Playing Chess With Kubrick

Stanley Kubrick and Arthur C. Clarke working on 2001: A Space Odyssey in Kubrick’s apartment in New York (from Moonwatcher’s Memoir by Dan Richter)

In the early 1960s, I wrote an appreciative essay for The New Yorker about the science fiction of Arthur Clarke. Not long after I got a letter from Clarke written from Sri Lanka where he lived. He told me that he was coming to New York in a few weeks and wanted to meet me. When we met, I asked him the purpose of his visit. His answer totally astonished me. “I am working on the son of Dr. Strangelove,” is what he said. The film had just come out and the first time I saw it I was so impressed that I sat through it a second time. “Stanley,” he said referring to Kubrick, “is a remarkable man. You should meet him.”

I told Clarke that nothing would please me more. Much to my amazement, the next day Clarke called to say that I was expected that afternoon at Kubrick’s apartment on Central Park West. I had never met a movie mogul and had no idea what to expect. But as soon as Kubrick opened the door I felt an immediate kindred spirit. He looked and acted like every obsessive theoretical physicist I have ever known. His obsession at that moment was whether or not anything could go faster than the speed of light. I explained to him that according to the theory of relativity no information bearing signal could go faster. We conversed like that for about an hour when I looked at my watch and realized I had to go. “Why?” he asked, seeing no reason why a conversation that he was finding interesting should stop.

I told him I had a date with a chess hustler in Washington Square Park to play for money. Kubrick wanted the name. “Fred Duval” I said. Duval was a Haitian who claimed to be related to Francois Duvalier. I was absolutely positive that the name would mean nothing to Kubrick. His next remark nearly floored me. “Duval is a patzer,” is what he said. Unless you have been around chess players you cannot imagine what an insult this is. Moreover, Duval and I were playing just about even. What did that make me?

Kubrick explained that early in his career he too played chess for money in the park and that Duval was so weak that it was hardly worth playing him. I said that we should play some time and then left the apartment. I was quite sure that we would never play. I was wrong.

I wrote a Talk of the Town on my meeting with Kubrick, which he liked. I was thus emboldened to ask if I could write a full scale profile of him. He agreed but said that he was about to leave for London to begin production of what became 2001: A Space Odyssey. Still better, I thought: I could watch the making of the film. Our first meeting was at the Hotel Dorchester in London where he was temporarily living with his family. Kubrick brought out a chess set and beat me promptly. Then we played three more games and he beat me less promptly. But I won the fifth game!

Stanley Kubrick and George C. Scott playing chess on the set of Dr. Strangelove

Seizing the moment I told him that I had been hustling him and had deliberately lost the first four games. His response was that I was a patzer. All during the filming of 2001 we played chess whenever I was in London and every fifth game I did something unusual. Finally we reached the 25th game and it was agreed that this would decide the matter. Well into the game he made a move that I was sure was a loser. He even clutched his stomach to show how upset he was. But it was a trap and I was promptly clobbered. “You didn’t know I could act too,” he remarked.

The scene now shifts to the spring of 1972. I was spending the year at Oxford, and spent some Sundays with the Kubricks. Our interest again turned to chess but this time it was with the imminent match between Bobby Fischer and Boris Spassky in Iceland. One Sunday, Kubrick and I watched Fischer’s interview with Mike Wallace for “60 Minutes.” It was around the time of Fischer’s birthday and Wallace had come with a cake. “I don’t like that kind of cake,” Fischer said graciously. Then he told Wallace how he had learned to play chess. His older sister had taught him the moves. He soon began beating her so he spotted her pieces. Then he said that that no longer worked so he began playing with himself—Fischer vs. Fischer. “Mostly I won,” he commented with no trace of humor.

I expected a pleasant summer in Oxford reading about the match but one morning in May the phone rang in my office. The man on the line identified himself as the features editor of Playboy. He informed me that Hugh Heffner was interested in chess and had read my New Yorker profile of Kubrick. They had decided that I was the perfect person to write about the Fischer-Spassky match for Playboy. They would pay all my expenses and I would even have the American grandmaster Larry Evans at my disposal. It sounded too good to be true and, indeed, I had a problem. My writing for the New Yorker was not going down that well with my academic colleagues and writing for Playboy would be the last straw. He said not to worry I could use an assumed name. So I agreed. (I chose “Jay Amber”—“Bernstein” being the German for “Amber.”)

Much has been written about the match and I will only add a few personal recollections. Fischer got there the fourth of July, two days after the match had been scheduled to start. When the first game actually began on the eleventh, Spassky showed up on time but there was no Fischer. Finally, Fischer arrived, and quickly made it clear that he was much more concerned by a TV cameraman’s recording of the games than actually playing them. Indeed, after an incredibly bad move, he lost. Fischer then failed to appear at all for the second game, which he forfeited to go down two-zip.

That was about as good as it got for Spassky. Once Fischer actually began to play it was clear that Spassky had no chance. Fischer was in another league. There was a room at the tournament where grandmasters met to watch. They would predict Fischer’s next move and, more often than not, he would do something none of them had anticipated. A remarkable group of writers including Arthur Koestler and Harold Schonberg, who had played chess with Fischer and was the music critic of The New York Times, also turned up. We gathered in the lobby of the Hotel Loftleider to exchange stories and to catch an occasional glimpse of Fischer as he went off for midnight bowling.

From 2001: A Space Odyssey

When the match ended Schonberg predicted that Fischer would never play another. At the time I thought that Schonberg was surely wrong, but he wasn’t. The only match he ever did play was in 1992 when he played Spassky again, this time in Yugoslavia. Fischer won but the experts detected a decline in his game. He was succeeded as world champion first by Anatoly Karpov and then by Garry Kasparov, whose 1997 loss to the chess computer Deep Blue, had, in a sense, been predicted by Kubrick and Clarke decades earlier. In Kubrick’s 2001, before HAL 9000, the villainous computer, turns murderous, he roundly beats his human opponent, the astronaut Frank Poole, in a chess match.

For his part, Fischer spent the rest of his life a fugitive from both American and Japanese law. In 2005 he returned to Iceland, where he sought asylum. He was granted Icelandic citizenship and died in Reykjavik on January 17, 2008.

http://www.nybooks.com/blogs/nyrblog/2010/apr/05/playing-chess-with-kubrick/

The New York Times and Chess

Lubomir Kavalek Headshot

The world champion Magnus Carlsen is making chess popular around the globe and his title defense against Vishy Anand begins on November 8 in Sochi, Russia. Millions of chess fans are looking forward to the coverage of the World Chess Championship match on the Internet and in the newspapers. Alas, The New York Times chess column will not be one of them. Last month, it was abruptly terminated with a single sentence: “This is the final chess column to run in The New York Times.”

At least the Washington Post was more generous. After they decided to stop my chess column in January 2010, I was able to write the last article as a farewell note, expressing what the column tried to accomplish. But make no mistake about it: every time a newspaper cuts a chess column, chess loses.

Happy times

In 1972 America went chess crazy. Bobby Fischer played the Match of the Century against Boris Spassky and chess was everywhere. The New York Times hired grandmaster Robert Byrne to run the chess column.

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On October 10, they devoted almost a full page to chess with three items. The first began with…

BYRNE IS APPOINTED AS CHESS COLUMNIST

Robert Byrne, a United States chess co-champion, has been appointed chess columnist for The New York Times. He replaces Al Horwitz, who has been on a leave of absence.

