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Bobby Fischer

Robert James Fischer (March 9, 1943 – January 17, 2008) was an American chess grandmaster and the eleventh World Chess Champion. A chess prodigy, he won his first of a record eight US Championships at the age of 14. In 1964, he won with an 11–0 score, the only perfect score in the history of the tournament. Qualifying for the 1972 World Championship, Fischer swept matches with Mark Taimanov and Bent Larsen by 6–0 scores. After winning another qualifying match against Tigran Petrosian, Fischer won the title match against Boris Spassky of the USSR, in Reykjavík, Iceland. Publicized as a Cold War confrontation between the US and USSR, the match attracted more worldwide interest than any chess championship before or since.

Bobby Fischer
Fischer in 1972
Full nameRobert James Fischer
CountryUnited States
Born(1943-03-09)March 9, 1943
Chicago, Illinois, US
DiedJanuary 17, 2008(2008-01-17) (aged 64)
Reykjavík, Iceland
TitleGrandmaster (1958)
World Champion1972–1975
Peak rating2785 (July 1972)[1]
Peak rankingNo. 1 (July 1971)

In 1975, Fischer refused to defend his title when an agreement could not be reached with FIDE, chess's international governing body, over the match conditions. Consequently, the Soviet challenger Anatoly Karpov was named World Champion by default. Fischer subsequently disappeared from the public eye, though occasional reports of erratic behavior emerged. In 1992, he reemerged to win an unofficial rematch against Spassky. It was held in Yugoslavia, which was under a United Nations embargo at the time. His participation led to a conflict with the US government, which warned Fischer that his participation in the match would violate an executive order imposing US sanctions on Yugoslavia. The US government ultimately issued a warrant for his arrest. After that, Fischer lived as an émigré. In 2004, he was arrested in Japan and held for several months for using a passport that the US government had revoked. Eventually, he was granted Icelandic citizenship by a special act of the Icelandic parliament, allowing him to live there until his death in 2008.

Fischer made numerous lasting contributions to chess. His book My 60 Memorable Games, published in 1969, is regarded as essential reading in chess literature. In the 1990s, he patented a modified chess timing system that added a time increment after each move, now a standard practice in top tournament and match play. He also invented Fischer random chess, also known as Chess960, a chess variant in which the initial position of the pieces is randomized to one of 960 possible positions.

Fischer made numerous antisemitic statements, including Holocaust denial. His antisemitism was a major theme in his public and private remarks, and there has been widespread comment and speculation concerning his psychological condition based on his extreme views and eccentric behavior.

Early years

Bobby Fischer was born at Michael Reese Hospital in Chicago, Illinois, on March 9, 1943.[2] His mother, Regina Wender Fischer, was a US citizen,[3][4] born in Switzerland; her parents were Polish Jews.[5][6] Raised in St. Louis, Missouri,[2] Regina became a teacher, a registered nurse, and later a physician.[7]

After graduating from college in her teens, Regina traveled to Germany to visit her brother. It was there she met geneticist and future Nobel Prize winner Hermann Joseph Muller, who persuaded her to move to Moscow to study medicine. She enrolled at I.M. Sechenov First Moscow State Medical University, where she met Hans-Gerhardt Fischer, also known as Gerardo Liebscher,[8] a German biophysicist, whom she married in November 1933.[9] In 1938, Hans-Gerhardt and Regina had a daughter, Joan Fischer. The reemergence of antisemitism under Stalin prompted Regina to go with Joan to Paris, where Regina became an English teacher. The threat of a German invasion led her and Joan to go to the United States in 1939. Regina and Hans-Gerhardt had already separated in Moscow, although they did not officially divorce until 1945.[9]

At the time of her son's birth, Regina was homeless[10] and shuttled to different jobs and schools around the country to support her family. She engaged in political activism and raised both Bobby and Joan as a single parent.[11][12][13]

In 1949, Regina moved the family to Manhattan[14] and the following year to Brooklyn, New York City, where she studied for her master's degree in nursing and subsequently began working in that field.[12]

Paul Neményi as Fischer's father

In 2002, Peter Nicholas and Clea Benson of The Philadelphia Inquirer published an investigative report which stated that Bobby Fischer's biological father was actually Paul Neményi.[15][16][13]

Neményi, a Hungarian mathematician and physicist of Jewish heritage, specialized in continuum mechanics. His work applied geometrical solutions to fluid dynamics. Like Bobby, he was a child prodigy and won the Hungarian national mathematics competition at the age of 17.

Benson and Nicholas continued their work and gathered additional evidence in court records, personal interviews, and a summary of an FBI investigation written by J. Edgar Hoover, which confirmed their earlier conclusions.[13]

Throughout the 1950s, the FBI investigated Regina and her circle due to her supposed communist views and due to her time living in Moscow.[17] FBI files note that Hans-Gerhardt Fischer never entered the United States, while recording that Neményi took a keen interest in Fischer's upbringing.[15][18][19] Not only were Regina and Neményi reported to have had an affair in 1942, but Neményi made monthly child support payments to Regina and paid for Bobby's schooling until Paul Neményi's death in 1952.[20][13]

Chess beginnings

 
William Lombardy and Fischer analyzing, with Jack Collins looking on

In March 1949, six-year-old Bobby and his sister Joan learned how to play chess using the instructions from a set bought at a candy store.[21] When Joan lost interest in chess and Regina did not have time to play, Fischer was left to play many of his first games against himself.[22] When the family vacationed at Patchogue, Long Island, New York, that summer, Bobby found a book of old chess games and studied it intensely.[23]

In 1950, the family moved to Brooklyn, first to an apartment at the corner of Union Street and Franklin Avenue and later to a two-bedroom apartment at 560 Lincoln Place.[24] It was there that "Fischer soon became so engrossed in the game that Regina feared he was spending too much time alone."[12] As a result, on November 14, 1950, Regina sent a postcard to the Brooklyn Eagle newspaper, seeking to place an ad inquiring whether other children of Bobby's age might be interested in playing chess with him. The paper rejected her ad, because no one could figure out how to classify it, but forwarded her inquiry to Hermann Helms, the "Dean of American Chess", who told her that Master Max Pavey, former Scottish champion, would be giving a simultaneous exhibition on January 17, 1951.[25][26] Fischer played in the exhibition. Although he held on for 15 minutes, drawing a crowd of onlookers, he eventually lost to the chess master.[27]

One of the spectators was Brooklyn Chess Club President[28] Carmine Nigro, an American chess expert of near master strength and an instructor.[29] Nigro was so impressed with Fischer's play[28] that he introduced him to the club and began teaching him.[30][31][32] Fischer noted of his time with Nigro: "Mr. Nigro was possibly not the best player in the world, but he was a very good teacher. Meeting him was probably a decisive factor in my going ahead with chess."[33]

