The K-K sequence of matches is unrivalled in
competitive sport. In Portugal at the time there was much information regarding
this match, but I remember following it on the weeklies chess programms with
expert commentary on the chess as well as insights into all the backstage
shenanigans. The introduction, playing Prokofiev's Dance of the Nights to the
backdrop of snowy Red Square was unmissable and a brilliant entré to the great
chess battles that followed. After the resumption in 1985, the climax came with
game 16 when Kasparov paralyzed Karpov on move 16. I just had to look it up to freshen my memory. Karpov couldn't move a piece
without provoking disaster to his position. Perhaps the most brilliant display
of Kasparov's genius and unlikely that any grand-master has ever achieved such a
dominant position in a chess championship match before or since.
The rating system in international chess (Elo,
designed by Arpad Elö) is incapable of comparing playing strength between
players from different time periods. It is designed to facilitate a comparing
of a closed group of players. More so up until the seventies there was no
rating-system in place. You also have to take into account that the rules have
significantly changed over time, specifically time-limits. Training methods
have been hugely improved with the arrival of computers, Gary Kasparov was
himself the first world class player to regularly use computers (he was
directly involved in the making of ChessBase and his copy has the serial number
0001). Any claim to who is the strongest chess player ever always has to be
considered "tricky". Gary Kasparov certainly is one of the strongest
in modern chess as are also; Anatoly Karpov, Michal Tal, Mikhail Botvinnik,
Paul Keres, Capablanca, Robert J Fisher, Alekhin, Bronstein, Anand, and many
others.
By reading about the in-fighting in FIDE, which
Waitzkin makes abundantly clear, one concludes FIDE is more corrupt than
Blatter and FIFA. A couple of years ago I remember a situation when the Russian
embassies around the world were actually openly canvasing/coercing for Putin's
suspected bum chum Kirsan Ilyumzhinov. Once again Russia had an inferiority
complex that due to massive investments in developing the game there, a small
country like Norway could produce the greatest chess player in the history of
the game so far. I guess it is difficult for Russia to dope its chess players
to get better results, unlike their athletes. Carlsen, as I understand it, is
the highest rated player of all time. Looking at the current GM list, could we
conclude 21st century chess is vastly more competitive than in Kasparov's day?
104 players who've achieved an Elo of 2700+, with all but 6 of them doing it
this century? Is this mostly attributable to advances in theory, or rating
inflation caused by the Elo system? Actually it is the advent of computer
preparation which has resulted in rather robotic play and "unnatural"
opening choices. The ratings have inflated a lot however it is important to
know that the modern 2700 GM would beat or at least be equal to any yesteryear
2700 GM because he is armed with a lot of computer preparation.
Does anyone else know of a human activity, sex
excepted (and accepted), that is as widely practised as chess but so profoundly
mired in clichés and ignorance in most Western societies?
Checkmate! Just won my game, while reading this
story of chess grand-masters. Will this rub off on me, so that I can puff out my
chest? Nah. I've got to keep working on it...Too much time out of the game...