A 44-year-old grandmaster, Mr. Byrne has won the United States Open Chess Championship three times – in 1960, 1963 and 1966. He shares the title of current co-champion with Samuel Reshevsky and Lubomir Kavalek.

It was not a mistake. We were the co-champions. The 1972 U.S. Championship was also a Zonal qualifier and only two places were available. Robert Byrne won the play-off in February 1973.

A news item followed:

U.S. CHESS PLAYERS BOW TO SOVIET TEAM

SKOPJE, Yugoslavia, Oct. 9 – The United States team lost today to the Soviet Union in the 12th round of the chess Olympics here. On the top two boards, Lubomir Kavalek drew with Tigran Petrosian and Robert Byrne drew with Vasily Smyslov. But Pal Benko lost to Mikhail Tal and Arthur Bisguier lost to Anatoly Karpov.

Karpov was actually the first reserve on the Soviet team.

The U.S. team could have been much stronger. The Coca-Cola company was willing to pay $100,000 on a condition that Fischer plays. He would get $50,000 and each of us $10,000. Bobby wanted to go to Skopje. He told me that before my departure from Reykjavik, where I was performing a double duty: reporting on the match for the Voice of America and working with Bobby on his adjournments from the Game 13 till the end of the match. But it was Fischer’s adrenaline talking: he was, understandably, too tired after the match with Spassky. Larry Evans and William Lombardy also stayed home.

The third item was Byrne’s first column. He wrote about my game against Florin Gheorghiu. At the 1966 Havana Olympiad, the Rumanian grandmaster defeated Bobby Fischer. Byrne based the comments on our mutual analysis before and after the game. The game was also annotated by Hans Kmoch in the Chess Life and Review and I have revisited the comments and added more recent views.

Chess: Flash of Insight, Not Analysis, Gives Kavalek Brilliant Victory

By ROBERT BYRNE

Special to The New York Times

SKOPJE, Yugoslavia, Oct. 9 -The rich stock of opening ideas Bobby Fischer and Boris Spassky came up with in their recent world championship match is the spur for dozens of encounters here in the Chess Olympics.

Kavalek,Lubomir – Gheorghiu,Florin
Skopje Olympiad 1972

“Since the 15th Spassky-Fischer game (Reykjavik 1972) Lubomir Kavalek, the former Czech grandmaster now playing Board No.1 on the United States team here, has, like others, thrown enormous effort into mastering the complexities of Spassky’s new attack against the Najdorf variation of the Sicilian Defense. Spassky’s sharp play had broken the defense early in the game for a moral victory, although Fischer’s tenacity and Spassky’s later mistakes led to a draw.” – R. Byrne

1.e4 c5 2.Nf3 d6 3.d4 cxd4 4.Nxd4 Nf6 5.Nc3 a6 6.Bg5 e6 7.f4 Nbd7 8.Qf3

Gheorghiu’s opening choice was not a surprise since we already played the same variation in the preliminaries. I chose 8.Bc4 but did not get much and the game was quickly drawn.

8…Qc7 9.0-0-0 b5 10.Bd3 Bb7 11.Rhe1 b4

2014-10-31-1Gheo.jpg

Spassky-Fischer, Game 15, Reykjavik 1972, went: 11…Be7 12.Qg3 0-0-0 (12…b4 became later the most popular move.) 13.Bxf6 (Two years later, at the 1974 Nice Olympiad, GM Velimirovic came up with the dangerous sacrifice: 13.Bxb5!? axb5 14.Ndxb5 Qb6 15.e5.) 13…Nxf6 14.Qxg7 Rdf8 and in a sharp battle Fischer wrested a draw.

“Something more radical than Fischer’s routine play was required if Black was to stay in the game. The answer had to be an early b5-b4, provoking White to attack precipitously by Nc3-d5, accepting the knight sacrifice and squirming tortuously to a won endgame.

When the match had been under way about 20 minutes I was startled to find Kavalek 13 moves deep in the Najdorf Sicilian variation that had stumped us. His opponent, Florin Gheorghiu, was following the track of our analysis, compelling the piece sacrifice by 11…b4 and further improving on Fischer’s play by omitting the development of his king bishop, which otherwise would have been caught in an awkward pin on the king file.

What was wanted was a smashing justification of the knight offer. But every proposal I came up with brought only a sad,”No, Bob, no– it’s no good,” from Kavalek.
That’s how matters stood when the United States met Rumania last Thursday.” – R. Byrne

12.Nd5! exd5 13.exd5+ Kd8

The king walks away. This is the reason why black left his dark bishop home- on the square f8.

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14.Bf5!

Like a drunken sailor, the light bishop is going to zig-zag its way to the pawn on f7.

Commenting for the Chess Life and Review, Hans Kmoch over enthusiastically awarded this and my next move with a double exclamation point.

Robert Byrne was more down to earth: “Kavalek had stubbornly gone in with nothing better in mind than the 14.Nc6+ Bxc6 15.dxc6 Nb6 we knew to be insufficient. His brilliant inspiration 14.Bf5 and 15.Be6 occurred to him only over the board in the 10 minutes he took on his 14th turn.”

Today, the computers assess the variation 14.Nc6+ Bxc6 15.dxc6 Nb6 as better for white, for example: 16.Qh5 d5 17.Bxf6+ gxf6 18.Be4 Kc8 19.Bxd5±.

14…Be7

The position seems critical. There are several choices:

A. Some of the terrific power is revealed by 14…Qb6 15.Bxd7 Kxd7 16.Bxf6 gxf6 17.Qh5 for example:

a) 17…Kc7 18.Qxf7+ Kb8 19.Re8+ Ka7 20.Nc6+ permits white to mate. – R. Byrne;
b) 17…Rd8 18.Qxf7+ Kc8 19.Qxf6+- (19.Ne6) ;

c) 17…Be7 18.Qxf7 Rae8 19.Nf5 Qd8 20.Qe6+ (20.Re6!+-) 20…Kc7 21.Nxe7 recovering the sacrificed piece with a winning two-pawn lead. – R. Byrne.

B. After 17…Be7 the line 18. Qf5+ Kd8 19.Rxe7! Kxe7 20.Re1+ Kf8 21.Qxf6 is better and wins.

C. Byrne explained that giving extra protection to the weak square e6 by 14…Nc5 would not have rescued Gheorghiu and suggested 15.Bh3 for example 15…Be7 16.Nf5 Bf8 17.Qe3 Qb6 18.Nxg7 Bxg7 19.Qe7 mate.

D. Donner’s suggestion 14…Nb6 is best dealt with 15.Bxf6+! gxf6 16.Qe3 Bh6 17.Nc6+ Bxc6 18.dxc6 ±;

E. 14…h6 15.Nc6+ Bxc6 16.dxc6 hxg5 17.cxd7 Rb8 18.fxg5 Nxd7 19.Qe4 Qc8 20.Rd4+-;

F. We did not consider the move 14…Qc4!? suggested by computers, for example 15.Qh5 Bxd5 (15…Qxd5 16.Ne6+ fxe6 17.Rxd5 Bxd5 18.Bxe6+-) 16.Bxd7 Kxd7 17.Bxf6 gxf6 18.b3 Qc5 19.c4 Rc8 (19…bxc3 20.Nc2 Re8 21.Qf5+ Re6 22.Re3+-) 20.Qf5+ Be6 21.Qxf6 with a repetition of moves after 21…Be7 22.Qh6 Bf8 23.Qf6.