Nigro hosted Fischer's first chess tournament at his home in 1952.[34] In the summer of 1955, Fischer, then 12 years old, joined the Manhattan Chess Club.[35][36] Fischer's relationship with Nigro lasted until 1956, when Nigro moved away.[37][38]

The Hawthorne Chess Club

In June 1956, Fischer began attending the Hawthorne Chess Club, based in master John "Jack" W. Collins's home.[39] Collins taught chess to children, and has been described as Fischer's teacher,[40][41] but Collins himself suggested that he did not actually teach Fischer,[42] and the relationship might be more accurately described as one of mentorship.[43]

Fischer played thousands of blitz and offhand games with Collins and other strong players, studied the books in Collins' large chess library, and ate almost as many dinners at Collins' home as his own.[44][45][46]

Young champion

 
Fischer in Cuba, March 1956

In March 1956, the Log Cabin Chess Club of West Orange, New Jersey (based in the home of the club's eccentric multi-millionaire founder and patron Elliott Forry Laucks), took Fischer on a tour to Cuba, where he gave a 12-board simultaneous exhibition at Havana's Capablanca Chess Club, winning ten games and drawing two.[47][48] On this tour the club played a series of matches against other clubs. Fischer played second board, behind International Master Norman Whitaker. Whitaker and Fischer were the club's leading scorers, each scoring 5½ points out of 7 games.[49]

Fischer experienced a "meteoric rise" in his playing strength during 1956.[50] Fischer's first real tournament success occurred in July 1956, when he won the US Junior Chess Championship in Philadelphia. He scored 8½/10 to become the youngest-ever Junior Champion at age 13,[51][52] a record that still stands. At the 1956 US Open Chess Championship in Oklahoma City, he scored 8½/12 to tie for 4th–8th places, with Arthur Bisguier winning.[53] In the first Canadian Open Chess Championship at Montreal 1956, he scored 7/10 to tie for 8th–12th places, with Larry Evans winning.[54] In November, Fischer played in the 1956 Eastern States Open Championship in Washington, D.C., tying for second with William Lombardy, Nicholas Rossolimo, and Arthur Feuerstein, with Hans Berliner taking first by a half-point.[55]

Fischer accepted an invitation to play in the Third Lessing J. Rosenwald Trophy Tournament in New York City (1956), a premier tournament limited to the 12 players considered the best in the US.[56] Playing against top opposition, the 13-year-old Fischer could only score 4½/11, tying for 8th–9th place.[57] Yet he won the brilliancy prize[58] for his game against International Master Donald Byrne,[56] in which Fischer sacrificed his queen to unleash an unstoppable attack. Hans Kmoch called it "The Game of the Century",[59] writing: "The following game, a stunning masterpiece of combination play performed by a boy of 13 against a formidable opponent, matches the finest on record in the history of chess prodigies."[60][61] According to Frank Brady, "'The Game of the Century' has been talked about, analyzed, and admired for more than fifty years, and it will probably be a part of the canon of chess for many years to come."[62] "In reflecting on his game a while after it occurred, Bobby was refreshingly modest: 'I just made the moves I thought were best. I was just lucky.'"[63]

In 1957, Fischer played a two-game match against former world champion Max Euwe at New York, losing ½–1½.[64][65][66] When the US Chess Federation published its rating list in May, Fischer had the rank of Master, the youngest player to earn that title up to that point.[65] In July, he successfully defended his US Junior title, scoring 8½/9 at San Francisco.[67] In August, he scored 10/12 at the US Open Chess Championship in Cleveland, winning on tie-breaking points over Arthur Bisguier.[68][69] This made Fischer the youngest ever US Open Champion.[70][71] He won the New Jersey Open Championship, scoring 6½/7.[72] He then defeated the young Filipino master Rodolfo Tan Cardoso 6–2 in a New York match sponsored by Pepsi-Cola.[73][74]

Wins first US title

Based on Fischer's rating and strong results, the USCF invited him to play in the 1957/58 US Championship.[75] The tournament included six-time US champion Samuel Reshevsky, defending US champion Arthur Bisguier, and William Lombardy, who in August had won the World Junior Championship.[76] Bisguier predicted that Fischer would "finish slightly over the center mark".[76][77] Despite all the predictions to the contrary, Fischer scored eight wins and five draws to win the tournament by a one-point margin, with 10½/13.[78][79] Still two months shy of his 15th birthday, Fischer became the youngest ever US Champion.[80] Since the championship that year was also the US Zonal Championship, Fischer's victory earned him the title of International Master.[81][82] Fischer's victory in the US Championship qualified him to participate in the 1958 Portorož Interzonal, the next step toward challenging the World Champion.[73]

Grandmaster, candidate, and author

In 1957, Fischer wanted to go to Moscow. At his pleading, "Regina wrote directly to the Soviet leader, Nikita Khrushchev, requesting an invitation for Fischer to participate in the 6th World Youth and Student Festival of 1957. The reply—affirmative—came too late for him to go."[83] Regina did not have the money to pay the airfare, but in 1958, Fischer was invited onto the game show I've Got a Secret, where, thanks to Regina's efforts, the producers of the show arranged two round-trip tickets to the Soviet Union, for Bobby and his sister Joan.[84][85]

Once in Russia, Fischer was invited by the Soviet Union to Moscow,[86] where International Master Lev Abramov would serve as a guide to Bobby and his sister, Joan.[87] Upon arrival, Fischer immediately demanded that he be taken to the Moscow Central Chess Club,[88] where he played speed chess with "two young Soviet masters", Evgeni Vasiukov and Alexander Nikitin,[89] winning every game.[88] Chess author V. I. Linder writes about the impression Fischer gave grandmaster (GM) Vladimir Alatortsev when he played blitz against the Soviet masters:

Back in 1958, in the Central Chess Club, Vladimir Alatortsev saw a tall, angular 15-year-old youth, who in blitz games, crushed almost everyone who crossed his path… Alatortsev was no exception, losing all three games. He was astonished by the young American Robert Fischer's play, his fantastic self-confidence, amazing chess erudition, and simply brilliant play! Vladimir said in admiration to his wife on arriving home: "This is the future world champion!"[90]

Fischer demanded to play against Mikhail Botvinnik, the reigning World Champion. When told that this was impossible, Fischer asked to play Paul Keres. "Finally, Tigran Petrosian was, on a semi-official basis, summoned to the club …" where he played speed games with Fischer, winning the majority.[91] "When Bobby discovered that he wasn't going to play any formal games … he went into a not-so-silent rage",[92] saying he was fed up "with these Russian pigs,"[93] which angered the Soviets who saw Fischer as their honored guest. It was then that the Yugoslavian chess officials offered to take in Fischer and Joan as early guests to the Interzonal. Fischer took them up on the offer, arriving in Yugoslavia to play two short training matches against masters Dragoljub Janošević and Milan Matulović.[94] Fischer drew both games against Janošević and then defeated Matulović in Belgrade by 2½–1½.[95]

