Showing posts with label Karpov. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Karpov. Show all posts

Monday, May 7, 2018

Nigel Short to run for FIDE President

Various sites have announced that Nigel Short will run for FIDE President. I believe the news was broken by Nicholas Bergh in the Norwegian paper Aftenposten, and has since been confirmed many other places, including on Nigel Short's Twitter feed.

I don't usually editorialize on the Club blog, as firstly the Club does not really have an official viewpoint on anything, and secondly we have no way of really establishing such a viewpoint other than unanimous acclimation. So I will put my personal editorial viewpoint of this announcement immediately beneath the fold.

Tuesday, November 29, 2016

“Any [redacted]-head could do a better job.”

The title is a quote from 2010, uttered by Anatoly Karpov, twelfth world champion, regarding Kirsan Ilyumzhinov's reign as President of FIDE. Yes, it violates one of the blog's policies, but that can't be helped, as it (a) is an accurate quote and (b) sums up the situation regarding the World Chess Federation perfectly, even if it is six years old.

This is all brought up due to a somewhat interesting article on FIDE and the current World Championship Match published by Bloomberg. You can find that article here.

Saturday, July 2, 2016

Pictures, cont.

The other day I mentioned Lars Grahn's Twitter feed, full of old pictures. Here's an example, a picture from a very famous game.

Monday, February 22, 2016

Kasparov on the hunt....

Kasparov provides analysis of his victory over Karpov in game 20 of their 1990 World Championship Match. Hat tip to David Llada, who linked to this on both his Twitter feed and Facebook feed.

Sunday, November 15, 2015

Move of the Day: June 17, 1974 edition

Way back when during the Nice, 1974 Olympiad, the Soviets faced the West German team on June 17th. On the first board, Anatoly Karpov, the then current wunderkind of the Soviet Chess Machine, faced off as White against long time West German Number 1 Wolfgang Unzicker. A typical slow Closed Ruy Lopez followed. Eventually, the following position was reached:

Karpov vs Unzicker
After 23...Qd8

I discovered this position in the 2015/6 issue of New In Chess. Parimarjan Negi wrote about it in his column Parimarjan's Chess Gym. I'll turn it over to him:
A well-known position. Black is ready to exchange rooks along the a-file, after which it will be much harder for White to generate anything on the queenside. Here Karpov played the amazing:
24. Ba7!
This absolutely paralyzes Black's queenside. The rest of the game is elementary technique, as White brought his other rook to the queenside, seemingly with the intention of penetrating via the a-file, but ending up completely suffocating Black, who was keeping himself ready for the bishop retreat that never happened.
An awkward seeming move, but a pretty idea! The rest of the game is a slow, steady squeeze. The whole game is in the viewer below.

Tuesday, September 15, 2015

Anatoly Karpov: A Better World Champion!

Now for an opinion that is guaranteed to be somewhat more controversial amongst chess players: Anatoly Karpov was the best world champion the chess world had prior to the advent of Kasparov.

I'm just going to list a few of Karpov's pluses for now.

First, he played the game as champion, and played often and well! Since Botvinnik had become champion in 1948, it seemed that champions didn't play all that much.* (Anyone that wants to spend time database mining can refute or confirm this, but I'll pass for now.) But Karpov, no doubt in part because of the fact that he was awarded the title simply because Fischer refused to play, took up a busy tournament schedule - and he won most of them during his reign.

Second, he successfully defended his title in matches! This might not seem like such a big deal, but consider the record of previous champions. I'll ignore Steinitz, as he basically invented the title and later tried backdating it. But Lasker mostly managed to duck his most dangerous opponents until he was older. The great Capablanca** failed in his only title defense. Alekhine ducked Capablanca, beat up on Bogoljubov twice before falling to Max Euwe in a massive upset. Euwe failed in a rematch with Alekhine, who then ducked any more matches until he was dead. (True, he got a big assist from WWII....)

Botvinnik never won a match when he was defending his title. The best he managed was two drawn matches against Bronstein and Smyslov. Smyslov & Tal couldn't defend the title against an old Botvinnik. Petrosian, in 1966, did what no champion had done in 32 years when he defended his title against Spassky. But he then fell to Spassky, who failed in his first defense to Fischer. And Fischer lost to his inner demons and couldn't even get back to the board for 20 years.

So Karpov showing up and defending his title twice om 1978 and 1981 was a damned fine showing.

Karpov showed up often, played well, and won much. And, he was part of the two greatest rivalries in the history of the game - his feuds with Korchnoi and Kasparov are legendary. In essence, Karpov played 74 games for the World Championship three times against Korchnoi over a period of seven years, and played Kasparov an incredible 144 times in five matches over six years. The only thing that comes close in the entire history of the game would be the La Bourdonnais – McDonnell  matches, but that series can 85 games in 1834 doesn't truly compare to the modern matches.

Thus a more controversial argument for people to argue with, both with facts & opinions. Have at it!



* Botvinnik didn't play hardly at all after winning the title, but after his close call in his defense against Bronstein in 1951 started playing more. We probably can't blame Smyslov or Tal for not playing much, as they held the title for only about a year each, and were busy preparing for the return match against Botvinnik. Still, the impression remains that world champion sightings at the board were somewhat rare until Karpov's reign.

** Is it possible to write about Capablanca without using the phrasing "the great Capablanca" at least once?