15.Be6! Rf8 16.Bxf7 Rxf7?

Leads to a difficult position. Black should have tried to equalize with 16…Nc5!? 17.Be6 h6 18.Bh4 g5 19.Bg3 a5.

17.Ne6+ Kc8 18.Nxc7 Kxc7

2014-10-31-3Gheo.jpg

“So Gheorghiu’s plan of exchanging his queen for three of the attacking minor pieces was the only one (alternative) feasible. Had he consolidated his position quickly enough, he would have been able to put up tremendous resistance. But Kavalek didn’t give him the chance.” – R. Byrne

“Black has three minor pieces for the Queen, but with two pawns down and his king exposed, he is in very bad shape.” – Hans Kmoch

19.Qe2

White threatens to hunt the queenside pawns or sacrifice the queen back on e7.

19…a5 20.Rd4 Bf8 21.Qb5 Nc5 22.Bxf6 Rxf6 23.Re8 Rxe8 24.Qxe8

Planning to jump back with 25.Qb5 to clean the queenside pawns.

2014-10-31-4Gheo.jpg

24…g5?!

“By move 24 Gheorghiu was so tied up that he was driven to the desperate pawn sacrifice 24…g5, in vain hope that he could organize some sort of counterattack on the white king.” – R. Byrne

“A hopeless bid for counterplay. White was at the point of using his kingside majority, anyhow. Now he can do it with much more immediate effect.” – Hans Kmoch

25.fxg5 Rf1+ 26.Rd1 Rf2 27.Qh5 Kb6 28.Qxh7 Bc8 29.Qh4!

2014-10-31-5Gheo.jpg

“Dislodging the black rook from its commanding position, thus preventing Bc8-f5, to converge on c2.” – R. Byrne

29…Rxg2 30.Qf4 Be7 31.h4 Bg4

After 31…Rg4 32.Qf7 Re4 33.g6 white wins.

32.Re1 Bh5 33.Rxe7 Rg1+ 34.Kd2 Rd1+ 35.Ke3 Re1+ 36.Kf2

After 36…Rxe7 37.Qxd6+ wins.

Black resigned.

Ageless warriors

At the age of 45, Byrne went on to qualify for the Candidates matches, finishing third behind Viktor Korchnoi and Karpov at the 1973 Leningrad Interzonal. Three years later at the 1976 Biel Interzonal, he missed the Candidates by a half point.

Last month, FIDE threw the 45-year-old Boris Gelfand into the lion’s den, organizing two 12-player Grand Prix events close to each other. Gelfand shared first in Baku, Azerbaijan, but finished last in Tashkent, Uzbekistan. The first two GP finishers qualify for the Candidates tournament. After two tournaments the leaders are Fabiano Caruana with 230 points and Hikaru Nakamura with 207 points, both in their twenties.

In 2012, Gelfand challenged Vishy Anand for the world title. It was the oldest pair in the history of the world championships and it ended with Anand’s victory in a rapid chess tiebreak. Last year Anand lost the title to Carlsen, but bounced back and against all odds won this year’s Candidate tournament to meet the Norwegian again. Last time they met, Anand grew tired in the middle of the 12-game world championship match.

At 44, Anand knows he is an underdog, but this time he will be better prepared mentally and physically. He sent a clear warning to Carlsen by winning the Bilbao Masters in September. At 23, Carlsen is bursting with energy and can keep the pressure on by playing long games and cutting down on his own mistakes.

It could become an uphill struggle for Anand. It doesn’t take much – two, three blunders perhaps – and the match is gone, and the ageless warrior we so much admire becomes simply too old.

http://www.huffingtonpost.com/lubomir-kavalek/the-new-york-times-and-ch_b_5992394.html

Chess Interview: Kramnik on the World Champions

Kramnik – I did not have the opportunity to study chess classics when I was a child. I was born in the Russian provincial town of Tuapse where chess literature was difficult to obtain; only books on modern players, such as Karpov, Petrosian, etc. were available. Of course, later I filled the gap in my education. However, it is much easier for me to talk about those who I met over the board, i.e. Karpov, Kasparov.

Interviewer – As you see it, should young chess players study the classics?

Kramnik – In my view, if you want to reach the heights, you should study the entire history of chess. I can’t give any clear logical explanation for it, but I think it is absolutely essential to soak up the whole of chess history.

Interviewer – Starting from Gioachino Greco?

Kramnik – I don’t think it is important to start with those ancient times because that is just the ABC of chess. However, Philidor’s games should be gone through, not to mention Anderssen and Morphy, whose games should be studied without fail. This knowledge will be a real help in self-improvement.

Wilhelm_SteinitzSteinitz

Kramnik – Steinitz was the first to realise that chess, despite being a complicated game, obeys some common principles. Up to his time chess players understood only individual themes. For instance, Philidor put forward and upheld the following opinion: ‘Pawns are the soul of chess’.

I have got patchy impressions of Steinitz and the other chess players of the 19th century. That’s why I would like to share my thoughts about their games. I carefully studied the matches played by Steinitz against Chigorin and Lasker …

Steinitz took a comprehensive approach to chess and started to form a common basis for individual conclusions. However, sometimes he made decisions that did not quite conform to his own rules. Steinitz was the first to discover certain ideas but was still far from getting down to the bedrock.

He did not seem to understand dynamics very well; dynamics was his weak spot. In his matches against Chigorin he regularly got into difficult positions with Black. For instance, he would capture the pawn in the Evans Gambit and then transfer all his pieces to the 8th rank ..

Although most players would feel like resigning in such a position, Steinitz defended it in his match two times, namely in games 15 and 17, and scored 1½ points. One game he even won. But the diagram position is absolutely hopeless for Black.

Steinitz was strong in practice. He had deep thoughts and imaginative ideas. For instance, he stated that the king was a strong piece, able to defend itself. This idea is really imaginative and even true in some cases but it is not a part of the classical basis of the game.

Up to his time people had just been playing chess, Steinitz began to study it. But as often happens the first time is just a try. With due respect to the first World Champion, I can’t say he was the founder of a chess theory. He was an experimenter and pointed out that chess obeys laws that should be considered.

200px-LaskerLasker

Kramnik – In my view, Lasker was a pioneer of modern chess. When you look through Steinitz’s games you understand they were played in the century before last whereas Lasker had a lot of games that modern chess players could have had. Lasker is the first link in the chain of “global” chess where various fighting elements are taken into account. Steinitz mainly concentrated on individual positional elements. For instance, if he had a better pawn structure along with a promising attack on the enemy’s king, he thought his advantage was almost decisive. But Lasker understood that different positional components could offset each other. He realized that different types of advantage could be interchangeable: tactical edge could be converted into strategic advantage and vice versa.

I think that Lasker had a more extensive knowledge of chess than Steinitz. By the way, it is significant that the World Chess Championship in 1894 (not to mention the return) was a total mismatch.