At Portorož, Fischer was accompanied by Lombardy.[96][97] The top six finishers in the Interzonal would qualify for the Candidates Tournament.[98] Most observers doubted that a 15-year-old with no international experience could finish among the six qualifiers at the Interzonal, but Fischer told journalist Miro Radoicic, "I can draw with the grandmasters, and there are half-a-dozen patzers in the tournament I reckon to beat."[99][a] Despite some bumps in the road and a problematic start, Fischer succeeded in his plan: after a strong finish, he ended up with 12/20 (+6−2=12) to tie for 5th–6th.[101] The Soviet GM Yuri Averbakh observed,

In the struggle at the board this youth, almost still a child, showed himself to be a full-fledged fighter, demonstrating amazing composure, precise calculation and devilish resourcefulness. I was especially struck not even by his extensive opening knowledge, but his striving everywhere to seek new paths. In Fischer's play an enormous talent was noticeable, and in addition one sensed an enormous amount of work on the study of chess.[102]

Soviet GM David Bronstein said of Fischer's time in Portorož: "It was interesting for me to observe Fischer, but for a long time I couldn't understand why this 15-year-old boy played chess so well."[103] Fischer became the youngest person ever to qualify for the Candidates and the youngest ever grandmaster at 15 years, 6 months, 1 day.[b] "By then everyone knew we had a genius on our hands."[105]

Before the Candidates' Tournament, Fischer won the 1958/59 US Championship (scoring 8½/11).[106] He tied for third (with Borislav Ivkov) in Mar del Plata (scoring 10/14), a half-point behind Luděk Pachman and Miguel Najdorf.[107] He tied for 4th–6th at Santiago (scoring 7½/12) behind Ivkov, Pachman, and Herman Pilnik.[108][109] At the Zürich International Tournament, spring 1959, Fischer finished a point behind future world champion Mikhail Tal and a half-point behind Yugoslavian GM Svetozar Gligorić.[110][111][112]

Although Fischer had ended his formal education at age 16, dropping out of Erasmus Hall High School in Brooklyn, he subsequently taught himself several foreign languages so he could read foreign chess periodicals.[113] According to Latvian chess master Alexander Koblencs, even he and Tal could not match the commitment that Fischer had made to chess. Recalling a conversation from the tournament:

"Tell me, Bobby," Tal continued, "what do you think of the playing style of Larissa Volpert?" "She's too cautious. But you have another girl, Dmitrieva. Her games do appeal to me!" Here we were left literally open-mouthed in astonishment. Misha and I have looked at thousands of games, but it never occurred to us to study our women players' games. How could we find the time for this?! Yet Bobby, it turns out, had found the time![114]

Until late 1959, Fischer "had dressed atrociously for a champion, appearing at the most august and distinguished national and international events in sweaters and corduroys."[115] Now, encouraged by Pal Benko to dress more smartly, Fischer "began buying suits from all over the world, hand-tailored and made to order."[116][117] He told journalist Ralph Ginzburg that he had 17 hand-tailored suits and that all of his shirts and shoes were handmade.[118]

At the age of 16, Fischer finished equal fifth out of eight at the 1959 Candidates Tournament in Bled/Zagreb/Belgrade, Yugoslavia,[119] scoring 12½/28. He was outclassed by tournament winner Tal, who won all four of their individual games.[120] That year, Fischer released his first book of collected games: Bobby Fischer's Games of Chess, published by Simon & Schuster.[121]

Drops out of school

Fischer's interest in chess became more important than schoolwork, to the point that "by the time he reached the fourth grade, he'd been in and out of six schools."[122] In 1952, Regina got Bobby a scholarship (based on his chess talent and "astronomically high IQ") to Brooklyn Community Woodward.[123] Fischer later attended Erasmus Hall High School at the same time as Barbra Streisand and Neil Diamond.[124][125] In 1959, its student council awarded him a gold medal for his chess achievements.[126][127] The same year, Fischer dropped out of high school when he turned 16, the earliest he could legally do so.[128][129] He later explained to Ralph Ginzburg, "You don't learn anything in school."[130][131]

When Fischer was 16, his mother moved out of their apartment to pursue medical training. Her friend Joan Rodker, who had met Regina when the two were "idealistic communists" living in Moscow in the 1930s, believes that Fischer resented his mother for being mostly absent, a communist activist, and an admirer of the Soviet Union, and that this led to his hatred for the Soviets. In letters to Rodker, Fischer's mother stated her desire to pursue her own "obsession" of training in medicine and wrote that her son would have to live in their Brooklyn apartment without her: "It sounds terrible to leave a 16-year-old to his own devices, but he is probably happier that way".[4] The apartment was on the edge of Bedford-Stuyvesant, a neighborhood that had one of the highest homicide and general crime rates in New York City.[132] Despite the alienation from her son, Regina, in 1960, protested the practices of the American Chess Foundation[133] and staged a five-hour protest in front of the White House, urging President Dwight D. Eisenhower to send an American team to that year's chess Olympiad (set for Leipzig, East Germany, behind the Iron Curtain) and to help support the team financially.[16]

US Championships

Fischer played in eight US Championships, winning all of them,[134][135] by at least a one-point margin.[136] His results were:[134][137][138]

US Champ. Score Place Margin of victory Percentage Age
1957/58 10½/13 (+8−0=5)[139] First 1 point 81% 14
1958/59 8½/11 (+6−0=5)[140] First 1 point 77% 15
1959/60 9/11 (+7−0=4)[141] First 1 point 82% 16
1960/61 9/11 (+7−0=4)[142] First 2 points 82% 17
1962/63 8/11 (+6−1=4)[143] First 1 point 73% 19
1963/64 11/11 (+11−0=0)[144] First 3½ points 100% 20
1965[145] 8½/11 (+8−2=1)[146] First 1 point 77% 22
1966/67 9½/11 (+8−0=3)[147] First 2 points 86% 23

Fischer missed the 1961/62 Championship (he was preparing for the 1962 Interzonal), and there was no 1964/65 event.[148] In his eight US Chess Championships, Fischer lost only three games; to Edmar Mednis in the 1962/63 event, and in consecutive rounds to Samuel Reshevsky, and Robert Byrne in the 1965 championship, culminating in a total score of 74/90 (61 wins, 26 draws, 3 losses).[149]

Olympiads

 
Fischer at 17 playing 23-year-old World Champion Mikhail Tal in Leipzig, East Germany

Fischer refused to play in the 1958 Munich Olympiad when his demand to play first board ahead of Samuel Reshevsky was rejected.[150] Some sources claim that 15-year-old Fischer was unable to arrange leave from attending high school.[151] Fischer later represented the United States on first board at four Men's Chess Olympiads, winning two individual Silver and one individual Bronze medals:[152]

