <a href="https://twitter.com/hashtag/c24live?src=hash&ref_src=twsrc%5Etfw">#c24live</a> <a href="https://twitter.com/hashtag/ChessLegends?src=hash&ref_src=twsrc%5Etfw">#ChessLegends</a> <a href="https://t.co/RA1Umor2Yw">pic.twitter.com/RA1Umor2Yw</a></p>— chess24.com (@chess24com) <a href="https://twitter.com/chess24com/status/1289600229008793600?ref_src=twsrc%5Etfw">August 1, 2020</a></blockquote> <script async src="https://platform.twitter.com/widgets.js" charset="utf-8"></script>
Not often that chess makes it big in mainstream popular culture. Netflix's miniseries 'The Queen's Gambit' based on Walter Tevis' 1983 novel (fiction) of the same name has been well received and many are calling it the best TV show of the year. With chess as its subject, who would have thought it would become the number one show? Hats off to the creators, actors, all those involved in the project.
Kasparov was chief consultant for the chess part (did a great job), along with the famous coach Bruce Pandolfini (played by Ben Kingsley in Academy Awards nominated 1993 movie 'Searching for Bobby Fischer').