My impression is that two completely different players in terms of insight met over the board. In present day Elo, we would say that a player with a rating of 2700 played against another rated 2400. That’s why Lasker’s victory was very convincing; he almost tore his opponent apart. I knew that Steinitz was a great player but in that match he was badly beaten, which came as a cultural shock to me. I have never seen such an enormous gap between the participants of a World Championship, as if it was more like a simultaneous exhibition than a match for the title. At that time Steinitz must have already been over the hill. But I could not have imagined he was that weak because he kept on getting decent results in tournaments.

Lasker was an impressive person. He managed to understand a lot in chess. I was looking through his games again some time ago and was astonished: his knowledge was incredibly extensive for his time! He was the first to understand the importance of psychological factors and started to pay attention to them. He began to adapt his strategy and, to a certain extent, his style to different opponents. Whereas Steinitz kept to one concept because he thought: this is correct and that is not.

Lasker comprehended an idea that was pretty difficult for a time when people saw chess only in black and white. Chess is a very complicated game and it can be absolutely unclear what is right or wrong. It is possible to act in different ways. Lasker was very flexible and undogmatic. He was the first undogmatic player in the history of chess. He did not think in terms of “this is good and this is bad”. For example, if you manage to occupy the centre, that’s good, if not, that’s bad”. That was a great step forward for chess development.

In my opinion, when Lasker was stripping Steinitz of his title, he was head and shoulders above all the others. Since that time chess history has not seen such a yawning gap. Lasker had surpassed everyone until a new generation grew up and his opponents, namely Tarrasch, got stronger.

Interviewer – We can hardly say that Tarrasch represented the new generation because he was six years older than Lasker …

Kramnik – I think that Tarrasch started playing stronger later. At the time Lasker was fighting for the title, Tarrasch’s play was not impressive.

Interviewer – Tarrasch regarded Lasker as an “upstart” because when Tarrasch was already “the Teacher of Germany”, Lasker was nobody. Steinitz challenged Tarrasch for a match, but the latter evaded it.

Kramnik – I was not impressed with Tarrasch’s play. He had imaginative ideas but like all players of that time he was prone to rigidity. And Lasker was not, that’s why he stood out.

Interviewer – Lasker became World Champion in 1894 while Pillsbury won the famous Hastings Tournament of 1895 where Chigorin was second and Lasker took only the third place. He did have worthy opponents …

Kramnik – I won’t argue. This is my personal view and I think that in the early 1890s Lasker was head and shoulders above the others in understanding, capacity and strength of play. That period did not last for long, two to three years, then the others started to catch up, having learned from him.

At the same time Lasker is to some extent an underrated figure. Legend has it that Steinitz was a super strategical player while Lasker was mainly a psychologist … I would like to dispel this myth.

Interviewer – By the way, not everyone knows that Lasker denied exerting “psychological influence” on his opponents by saying: “My success is primarily based on the understanding of the pieces’ strength, not on the opponent’s nature”.

Kramnik – I think that due to his flexibility he was able to have a deeper understanding of chess. He broke with dogmas and everyone thought he did it with regard to his opponent’s character. But Lasker started to call dogmas into question. Let’s remember his famous move f4-f5 against Capablanca.

Lasker realised that the e5-square could be weakened because it was difficult to exploit. And then they started talking about his psychological approach! It had nothing to do with psychology. Lasker grasped a deep concept, which is being automatically employed now: he gave up the e5-square and “fenced in” the c8-bishop. That’s why it was not a matter of psychology; Lasker had a very deep positional understanding.

Of course, he had worthy opponents. We should not forget Rubinstein, an incredibly talented and fantastic chess player. It is a pity that with his extensive knowledge of chess, he was not a World Champion. Sometimes he created true masterpieces and was way ahead of his time. To understand this, you should just go through the collection of his best games. Why didn’t he become a World Champion? That’s a mystery to me. His nerves might have played a role or he might not have been very good in practice. Anyway, he was a man of great talent.

Lasker had been holding the title for 27 years. He really was a great chess player. However, at that time not all worthy challengers had an opportunity to play for the title and those who participated in the World Championship were not always the strongest players.

capablancaCapablanca

Interviewer – But Capablanca did deserve to play the match!

Kramnik – Capablanca was a genius. He was an exception that did not obey any rule. I would not say he developed anything in chess … Such a person could be born at any time, just like Morphy: in the middle of the 20th or even 19th century. Capablanca had a conscious feel for harmonious play. When I was a child I very much liked his book Capablanca Teaches Chess because he explained certain principles in a very simple and accurate way, which was easy to understand. (Now, however, I don’t consider some of his statements to be correct).

He had a natural talent, which, regrettably, did not go hand in hand with hard work. Hypothetically, we could say that if Capablanca had spent as much time working on chess as Alekhine and Lasker did, he would have made better progress. However, in my view, these things were mutually exclusive: hard work did not accompany his talent. He did not need to work hard. We can compare Capablanca with Mozart, whose charming music appeared to have been a smooth flow. I get the impression that Capablanca did not even know why he preferred this or that move, he just moved the pieces with his hand. If he had worked a lot on chess, he might have played worse because he would have started to try to comprehend things. But Capablanca did not have to comprehend anything, he just had to move the pieces!

He is said to have lost to Alekhine due to his incomplete preparation. I don’t agree. He did what was right for him; otherwise, he would have undermined his unique talent. He stood out from everyone.

In 1921 Capablanca defeated Lasker. By the way, Lasker was not playing badly in that match; he retained great practical strength. In my opinion, this was the first match for the World Championship title where both opponents were very strong. Capablanca was younger, more active and a bit stronger. In the last game Lasker made a terrible blunder. However, the previous games saw an even and fascinating fight.

In the other matches where Lasker played we see either a good beating or a lot of flaws, as happened in his encounter against Schlechter. As for the Capablanca-Lasker match, there were few mistakes and the games were a real fight. Lasker was an impressive chess player, whereas Capablanca was a natural-born genius. Quite frankly it is incredible how Alekhine managed to defeat him.

effb34d8Alekhine

Interviewer – Alekhine’s diligence was thought to have been a real help.

Kramnik – As well as his nature and strong will … Certainly, Alekhine also was a gifted player and had great talent. However, it is difficult to understand why he won against Capablanca. It just happened and that’s it. I agree with Kasparov that Capablanca failed to withstand the tension of the fight. In his match against Lasker, Capablanca was applying pressure while his opponent defended. Lasker was “answering back” from time to time but mainly defended. Alekhine managed to cope with that pressure and was even trying to increase the tension himself. Capablanca might not have been able to cope with that wild stress. He was used to taking tournaments easy, making draws and winning some games thanks to his talent, taking first or second place and then relaxing, sipping wine | he enjoyed life! … But there he had to face acute tension. The match was long; the games were serious and combative. Alekhine set difficult tasks for the World Champion in every game.

Interviewer – Was Alekhine really the first chess player to undertake a modern analysis of the opening?

Kramnik – Alekhine definitely was a workaholic. He had a strategic talent and was the first player who had a conscious feel for dynamics. Lasker began to realise that dynamics played an important role but it did not form the basis of his games, he just kept it in mind and sometimes used it. But Alekhine placed a bet on dynamics and truly discovered that area of chess. He proved that it was possible to take advantage of dynamics by following main positional principles: to start weaving a kind of net from the very first moves, threatening and attacking at every step without looking for a long-term advantage.