Olympiad Individual result Percentage US team result Percentage[153]
Leipzig 1960 13/18[154] (Bronze) 72.2% Silver 72.5%
Varna 1962 11/17[155] (Eighth) 64.7% Fourth 68.1%
Havana 1966 15/17[156] (Silver) 88.2% Silver 68.4%
Siegen 1970 10/13[157] (Silver) 76.9% Fourth 67.8%

Out of four Men's Chess Olympiads, Fischer scored +40−7=18, for 49/65: 75.4%.[158][159] In 1966, Fischer narrowly missed the individual gold medal, scoring 88.23% to World Champion Tigran Petrosian's 88.46%. He played four games more than Petrosian, faced stiffer opposition,[160] and would have won the gold if he had accepted Florin Gheorghiu's draw offer, rather than declining it and suffering his only loss.[161]

At the 1962 Varna Olympiad, Fischer predicted that he would defeat Argentinian GM Miguel Najdorf in 25 moves. Fischer actually did it in 24, becoming the only player to beat Najdorf in the tournament.[162] Najdorf lost the game while employing the very opening variation named after him: the Sicilian Najdorf.[163]

Fischer had planned to play for the US at the 1968 Lugano Olympiad, but backed out when he saw the poor playing conditions.[164] Both former world champion Tigran Petrosian and Belgian-American International Master George Koltanowski, the leader of the American team that year, felt that Fischer was justified in not participating in the Olympiad.[165] According to Lombardy, Fischer's non-participation was due to Reshevsky's refusal to yield first board.[166]

In 1974, Fischer was willing to play the 21st Chess Olympiad in Nice, France, but FIDE rejected his demand to play in a separate room with only Fischer, his opponent, and spectators.[167]

1960–61

In 1960, Fischer tied for first place with Soviet star Boris Spassky at the strong Mar del Plata Tournament in Argentina, winning by a two-point margin, scoring 13½/15 (+13−1=1),[168][169] ahead of David Bronstein.[170] Fischer lost only to Spassky; this was the start of their lifelong friendship and rivalry.[171]

Fischer experienced a rare failure in his competitive career[172] at the Buenos Aires Tournament (1960), finishing with 8½/19 (+3−5=11), far behind winners Viktor Korchnoi and Samuel Reshevsky with 13/19.[173] According to Larry Evans, Fischer's first sexual experience was with a girl to whom Evans introduced him during the tournament.[174][175] Pal Benko said that Fischer did horribly in the tournament "because he got caught up in women and sex. Afterwards, Fischer said he'd never mix women and chess together, and kept the promise."[176] Fischer concluded 1960 by winning a small tournament in Reykjavík with 4½/5,[177] and defeating Klaus Darga in an exhibition game in West Berlin.[178]

In 1961, Fischer started a 16-game match with Reshevsky, split between New York and Los Angeles.[179] Reshevsky, 32 years Fischer's senior, was considered the favorite since he had far more match experience and had never lost a set match. After 11 games and a tie score (two wins apiece with seven draws), the match ended prematurely due to a scheduling dispute between Fischer and match organizer and sponsor Jacqueline Piatigorsky. Fischer forfeited 2 games, and even though the score was now 7½ to 5½, with 8½ required to win, Reshevsky was declared the winner, by default, and received the winner's share of the prize fund.[180]

Fischer was second in a super-class field, behind only former world champion Tal, at Bled, 1961.[181] Yet, Fischer defeated Tal head-to-head for the first time in their individual game, scored 3½/4 against the Soviet contingent, and finished as the only unbeaten player, with 13½/19 (+8−0=11).[182][183]

1962: success, setback, accusations of collusion

Fischer won the 1962 Stockholm Interzonal by a 2½-point margin,[184] going undefeated, with 17½/22 (+13−0=9).[185][186] He was the first non-Soviet player to win an Interzonal since FIDE instituted the tournament in 1948.[187] Russian GM Alexander Kotov said of Fischer:[188]

I have discussed Fischer's play with Max Euwe and Gideon Stahlberg. All of us, experienced 'tournament old-timers', were surprised by Fischer's endgame expertise. When a young player is good at attacking or at combinations, this is understandable, but a faultless endgame technique at the age of 19 is something rare. I can recall only one other player who at that age was equally skillful at endgames – Vasily Smyslov.

Fischer's victory made him a favorite for the Candidates Tournament in Curaçao.[189][190] Yet, despite his result in the Interzonal, Fischer only finished fourth out of eight with 14/27 (+8−7=12),[191] far behind Tigran Petrosian (17½/27), Efim Geller, and Paul Keres (both 17/27).[192] Tal fell very ill during the tournament, and had to withdraw before completion. Fischer, a friend of Tal's, was the only contestant who visited him in the hospital.[193]

Accuses Soviets of collusion

Following his failure in the 1962 Candidates,[c] Fischer asserted in a Sports Illustrated article,[195] that three of the five Soviet players (Tigran Petrosian, Paul Keres, and Efim Geller) had a prearranged agreement to quickly draw their games against each other in order to conserve their energy for playing against Fischer. It is generally thought that this accusation is correct.[196][197] Fischer stated that he would never again participate in a Candidates' tournament, since the format, combined with the alleged collusion, made it impossible for a non-Soviet player to win. Following Fischer's article, FIDE, in late 1962, voted to implement a radical reform of the playoff system, replacing the Candidates' tournament with a format of one-on-one knockout matches—the format that Fischer would dominate in 1971.[197][198]

Fischer defeated Bent Larsen in a summer 1962 exhibition game in Copenhagen for Danish TV. Later that year, Fischer beat Bogdan Śliwa in a team match against Poland in Warsaw.[199]

In the 1962/63 US Championship, Fischer lost to Edmar Mednis in round one. It was his first loss ever in a US Championship. Bisguier was in excellent form, and Fischer caught up to him only at the end. Tied at 7–3, the two met in the final round. Bisguier stood well in the middlegame, but blundered, handing Fischer his fifth consecutive US championship.[200]

Semi-retirement in the mid-1960s

Influenced by ill will over the aborted 1961 match against Reshevsky, Fischer declined an invitation to play in the 1963 Piatigorsky Cup tournament in Los Angeles, which had a world-class field.[200] He instead played in the Western Open in Bay City, Michigan, which he won with 7½/8.[201][202] In August–September 1963, Fischer won the New York State Championship at Poughkeepsie, with 7/7, his first perfect score,[203] ahead of Arthur Bisguier and James Sherwin.[204]

In the 1963/64 US Championship, Fischer achieved his second perfect score, this time against the top-ranked chess players in the country.[144][200] This result brought Fischer heightened fame, including a profile in Life magazine.[205] Sports Illustrated diagrammed each of the 11 games in its article, "The Amazing Victory Streak of Bobby Fischer".[206] Such extensive chess coverage was groundbreaking for the top American sports magazine. His 11–0 win in the 1963/64 Championship is the only perfect score in the history of the tournament,[207] and one of about ten perfect scores in high-level chess tournaments ever.[208][209][210] David Hooper and Kenneth Whyld called it "the most remarkable achievement of this kind".[208] Fischer recalls:[211] "Motivated by my lopsided result (11–0!), Dr. [Hans] Kmoch congratulated [Larry] Evans (the runner up) on 'winning' the tournament… and then he congratulated me on 'winning the exhibition'."