Interviewer – In the late 1920s and early 1930s Alekhine gave his rivals the slip. Or was he no match for Lasker’s dominance in his time?

Kramnik – I think it happened because of some sort of “troubled days”. Capablanca did not play much. Capablanca and Lasker did not participate in those tournaments where Alekhine triumphed. Botvinnik and Keres had not developed their strength yet, the older players were over the hill. Alekhine was definitely an outstanding World Champion, but the gap between him and the others can be explained rather by these reasons. I would not say he demonstrated anything different in those tournaments from his play before and during the match against Capablanca. He was playing at the same level. Of course, Alekhine enriched his play, became more experienced, but I would not say he was an innovator. Why did this gap not exist before the match and appear only after it? Quite frankly, I don’t think it had anything to do with chess. His match against Euwe proved this to some extent.

Max EuweEuwe

Interviewer – The Dutchman Max Euwe was the fifth World Champion. Some say he did not deserve to win the title, and that it was down to pure chance.

Kramnik – Euwe was a very good chess player. Botvinnik is said to have formed the basis of a comprehensive system of preparation but I think the credit belongs to Euwe. He realised how important the opening was and prepared it brilliantly. Moreover, he had a subtle feel for aspects of opening preparation. Despite working hard Alekhine often tried it on by employing obviously dubious openings. He was doing it even in very important games, which came as a surprise to me. It means that he either did not feel that the opening was dubious or hoped that it would work. Euwe prepared an opening fundamentally and rationally. Openings were always his strong point. He was always very good at openings.

Interviewer – Apart from this, he was the first to enlist the help of leading grandmasters. For instance, Flohr …

Kramnik – Euwe took a professional approach to chess. He was a versatile chess player that’s why he is difficult to describe and is underestimated. He was some sort of an “indefinable” player and his style is difficult to review. I have not grasped it to its full extent. It might have consisted of a combination of different elements plus nerves of steel, plus a healthy approach to life. He was a very sedate and well-balanced person. Those were the keys to his success and he fully deserved his World Championship title by defeating Alekhine.

Yes, Alekhine was a bit off form. But it is not true that he was in bad shape during the whole match. He was fighting fiercely, in the beginning he displayed brilliant play. So, we can’t say he was in bad shape when he started the match. At some point Euwe began to outplay Alekhine who then took to the bottle … Some other reasons prevailed: these might have been either psychological factors or something else. It was not a question of bad form. Euwe maintained the tension rather than “catching” his opponent in the openings. Capablanca primarily repelled Alekhine’s attacks in the openings. Alekhine was known as an encyclopaedic chess player whereas Euwe often succeeded in gaining an edge in the opening battles, both conceptually and in specific lines. For instance, it so happened that each of them engaged in the Slav Defence with both colours. Euwe won the battle.

I looked through the book written about their return match of 1937 and again saw an even encounter. Alekhine is considered to have easily regained the title. The rumour was that he lost the title because of his drinking habit, then gave up the booze and won, which actually has nothing to do with reality. First of all, Euwe had a positive score (3-1 in decisive games) against Alekhine in the period between their match and return-match. This means that although Alekhine broke his drinking habit almost immediately after the match, Euwe kept on beating him. The return also saw an even contest. In the first match it was Alekhine who collapsed while in the return the same thing happened to Euwe who lost several games in a row. Why did it happen? Euwe might not have wanted to remain World Champion, the title might have been a heavy psychological burden for him. Anyway, I think that it did not happen by pure chance. The return was not a piece of cake for Alekhine; this myth should be dispelled.

Mikhail_Botvinnik_1962Botvinnik

Interviewer – And now we have reached Botvinnik, the first World Champion you have actually met.

Kramnik – Botvinnik definitely represented a new era in chess. I would call him the first true professional. He was the first to realise that chess performance was not only dependent on chess skills. He developed comprehensive preparation for competitions which consisted of opening studies along with healthy sleep, daily routine and physical exercises. He was a pioneer in this field.

It is a bit funny for a modern chess player to read about the Alekhine-Euwe match: the games were being adjourned, one player had a drink, the other had a business meeting straight before the start of the game … Such things could not happen to Botvinnik.

Strange as it may seem, I think he was a pretty inconsistent chess player. His best games are of a very high level. However, sometimes he had failures. I don’t know what the reason was. I have the impression that he gave everything he had got in every game and was playing with all his strength. He seemed to have failed from time to time due to the colossal stress. Despite the fact that he was called an “iron-willed” man …

Interviewer – Did such failures also happen to Botvinnik in his youth or only in his mature age after long breaks in play?

Kramnik – I think such failures happened at any age. I am not referring to tournament breakdowns (however, they also took place) but to failures in individual games. And even when you look at his matches for the World Championship you see that in one-two, sometimes in three games, he collapsed. I have noticed it but have not found any explanation for it. I just wanted to draw your attention to this fact, which was somehow unnoticed by journalists. In any case, it is not that important in comparison with a huge number of outstanding games he played. Botvinnik grasped a lot of conceptual ideas in chess.

Interviewer – Did you ever hear the view that Botvinnik won games due to his character and strong will, although some of his opponents had greater chess talent?

Kramnik – I agree with this statement to some extent. On the other hand, talent can’t exist separately, without other elements. Talent is something barely perceptible. Some players don’t achieve outstanding results but they are considered to be talented. But I think that in chess like in any other activity, talent is just one of the components. It must not be more important than character. That’s why popular statements like “He is a gifted man but is not a success because of his sensitive nature” don’t work. I would agree that Capablanca had a greater purely chess talent than Botvinnik, while the latter managed to reach the heights in other elements, i.e. character, preparation, which is not so easy. He had genius in these areas. So, the above statements do not belittle Botvinnik’s merits and importance as a chess player because potential is one thing while its realization is quite another. In fact, Botvinnik’s chess career was the way of a genius, although he was not a genius, to my mind.

Interviewer – Did Botvinnik make a step forward in chess development compared to his predecessors?

Kramnik – He grasped a number of conceptual things. Criminal as it may sound, I don’t think he advanced chess, contributed anything absolutely new to the game. However, he made a great contribution to preparation. Again tastes differ: some people think preparation is a part of the game, others consider it a separate element. In my view, preparation is an integral part of the game. If we compare Botvinnik with Capablanca, Capablanca was a more gifted person, a magnificent chess player, whereas Botvinnik made a much greater contribution to chess.

Interviewer – What impression did personal meetings with Patriarch make on the young Vladimir Kramnik?

Kramnik – Very favourable. I understand that he was a controversial figure and his colleagues had a bone to pick with him. I have heard different opinions and don’t want to comment on them. I am not trying to avoid the subject but I did not live in his time and did not see these things with my own eyes. So, I can’t jump to any “profound” conclusions. I knew Botvinnik in his last years and he made a favourable impression on me.

I would like to mention one thing that seemed strange to me. I mean a certain discrepancy between his beliefs and his character. Botvinnik sincerely believed in Communist ideas. Moreover, it was clear that he spent much time thinking them over and believed in them. At the same time he was a very wise and intelligent person with the manners of a St. Petersburg Professor who had nothing to do with post-revolutionary Russia. It is a mystery to me how he managed to combine his Communist convictions with the nature of a true intellectual. This discrepancy impressed me. As a rule, such were the rules of the game that Soviet intellectuals took an opportunistic approach in paying tribute to the Communist ideas.

Of course, Botvinnik was very rigid. That was his strength. I think he must have been categorical by nature. But this quality must have been a disadvantage in his collaboration with other people, that’s why he often took issues with them.

SmyslovSmyslov

Interviewer – How would you describe the seventh World Champion, Vasily Smyslov?

Kramnik – How can I express it in the right way? … He is truth in chess! Smyslov plays correctly, truthfully and has a natural style. By the way, why do you think he lacks that aura of mystique like Tal or Capablanca? Because Smyslov is not an actor in chess, his play is neither artistic nor fascinating. But I am fond of his style. I would recommend a study of Smyslov’s games to children who want to know how to play chess because he plays the game how it should be played: his style is the closest to some sort of ‘virtual truth’ in chess. He always tried to make the strongest move in each position. He has surpassed many other of the World Champions in the number of strongest moves made. As a professional, this skill impresses me. I know that spectators are more interested in flaws … ups and downs. But from the professional standpoint, Smyslov has been underestimated.

He mastered all elements of play. Smyslov was a brilliant endgame specialist, all in all his play resembled a smooth flow, like a song. When you look at his games, you have that light feeling as if his hand is making the moves all by itself while the man is making no effort at all – just like he was drinking coffee or reading a newspaper! This has the feel of Mozart’s light touch! No stress, no effort, everything is simple yet brilliant. I like this feature of Smyslov and I am fond of his games.

Interviewer – Smyslov and Botvinnik played almost a hundred games against each other, including three World Championships. Did they produce high quality games in terms of modern standards?

Kramnik – They did, there was real quality about their games. Of course, they made mistakes since the matches were very long but the average level of their games was very high. Sometimes they blundered but I would not say this had a strong impact on the general assessment of the play. At the same time the average strength of each move was very high.

Interviewer – Diamond cut diamond – they were worthy opponents, weren’t they?

Kramnik – Yes, they were. Although they differed in their approach to chess, on the whole there it was an even contest. I feel a bit sorry that Smyslov did not hold the title for a longer period because, in my view, he really is an outstanding chessplayer. He played in the Challengers Final when he was 63! This indicates the highest class. Chess players who adopt an intensive approach normally can’t maintain their position at the highest level at that age. Smyslov could, and it was not because of his energy, drive or character – he had a deep understanding of chess. Botvinnik was a great player but in his late 50s he started to play worse, although he did hang on in for a long time. However the Smyslov phenomenon is second to none. He might not have held the title for a long time because he did not have a burning desire to do so. I think it was not that important to him. Under certain circumstances Smyslov could have held on to the title for about 15 years.

Interviewer – Did Smyslov play chess like his predecessors?

Kramnik – No, he played differently, he had his own brand of chess. He was a master of positional play and surpassed his predecessors in this area. He was also good at opening preparation and tactics but no more than that. Smyslov did not have incredible conceptual ideas but he was very accurate and carried out his ideas ‘millimetre by millimetre’. Probably, he was the first chess player to reach the highest level of accuracy. To a certain extent, Smyslov was the pioneer of this style, which was later brilliantly developed by Karpov, i.e. the gradual mounting of positional pressure based on the most accurate calculation of short lines.

tal_1960Tal

Kramnik – I hardly knew Tal but I was lucky to play a couple of games against him. In 1990 he took part in a strong open tournament in Moscow. I felt sorry for him because he looked awful. We did not meet over the board in the main tournament, but the organizers arranged for a blitz and 15-minute tournament on the day off.

Interviewer – And how did you get on?

Kramnik – We made a draw in the blitz. As for the 15-minute game I managed to win. Tal sacrificed a piece, then another one without any compensation; he enjoyed the game, played for fun and took it easy, that’s why the result did not have any significance. When he made an effort, Tal could still maintain a high level of play. Incidentally, he put in a good performance at blitz, we shared 2nd-3rd place. I was 15 at the time and not that strong but I had a quick mind. The blitz tournament had a pretty impressive pool: there were 12 players, including 10 grandmasters, one international master and myself – a FIDE master.

At one point in my game against Tal, my heart sank. In a difficult and approximately equal position we had about half a minute each. I made a move and realized that my opponent had a hidden tactical blow at his disposal. The flags were hanging and it was just our hands that were making the moves! And Tal immediately found that blow after which my position was hopeless. I can’t say I was impressed – I was aware that it was Tal, but a Tal who was suffering from a serious illness… Any other player would not have found this tactical blow even in a classical game. However, with the flags about to fall, the game ended in a draw by perpetual check.

Tal was a star, a real chess genius. As far as I am concerned he was not ambitious at all, he played primarily for fun and enjoyed the game. This attitude is totally unprofessional. But he was an incredibly gifted player and even with such an amateur approach, Tal managed to become a World Champion.

When I was a child I did not study a lot of his games. As I have already mentioned there were few chess books in the provincial town where I lived. When I grew up, I went through Tal’s games. I can say that he was a strong positional player. However, many people consider him just as a tactician. In fact, though he had an excellent tactical mind, at the same time he was a versatile chess player just like any professional of his strength. In the late 1970s – early 1980s he rode his second wave of success, playing in a disciplined and positional way, and won a lot of brilliant positional games.

Interviewer – That is considered to have been a result of his cooperation with Karpov.

Kramnik – I don’t think so. Of course, his cooperation with Karpov was helpful because it diverted his attention from all those other pleasures which he liked to indulge in besides chess. Instead, he was working on chess. But I don’t think his cooperation with Karpov was that crucial. Tal was quite simply an outstanding versatile chess player. Of course, his attitude to chess had an effect. If only he had had Botvinnik’s character, he would have been impossible to deal with…

Interviewer – However, a person can’t have it all – it’s one quality or another.

Kramnik – Yes, that’s right. There is one more point I would like to discuss: every chess player has his weak spots. A strong point somehow gives rise to a weak one. It is impossible to combine Botvinnik’s strongest points with Tal’s ones because they are mutually exclusive (in the chess sense). Tal’s talent, his approach to play, relaxed attitude and huge creative energy gave him a substantial advantage but also had its drawbacks. I think that such an attitude will not allow a person to hold the title for, let’s say, 15 years. It’s like a spectacular flash, a rising and falling star – such people may be incapable of living any another way. This kind of star is so brilliant that it is incapable of retaining its energy for a long time and will burn out.

It is difficult to talk about Tal because he was an unusual person as well as being a very fascinating player. Like a natural phenomenon. I am absolutely sure he would have been a success in any other field of endeavour. He had a quick and brilliant mind. If he had been an academic, he would have won a Nobel prize. He was an unworldly man. By the way, many people who knew him quite well said that he bore no relation to homo sapiens. He was like a man from another planet! That’s why he played “unidentifiable” chess. Analyzing his chess games is tantamount to discussing what God looks like.

220px-Tigran_Petrosian_World_Chess_ChampionPetrosian

Interviewer – Was the next World Champion a more down-to-earth man?

Kramnik – Yes, he was a down-to-earth person. Careful study of Petrosian’s games is required to form a clear impression of him. He was, so to speak, a very “secretive” player. We can call Petrosian the first defender with a capital D. He was the first person to demonstrate that it is possible to defend virtually every position. Petrosian contributed a defensive element to chess – an element that is being developed more and more today. He showed that chess contains an enormous number of resources, including defensive ones.