Fischer's 21-move victory against Robert Byrne won the brilliancy prize for the tournament. Byrne wrote:

The culminating combination is of such depth that, even at the very moment at which I resigned, both grandmasters who were commenting on the play for the spectators in a separate room believed I had a won game![212]

International Master Anthony Saidy recalled his last round encounter with the undefeated Fischer:[213]

Going into the final game I certainly did not expect to upset Fischer. I hardly knew the opening but played simply, and he went along with the scenario, opting for a N-v-B [i.e., Knight vs. Bishop] endgame with a minimal edge. In the corridor, Evans said to me, "Good. Show him we're not all children."

At adjournment, Saidy saw a way to force a draw, yet he had already "sealed a different, wrong move", and lost.[213] "Chess publications around the world wrote of the unparalleled achievement. Only Bent Larsen, always a Fischer detractor, was unimpressed: 'Fischer was playing against children.'"[214]

Fischer, eligible as US Champion, decided against his participation in the 1964 Amsterdam Interzonal, taking himself out of the 1966 World Championship cycle,[215] even after FIDE changed the format of the eight-player Candidates Tournament from a round-robin to a series of knockout matches, which eliminated the possibility of collusion.[205] Instead, Fischer embarked on a tour of the United States and Canada from February through May, playing a simultaneous exhibition, and giving a lecture in each of more than 40 cities.[216] He had a 94% winning percentage over more than 2,000 games.[216] Fischer declined an invitation to play for the US in the 1964 Olympiad in Tel Aviv.[217]

Successful return

 
Fischer in 1971

Fischer wanted to play in the Capablanca Memorial Tournament in Havana in August and September 1965.[218] Since the State Department refused to endorse Fischer's passport as valid for visiting Cuba,[219] he proposed, and the tournament officials and players accepted, a unique arrangement: Fischer played his moves from a room at the Marshall Chess Club, which were then transmitted by teleprinter to Cuba.[220][221][222][223] Luděk Pachman observed that Fischer "was handicapped by the longer playing session resulting from the time wasted in transmitting the moves, and that is one reason why he lost to three of his chief rivals."[224] The tournament was an "ordeal" for Fischer, who had to endure eight-hour and sometimes even twelve-hour playing sessions.[225] Despite the handicap, Fischer tied for second through fourth places, with 15/21 (+12−3=6),[226] behind former world champion Vasily Smyslov, whom Fischer defeated in their individual game.[224] The tournament received extensive media coverage.[227][219]

In December, Fischer won his seventh US Championship (1965), with the score of 8½/11 (+8−2=1),[228] despite losing to Robert Byrne and Reshevsky in the eighth and ninth rounds.[229][230] Fischer also reconciled with Mrs. Piatigorsky, accepting an invitation to the very strong second Piatigorsky Cup (1966) tournament in Santa Monica. Fischer began disastrously and after eight rounds was tied for last with 3/8. He then staged a strong comeback, scoring 7/8 in the next eight rounds. In the end, World Chess Championship finalist Boris Spassky edged him out by a half point, scoring 11½/18 to Fischer's 11/18 (+7−3=8).[231][232]

Now aged 23, Fischer would win every match or tournament he completed for the rest of his life.[233]

Fischer won the US Championship (1966/67) for the eighth and final time, ceding only three draws (+8−0=3).[234][235] In March–April and August–September, Fischer won strong tournaments at Monte Carlo, with 7/9 (+6−1=2),[236] and Skopje, with 13½/17 (+12−2=3).[237][238] In the Philippines, Fischer played nine exhibition games against master opponents, scoring 8½/9.[239]

Withdrawal while leading Interzonal

Fischer's win in the 1966/67 US Championship qualified him for the next World Championship cycle.[228]

At the 1967 Interzonal, held at Sousse, Tunisia, Fischer scored 8½ points in the first 10 games, to lead the field. His observance of the Worldwide Church of God's seventh-day Sabbath was honored by the organizers but deprived Fischer of several rest days, which led to a scheduling dispute,[240] causing Fischer to forfeit two games in protest and later withdraw, eliminating himself from the 1969 World Championship cycle.[241] Communications difficulties with the highly inexperienced local organizers were also a significant factor since Fischer knew little French and the organizers had very limited English. No one in Tunisian chess had previous experience running an event of this stature.[242]

Since Fischer had completed fewer than half of his scheduled games, all of his results were annulled, meaning players who had played Fischer had those games cancelled, and the scores nullified from the official tournament record.[198]

Second semi-retirement

In 1968, Fischer won tournaments at Netanya, with 11½/13 (+10−0=3),[243] and Vinkovci, with 11/13 (+9−0=4),[244] by large margins.[245] Fischer then stopped playing for the next 18 months, except for a win against Anthony Saidy in a 1969 New York Metropolitan League team match.[246][247] That year, Fischer (assisted by GM Larry Evans) released his second book of collected games: My 60 Memorable Games, published by Simon & Schuster.[248] The book "was an immediate success".[249]

1969–1972: Road to World Champion

In 1970, Fischer began a new effort to become World Champion. His dramatic march toward the title made him a household name and made chess front-page news for a time. He won the title in 1972, but forfeited it three years later.

Road to the World Championship

 
Fischer's scoresheet from his round 3 game against Miguel Najdorf in the 1970 Chess Olympiad in Siegen, Germany

The 1969 US Championship was also a zonal qualifier, with the top three finishers advancing to the Interzonal. Fischer, however, had sat out the US Championship because of disagreements about the tournament's format and prize fund. Benko, one of the three qualifiers, agreed to give up his spot in the Interzonal to give Fischer another shot at the World Championship; Lombardy, who would have been "next in line" after Benko, did the same.[250][251][252][253][254][255]

In 1970 and 1971, Fischer "dominated his contemporaries to an extent never seen before or since".[256]

Before the Interzonal, in March and April 1970, the world's best players competed in the USSR vs. Rest of the World match in Belgrade, Yugoslavia, often referred to as "the Match of the Century". There was much surprise when Fischer decided to participate.[257]