Petrosian was a very intensive chess player who was hard to understand. I don’t think he has been presented to the public in the correct way. He is one of the few chess players of whom I have failed to form a clear opinion after going through his games collection. There is something mysterious about Petrosian. He was a brilliant tactician and an excellent strategic player, although his positional understanding was not as good as Smyslov’s. However, many people consider him to have been a master of positional play. He was definitely a player who could cope with every kind of situation, but I don’t think that positional play was his cup of tea. Defence and a magnificent tactical vision were his strongest points – that’s why he was so good at defence. Only a brilliant tactician can succeed in defence, and he had perfect sight of all the tactical opportunities and nuances for his opponent. I would even say that attack, rather than defence, is a positional skill. You can attack mostly on the basis of general ideas, whereas in defence you have to be specific. Calculations of lines and verification of specific positional features are more important for defence than for attack.

Of course, I should mention Petrosian’s subtle sense of danger. To a certain extent, this skill goes hand in hand with proficiency at defence. Petrosian could feel danger. I also think he could be very unpredictable.

Interviewer – It looks like he didn’t made fast progress and reached his height when he was over 30.

Kramnik – As far as I understand he was a ‘smooth’ guy: steady, calm, well-balanced with a strong nervous system, a very sound disposition. And he progressed in that way: he achieved his goal without failures and without rushing.

borisspasskySpassky

Interviewer – And how would you describe Boris Spassky?

Kramnik – I would agree with the “official version”: he was the first really versatile player. I like his extensive and comprehensive play very much. I think he is a broad minded fellow who does not pay much attention to sundry odds and ends. Spassky’s play reminds me of Keres. But Spassky has more fantasy and imagination than Keres who, in my view, had some problems with fantasy.

Spassky is also a correct player, in this ‘classical’ aspect he is like Smyslov. But whereas Smyslov is a sedate player, Spassky has an attacking style. He combines the qualities of different chess players. Like Alekhine he values time. He is a very good strategic player. He might not have polished up his tactical proficiency and sometimes he miscalculated a bit but I think that Spassky spent a great deal of energy on every game and chess was a reflection of his character. His games are pleasant to watch: he uses the whole board. He manages to deal with everything, grabs space, turns on the pressure here and there… I have carefully studied the Fischer-Spassky match and can say that Spassky’s play was almost as good as Fischer’s.

Interviewer – What were his weak points then?

Kramnik – He made incredible one-move blunders in virtually every other lost game. I don’t understand what happened to him. It must have been Fischer’s energy and extreme pressure that was able to carry everything before it, even Spassky. But if we leave out those blunders the match would have been an even contest. Though it was considered almost a total mismatch it was in fact one of the few matches for the title where the score did not reflect the real situation. In the second half of the match Spassky was turning up the pressure while Fischer was running away in every game. In that match Spassky might have suffered from his negligence of those sundry odds and ends: he failed to calculate something, blundered somewhere, erred in a winning position or decided it was good enough anyway and gave up further calculations… And his strong point turned into a weak spot. Probably his laziness let him down. For instance, I have heard that Spassky did not spent much time on chess. He did not have too much professionalism.

Spassky was neither sufficiently disciplined nor ambitious. As far as he was concerned, I think there was not much difference between the World Championship and the Leningrad Championship. He took a similar approach to preparation. And he didn’t have much luck either because he found himself in the same era as Fischer, a man few World Champions could deal with!

Interviewer – What was your impression of Spassky when you met?

Kramnik – We talked a lot and even played for the same club. Once I stayed with him. He is a very decent, candid, wise and ingenuous man. I appreciate these traits very much. And his highest level of chess is obvious. When we meet we sometimes analyse different positions a little: he is very quick at understanding and always makes sensible proposals. Strange as it may seem I can’t say the same about Botvinnik. Such was my impression when I attended his school. Of course, Botvinnik’s suggestions were always very interesting but sometimes he offered something ‘dubious’. That certainly did not happen very often but it did happen. Spassky is something else, he is always to the point. Sometimes he does not calculate fully but he will grasp the correct direction of play in 15 seconds! Here is another remarkable episode. Three years ago we played in a tournament celebrating Korchnoi’s jubilee where Spassky, who was already over 60, defeated Short in a perfect game. Moreover, they had reached the kind of position that was Short’s forte and yet he was completely out of it!

Spassky might not have reached his full potential for a number of reasons. But, anyway, the games he played in his best years are of great importance.

Interviewer – So, Spassky was unlucky to be born in Fischer’s era!

Kramnik – Other players have suffered greater misfortune: they would have become World Champions if it were not for some genius who lived in their lifetime.

FischerFischer

Kramnik – What can I say about Fischer? I feel this man had to be the World Champion and nothing would stop him. It was a foregone conclusion. His career took a rather roundabout course but everything was already mapped out! I think that five years before he became World Champion, everyone was aware that the inevitable would happen. He was a real driving force! And Spassky got run over by that ‘machine’. I think that any other player would have lost to Fischer too. They were not much weaker, it was the will of fate – Fischer would have broken through any cordon.

Interviewer – Did Fischer dominate because of his energy and understanding?

Kramnik – At a certain moment he had everything: energy, drive, preparation, strong play, etc. as if all the rays were gathered together at one point! He had no weak spots at all – how can you handle such a person?! This happens to every outstanding player when everything clicks. As I see it, Fischer reached his height during the Candidates cycle and his match against Spassky.

Interviewer – Kasparov is said to have stated that Fischer was a pioneer of modern chess.

Kramnik – I don’t think so. Spassky also played up-to-date chess. Fischer discovered modern preparation in the opening. Unlike Botvinnik who realised the importance of preparation, Fischer gave it a modern slant: he set tasks for his opponent at every move with either colour and in every opening. Fischer kept his opponent busy from the very beginning, he started setting problems from the very first move! Later Kasparov improved this ‘high-tension’ style; and followed Fischer to some extent. Fischer was the first chess player to mount tension from the first till the last move without giving his opponent even the slightest break. He had a similar precept for both positional and tactical games: he tried to set as many tasks for his opponent as he could. He played very ‘vigorous’ chess.

Interviewer – And what happened to him? Did he burn himself out?

Kramnik – I don’t know. It is a pity Fischer gave up playing chess, his match against Karpov would have been very interesting. There is a point I would like to make. With the development of chess and higher level of play, chess players lose their individual handwriting and there are fewer players with a clear style. We are moving to a versatile style. I can’t say that Fischer had clear handwriting – he was a versatile player. In fact I would rather call it a cumulative style. In his better days he combined Smyslov’s accuracy with Spassky’s universalism and Alekhine’s energy… His rationalism was his only weak spot, he was not that good at irrational and unsound positions. Here Spassky prevailed. Fischer had a clear blueprint for his play. Spassky’s victory over him in the 11th game of the match was remarkable. He virtually tore Fischer apart in the Poisoned Pawn variation. It was not a matter of opening preparation, this kind of chess was simply difficult for Fischer. Of course, these are nuances, an attempt to find a weak link and demonstrate what kind of person he was. But Fischer admitted this weak spot himself and was trying to avoid those positions.

Crystal clear ideas were his strength. Fischer was perfect at the Ruy Lopez. It is difficult to create chaos on the board in this opening.

Anatoly_Karpov_1977Karpov

Interviewer – We can have a long argument about the possible outcome of the Fischer-Karpov match. What do you think, did Karpov have a chance?

Kramnik – He did. I think that Fischer had the better chances but Karpov had his trump card too. I am referring to Karpov’s preparation because Fischer was a ‘lone sailor’. He did not have any serious assistants and played risky openings. Karpov had his chances by setting opening problems for Fischer. I would like to mention that Geller had a positive score against Fischer. Geller was proficient at openings and adopted an intensive approach to theory, which was not easy for Fischer. As for level of play Fischer would have been superior to Karpov. However, if Karpov could have gained a real edge in the opening, the match would have seen an even contest.

Interviewer – Has Karpov followed the versatile pattern?

Kramnik – Of course he has. Additionally, there is something mysterious about his play, no one else could cope with things like he did. It is easier for me to talk about Karpov because his collection of games was my first chess book. I studied his work when I was a child, later I played quite a few games against him. He is a versatile chess player, a good tactician who brilliantly calculates lines and positionally very strong. He also has a distinctive feature. Funnily enough, he has effectively denied Steinitz’s pronouncement: if you have an advantage you must attack, otherwise, you will lose it. When having an edge, Karpov often marked time and still gained the advantage! I don’t know anyone else who could do that, it’s incredible. I was always impressed and delighted by this skill. When it looked like it was high time to start a decisive attack, Karpov played a3, h3, and his opponent’s position collapsed.

Karpov defeated me in Linares-94 where he scored 11 out of 13. I got into an inferior endgame. However, it did not seem awful. Then I made some appropriate moves and could not understand how I had managed to get into a losing position. Although I was already in the world top ten, I failed to understand it even after the game. This was one of the few games after which I felt like a complete idiot with a total lack of chess understanding! Such things happen very rarely to top level players. Usually you realise why you have lost. This moment defies description – there is something almost imperceptible about it and so characteristic of Karpov.

As regards other things, Karpov is a very strong universal player who is not so very different from the rest. But the above ‘know-how’ distinguishes him from the other highly rated chess players.

Interviewer – Does he have strong playing skills?

Kramnik – Yes, he is definitely a great player. His fighting skills are second to none. When I started playing in super tournaments, I was impressed with his ability to adapt to changed circumstances in a split second. For instance, you watch Karpov playing a game, he is under pressure and has been defending for six hours by strengthening his position. Owing to his brilliant calculations he defends tenaciously and is very difficult to break through. He appears to be making a draw. His opponent takes it a bit easy and Karpov equals the position. Any other player would agree to a draw here and would be happy that the torture was over. While Karpov starts to play for a win! It was easy for him to forget what had happened on the board up to the present, he did not think about the recent past. Karpov did not suffer from mood swings, he made an impression of a person who had just started playing. If he sees a slight chance, he tries to take an advantage of it.

Let’s remember Karpov’s victory over Korchnoi in their last game of the match in Bagio. Korchnoi started to ouplay Karpov at the end of the match. I don’t know why that happened, Karpov must have got tired. When Korchnoi seized an advantage, Karpov demonstrated a brilliant play! As if nothing had happened and the score 5:2 had not turned into 5:5, and there were no hard play after adjournment where he lost in a bit worse rook ending, Karpov played as if it were the first game of the match! Despite wild pressure, when his future was dependant on the outcome of the match, he was playing as if he were training in his kitchen in a relaxed way. Of course, he was an incredible fighter!

Interviewer – To add some “human qualities”, what were Karpov’s weak points?

Kramnik – I think he did not pay attention to strategy. As I have already told, he easily forgot about the things that had happened on the board. Probably, he did not have a sufficiently deep strategic thread of the play. Karpov is a chess player of a great number of short, two to three move combinations: he transferred his knight, seized the space, weakened a pawn . In my view, he was not a strategic player by nature. And like Fischer he could get confused when he saw chaos on the board. However, all this weak spots are largely symbolic.

Sometimes he must have been too self-confident. He was so sure that he would find a way out, if necessary, that he took a good much liberty. Karpov must have understood that his position was getting worse but was likely to think: “I will outplay him anyway”. He had a feeling that he would always get away with it. When he met Kasparov he let down. In their first match he got away with dubious situations while with every following match it was more and more difficult for him to deal with them. Possibly, he lacked strict approach. It could explain his dominance before Kasparov’s appearance. At first he did not need strictness, later it was difficult to re-train.

Interviewer – But Karpov must have also improved in his matches vs Kasparov?

Kramnik – Of course, Karpov also made a progress like any outstanding chess player he enriched his play. But Kasparov was improving at fantastic speed. Kasparov in 1984 and in 1985 was like two different players, the latter could have given a pawn and take back to the former. Kasparov’s capability of study was always his strong point. Karpov must also possess this quality but Kasparov surpassed him.

garry_kasparovKasparov

Interviewer – Can we say that Kasparov is a phenomenon in chess?

Kramnik – Yes, sure. It is always difficult to talk about Kasparov. First of all, we are in the same era, I have played a lot of games against him. Secondly, he is a chess player who does not seem to have weak spots. At least, I don’t know which weak point he had in his better days. Many books can be written about him.

He is an incredible workaholic; he works even harder than Fischer. Kasparov is a combination of lucky circumstances: a good coach in his childhood, convenient conditions for studies, an incredibly strong will.

As for his strong will, Kasparov could be compared to Botvinnik but he surpasses his teacher because he is much more flexible. As I have already said, Botvinnik’s rigidity was his strong point. At the same time it had its drawbacks. Though rigid, Kasparov is open to any changes. He is able to change his outlook on chess in six months. Kasparov absorbs things like a sponge; he soaks up all changes, everything he sees he processes quickly and makes it part of his arsenal. I think this is the main quality that makes Kasparov different from the other chess players.

Objectively, Karpov taught him a lot. Before the match Kasparov could not have understood all of Karpov’s merits. You are able to fully appreciate them only when you start playing against him. Karpov taught Kasparov a lot in their match of 1984. As we see from his following encounters, Kasparov has improved those aspects of play which were traditionally Karpov’s strong points.

Kasparov definitely has a great talent. There is nothing in chess he has been unable to deal with. The other world champions had something ‘missing’. I can’t say the same about Kasparov: he can do everything. If he wishes to play some type of positions brilliantly, he will do it. Nothing is impossible for him in chess.

However, it is also impossible to be perfect at everything in the same period of time. Kasparov has had weak points at every step of his career because one cannot concentrate on everything. But he is able to cover his vulnerable spots in two to three months. After that another weak point comes to light but you don’t know which one. It is very important to take advantage of his ‘quickly disappearing’ weak spots because you won’t find them later.

It is clear that in 1984 Kasparov had some problems with defence, he was a bit too impulsive or proactive. But in 1985 he demonstrated a quite different style of play. Kasparov realises what is going wrong at a certain moment and is able to put right his weak points. His capacity for study is second to none!

Interviewer – In 1995 when you helped Kasparov to prepare for his match against Anand, who was teaching whom?

Kramnik – Both. I hope I also have some capacity for study. It might not be as good as Kasparov’s, but I do have it. In principle, we were just working. Kasparov wanted to win the match and I helped him without any second thoughts. I did not try to learn anything from him. I think both of us gained something from that cooperation.