With Evans as his second,[258] Fischer flew to Belgrade[259] with the intention of playing first board for the rest of the world.[260] Danish GM Bent Larsen, however, due to his recent tournament victories, demanded to play first board instead of Fischer, even though Fischer had the higher Elo rating.[260][261] To the surprise of everyone, Fischer agreed.[262][263] Although the USSR team eked out a 20½–19½ victory, "On the top four boards, the Soviets managed to win only one game out of a possible sixteen. Bobby Fischer was the high scorer for his team, with a 3–1 score against Petrosian (two wins and two draws)."[264] "Fischer left no doubt in anyone's mind that he had put his temporary break from the tournament circuit to good use. Petrosian was almost unrecognizable in the first two games, and by the time he had collected himself, although pressing his opponent, he could do no more than draw the last two games of the four-game set".[260]

After the USSR versus the Rest of the World Match, the unofficial World Championship of Lightning Chess (5-minute games) was held at Herceg Novi. "[The Russians] figured on teaching Fischer a lesson and on bringing him down a peg or two".[265] Petrosian and Tal were considered the favorites,[266] but Fischer overwhelmed the super-class field with 19/22 (+17−1=4), far ahead of Tal (14½), Korchnoi (14), Petrosian (13½), and Bronstein (13).[266][267] Fischer lost only one game (to Korchnoi, who was also the only player to achieve an even score against him in the double round robin tournament).[266][268] Fischer "crushed such blitz kings as Tal, Petrosian and Vasily Smyslov by a clean score".[269] Tal marveled that, "During the entire tournament he didn't leave a single pawn en prise!", while the other players "blundered knights and bishops galore".[269][270] For Lombardy, who had played many blitz games with Fischer,[271] Fischer's 4½-point margin of victory "came as a pleasant surprise".[272]

 
Fischer in Belgrade for the USSR vs. Rest of the World match in 1970

In April–May 1970, Fischer won at Rovinj/Zagreb with 13/17 (+10−1=6), by a two-point margin, ahead of Gligorić, Hort, Korchnoi, Smyslov, and Petrosian.[273][274] In July–August, Fischer crushed the mostly grandmaster field at Buenos Aires, winning by a 3½-point margin, scoring 15/17 (+13−0=4).[275] Fischer then played first board for the US Team in the 19th Chess Olympiad in Siegen, where he won an individual Silver medal, scoring 10/13 (+8−1=4),[157] with his only loss being to World Champion Boris Spassky.[276] Right after the Olympiad, Fischer defeated Ulf Andersson in an exhibition game for the Swedish newspaper Expressen.[277] Fischer had taken his game to a new level.[278]

Fischer won the Interzonal (held in Palma de Mallorca in November and December 1970) with 18½/23 (+15−1=7),[279] far ahead of Larsen, Efim Geller, and Robert Hübner, with 15/23.[280][281] Fischer finished the tournament with seven consecutive wins.[282][283] Setting aside the Sousse Interzonal (which Fischer withdrew from while leading), Fischer's victory gave him a string of eight consecutive first prizes in tournaments.[284] Former world champion Mikhail Botvinnik was not, however, impressed by Fischer's results, stating: "Fischer has been declared a genius. I do not agree with this… In order to rightly be declared a genius in chess, you have to defeat equal opponents by a big margin. As yet he has not done this".[285] Despite Botvinnik's remarks, "Fischer began a miraculous year in the history of chess".[286]

In the 1971 Candidates matches, Fischer was set to play against Soviet grandmaster and concert pianist Mark Taimanov in the quarter-finals. The match began in mid-May in Vancouver, British Columbia, Canada.[287] Fischer was generally favored to win.[287][288] Taimanov had reason to be confident. He was backed by the firm guidance of Botvinnik, who "had thoroughly analysed Fischer's record and put together a 'dossier' on him", from when he was in talks to play Fischer in a match "a couple of years earlier".[289] After Fischer defeated Taimanov in the second game of the match, Taimanov asked Fischer how he managed to come up with the move 12. N1c3, to which Fischer replied "that the idea was not his—he had come across it in the monograph by the Soviet master Alexander Nikitin in a footnote".[290] Taimanov said of this: "It is staggering that I, an expert on the Sicilian, should have missed this theoretically significant idea by my compatriot, while Fischer had uncovered it in a book in a foreign language!"[291] With the score at 4–0, in Fischer's favor, the fifth game adjournment was a sight to behold.[292] Schonberg explains the scene:[265]

Taimanov came to Vancouver with two seconds, both grandmasters. Fischer was alone. He thought that the sight of Taimanov and his seconds was the funniest thing he had ever seen. There Taimanov and his seconds would sit, six hands flying, pocket sets waving in the air, while variations were being spouted all over the place. And there sat Taimanov with a confused look on his face. Just before resuming play [in the fifth game] the seconds were giving Taimanov some last-minute advice. When poor Taimanov entered the playing room and sat down to confront Fischer, his head was so full of conflicting continuations that he became rattled, left a Rook en prise and immediately resigned.

Fischer beat Taimanov by the score of 6–0.[293] There was little precedent for such a lopsided score in a match leading to the World Championship.[294]

Upon losing the final game of the match, Taimanov shrugged his shoulders, saying sadly to Fischer: "Well, I still have my music."[295] As a result of his performance, Taimanov "was thrown out of the USSR team and forbidden to travel for two years. He was banned from writing articles, was deprived of his monthly stipend… [and] the authorities prohibited him from performing on the concert platform."[296] "The crushing loss virtually ended Taimanov's chess career."[297]

Fischer was next scheduled to play against Danish GM Bent Larsen. "Spassky predicted a tight struggle. 'Larsen is a little stronger in spirit.'"[298] Before the match, Botvinnik had told a Soviet television audience:[299]

It is hard to say how their match will end, but it is clear that such an easy victory as in Vancouver [against Taimanov] will not be given to Fischer. I think Larsen has unpleasant surprises in store for [Fischer], all the more since having dealt with Taimanov thus, Fischer will want to do just the same to Larsen and this is impossible.

Fischer beat Larsen by the identical score of 6–0.[300] Robert Byrne writes: "To a certain extent I could grasp the Taimanov match as a kind of curiosity—almost a freak, a strange chess occurrence that would never occur again. But now I am at a loss for anything whatever to say… So, it is out of the question for me to explain how Bobby, how anyone, could win six games in a row from such a genius of the game as Bent Larsen".[301] Just a year before, Larsen had played first board for the Rest of the World team ahead of Fischer, and had handed Fischer his only loss at the Interzonal. Garry Kasparov later wrote that no player had ever shown a superiority over his rivals comparable to Fischer's "incredible" 12–0 score in the two matches.[302] Chess statistician Jeff Sonas concludes that the victory over Larsen gave Fischer the "highest single-match performance rating ever".[303]

On August 8, 1971, while preparing for his last Candidates match with former world champion Tigran Petrosian, Fischer won the Manhattan Chess Club Rapid Tournament, scoring 21½/22 against a strong field.[267][304]

Despite Fischer's results against Taimanov and Larsen, his upcoming match against Petrosian seemed a daunting task.[305] Nevertheless, the Soviet government was concerned about Fischer.[306][307] "Reporters asked Petrosian whether the match would last the full twelve games… 'It might be possible that I win it earlier,' Petrosian replied",[308] and then stated: "Fischer's [nineteen consecutive] wins do not impress me. He is a great chess player but no genius."[309] Petrosian played a strong theoretical novelty in the first game, gaining the advantage, but Fischer eventually won the game after Petrosian faltered.[310][311][312] This gave Fischer a run of 20 consecutive wins against the world's top players (in the Interzonal and Candidates matches), a winning streak topped only by Steinitz's 25 straight wins in 1873–1882.[313][209] Petrosian won the second game, finally snapping Fischer's streak.[314][d] After three consecutive draws, Fischer swept the next four games to win the match 6½–2½ (+5−1=3).[316] Sports Illustrated ran an article on the match, highlighting Fischer's domination of Petrosian as being due to Petrosian's outdated system of preparation:[317]

Fischer's recent record raises the distinct possibility that he has made a breakthrough in modern chess theory. His response to Petrosian's elaborately plotted 11th move in the first game is an example: Russian experts had worked on the variation for weeks, yet when it was thrown at Fischer suddenly, he faced its consequences alone and won by applying simple, classic principles.

Upon completion of the match, Petrosian remarked: "After the sixth game Fischer really did become a genius. I on the other hand, either had a breakdown or was tired, or something else happened, but the last three games were no longer chess."[318][319] "Some experts kept insisting that Petrosian was off form, and that he should have had a plus score at the end of the sixth game …" to which Fischer replied, "People have been playing against me below strength for fifteen years."[320] Fischer's match results befuddled Botvinnik: "It is hard to talk about Fischer's matches. Since the time that he has been playing them, miracles have begun."[321] "When Petrosian played like Petrosian, Fischer played like a very strong grandmaster, but when Petrosian began making mistakes, Fischer was transformed into a genius."[321]

Fischer gained a far higher rating than any player in history up to that time.[322] On the July 1972 FIDE rating list, his Elo rating of 2785 was 125 points above (World No. 2) Spassky's rating of 2660.[323][324][325][326] His results put him on the cover of Life magazine,[327] and allowed him to challenge World Champion Boris Spassky, whom he had never beaten (+0−3=2).[328][329]

World Championship match

Fischer's career-long stubbornness about match and tournament conditions was again seen in the run-up to his match with Spassky. Of the possible sites, Fischer's first choice was Belgrade, Yugoslavia, while Spassky's was Reykjavík, Iceland.[330] For a time it appeared that the dispute would be resolved by splitting the match between the two locations, but that arrangement failed.[331] After that issue was resolved, Fischer refused to appear in Iceland until the prize fund was increased. London financier Jim Slater donated an additional US$125,000, bringing the prize fund up to an unprecedented $250,000 ($1.75 million today) and Fischer finally agreed to play.[332]

Before and during the match, Fischer paid special attention to his physical training and fitness, which was a relatively novel approach for top chess players at that time. Leading up to this match he conducted interviews with 60 Minutes and Dick Cavett explaining the importance of physical fitness in his preparation. He had developed his tennis skills to a good level, and played frequently during off-days in Reykjavík. He had also arranged for exclusive use of his hotel's swimming pool during specified hours, and swam for extended periods, usually late at night.[333] According to Soviet Grandmaster Nikolai Krogius, Fischer "was paying great attention to sport, and that he was swimming and even boxing …"[334]

The match took place in Reykjavík from July to September 1972. Fischer was accompanied by William Lombardy; besides assisting with analysis,[335] Lombardy may have played an important role in getting Fischer to play in the match and to stay in it.[336] The match was the first to receive an American broadcast in prime time.[337][338] Fischer lost the first two games in strange fashion: the first when he played a risky pawn-grab in a drawn endgame, the second by forfeit when he refused to play the game in a dispute over playing conditions.[339] Fischer would likely have forfeited the entire match, but Spassky, not wanting to win by default, yielded to Fischer's demands to move the next game to a back room, away from the cameras, whose presence had upset Fischer.[340][341] After that game, the match was moved back to the stage and proceeded without further serious incident. Fischer won seven of the next 19 games, losing only one and drawing eleven, to win the match 12½–8½ and become the 11th World Chess Champion.[337]

The Cold War trappings made the match a media sensation.[342] It was called "The Match of the Century",[343][344][e] and received front-page media coverage in the United States and around the world.[345][346] Fischer's win was an American victory in a field that Soviet players – closely identified with and subsidized by the state – had dominated for the previous quarter-century. Kasparov remarked, "Fischer fits ideologically into the context of the Cold War era: a lone American genius challenges the Soviet chess machine and defeats it".[347][348] Dutch Grandmaster Jan Timman calls Fischer's victory "the story of a lonely hero who overcomes an entire empire".[349] Fischer's sister observed, "Bobby did all this in a country almost totally without a chess culture. It was as if an Eskimo had cleared a tennis court in the snow and gone on to win the world championship".[350]

Upon Fischer's return to New York,[351] a Bobby Fischer Day was held.[352] He was offered numerous product endorsement offers worth "at least $5 million" ($35 million today), all of which he declined.[353] He appeared on the cover of Sports Illustrated[354] with American Olympic swimming champion Mark Spitz and also appeared on The Dick Cavett Show, as well as on a Bob Hope TV special.[355] Membership in the US Chess Federation doubled in 1972,[356] and peaked in 1974; in American chess, these years are commonly referred to as the "Fischer Boom". This match attracted more worldwide interest than any chess championship before or since.[357]

Forfeiture of title

Fischer was scheduled to defend his title in 1975 against Anatoly Karpov, who had emerged as his challenger.[358] Fischer, who had played no competitive games since his World Championship match with Spassky, laid out a proposal for the match in September 1973, in consultation with FIDE official Fred Cramer. He made three principal (non-negotiable) demands:

  1. The match continues until one player wins 10 games, draws not counting.
  2. No limit to the total number of games played.
  3. In case of a 9–9 score, the champion (Fischer) retains the title, and the prize fund is split equally.[359]

A FIDE Congress was held in 1974 during the Nice Olympiad. The delegates voted in favor of Fischer's 10-win proposal, but rejected his other two proposals, and limited the number of games in the match to 36.[360] In response to FIDE's ruling, Fischer sent a cable to Euwe on June 27, 1974:[361][362][363]

As I made clear in my telegram to the FIDE delegates, the match conditions I proposed were non-negotiable. Mr. Cramer informs me that the rules of the winner being the first player to win ten games, draws not counting, unlimited number of games and if nine wins to nine match is drawn with champion regaining title and prize fund split equally were rejected by the FIDE delegates. By so doing FIDE has decided against my participation in the 1975 World Chess Championship. Therefore, I resign my FIDE World Chess Championship title. Sincerely, Bobby Fischer.

The delegates responded by reaffirming their prior decisions, but did not accept Fischer's resignation and requested that he reconsider.[364] Many observers considered Fischer's requested 9–9 clause unfair because it would require the challenger to win by at least two games (10–8).[365] Botvinnik called the 9–9 clause "unsporting".[366] Korchnoi, David Bronstein, and Lev Alburt considered the 9–9 clause reasonable.[367][368][369] Korchnoi in particular stated:[370]

Was Fischer right in demanding that the world title be protected by a two point handicap – that the challenger would be considered the winner with a 10–8 score and that the champion would retain his title in the event of a 9–9 draw? Yes, this was quite natural: the champion deserves this, not to mention the fact that further play to the first win in the event of an even score would be nothing short of a lottery – the winner in that case could not claim to have won a convincing victory.

Due to the continued efforts of US Chess Federation officials,[371] a special FIDE Congress was held in March 1975 in Bergen, Netherlands,[372] in which it was accepted that the match should be of unlimited duration, but the 9–9 clause was once again rejected, by a narrow margin of 35 votes to 32.[373] FIDE set a deadline of April 1, 1975, for Fischer and Karpov to confirm their participation in the match. No reply was received from Fischer by April 3. Thus, by default, Karpov officially became World Champion.[374] In his 1991 autobiography, Karpov professed regret that the match had not taken place, and claimed that the lost opportunity to challenge Fischer held back his own chess development. Karpov met with Fischer several times after 1975, in friendly but ultimately unsuccessful attempts to arrange a match, since Karpov would never agree to play to 10.[375]

Brian Carney opined in The Wall Street Journal that Fischer's victory over Spassky in 1972 left him nothing to prove, except that perhaps someone could someday beat him, and he was not interested in the risk of losing. He also opined that Fischer's refusal to recognize peers also allowed his paranoia to flower: "The world championship he won ... validated his view of himself as a chess player, but it also insulated him from the humanizing influences of the world around him. He descended into what can only be considered a kind of madness".[197]

Bronstein felt that Fischer "had the right to play the match with Karpov on his own conditions".[376] Years later, in his 1992 match against Spassky, Fischer similarly said that it was Karpov who refused to play against him under Fischer's conditions.[377]

Whether Karpov could have beaten Fischer is a matter of speculation. Soviet GM Lev Alburt felt that the decision to not concede to Fischer's demands rested on Karpov's "sober view of what he was capable of".[378] Spassky thought that Fischer would have won in 1975 but Karpov would have qualified again and beaten Fischer in 1978.[379] According to Susan Polgar, commentators are divided, with a slight majority believing Fischer would have won, an opinion she shares.[379] Former world champion Garry Kasparov argued that Karpov would have had good chances, because he had beaten Spassky convincingly and was a new breed of tough professional, and indeed had higher-quality games, while Fischer had been inactive for three years.[380] Karpov himself said in 2020 that he thought he had chances, although he could not say he would be favored.[381]

Sudden obscurity

After the 1972 World Chess Championship, Fischer did not play a competitive game in public for nearly 20 years.[382] In 1977 in Cambridge, Massachusetts, he played three games against the MIT Greenblatt computer program, winning them all.[383]

He moved to the Los Angeles area and associated with the Worldwide Church of God for a time.[384] On May 26, 1981, while walking in Pasadena, Fischer was arrested by a police patrolman, because he resembled a man who had just committed a robbery in the area.[385] Fischer, who alleged that he was slightly injured during the arrest,[386] said that he was held for two days, subjected to assault and various types of mistreatment,[387] and released on $1,000 bail.[388] Fischer published a 14-page pamphlet detailing his allegations of police misconduct, saying that his arrest had been "a frame up and set up".[389][390][391]

In 1981, Fischer stayed at the home of grandmaster Peter Biyiasas in San Francisco, where, over a period of four months, he defeated Biyiasas seventeen times in a series of speed games.[392][393] In an interview with Sports Illustrated reporter William Nack, Biyiasas assessed Fischer's play:[391][394]

He was too good. There was no use in playing him. It wasn't interesting. I was getting beaten, and it wasn't clear to me why. It wasn't like I made this mistake or that mistake. It was like I was being gradually outplayed, from the start. He wasn't taking any time to think. The most depressing thing about it is that I wasn't even getting out of the middle game to an endgame. I don't ever remember an endgame. He honestly believes there is no one for him to play, no one worthy of him. I played him, and I can attest to that.

In 1988–1990, Fischer had a relationship with German chess player Petra Stadler, who had been put in touch with Fischer by Spassky. When Stadler later published a book about the affair,[395] Spassky apologized to Fischer.[396]

1992 Spassky rematch

Fischer emerged after twenty years of isolation to play Spassky (then tied for 96th–102nd on the FIDE rating list) in a "Revenge Match of the 20th century" in 1992. This match took place in Sveti Stefan and Belgrade, Yugoslavia, in spite of a United Nations embargo that included sanctions on commercial activities. Fischer demanded that the organizers bill the match as "The World Chess Championship", although Garry Kasparov was the recognized FIDE World Champion. Fischer insisted he was still the true World Champion, and that for all the games in the FIDE-sanctioned World Championship matches, involving Karpov, Korchnoi, and Kasparov, the outcomes had been prearranged.[397] The purse for the rematch was US$5 million, with $3.35 million of the purse going to the winner.[398][399] This was and still is the largest purse for a match in chess history.

According to grandmaster Andrew Soltis:[400]

[The match games] were of a fairly high quality, particularly when compared with Kasparov's championship matches of 1993, 1995 and 2000, for example. Yet the games also reminded many fans of how out of place Fischer was in 1992. He was still playing the openings of a previous generation. He was, moreover, the only strong player in the world who didn't trust computers and wasn't surrounded by seconds and supplicants.

Fischer won the match with 10 wins, 5 losses, and 15 draws.[401] Kasparov stated, "Bobby is playing OK, nothing more. Maybe his strength is 2600 or 2650. It wouldn't be close between us".[402] Yasser Seirawan believed that the match proved that Fischer's playing strength was "somewhere in the top ten in the world".[403]

Fischer and Spassky gave ten press conferences during the match.[404] Seirawan attended the match and met with Fischer on several occasions; the two analyzed some match games and had personal discourse. Seirawan later wrote: "After September 23 [1992], I threw most of what I'd ever read about Bobby out of my head. Sheer garbage. Bobby is the most misunderstood, misquoted celebrity walking the face of the earth."[405] He added that Fischer was not camera shy, smiled and laughed easily, was "a fine wit" and "wholly enjoyable conversationalist".[406]

The US Department of the Treasury warned Fischer before the start of the match that his participation was illegal, that it would violate President George H. W. Bush's Executive Order 12810 imposing United Nations Security Council Resolution 757 sanctions against engaging in economic activities in Yugoslavia.[407] In response, during the first scheduled press conference on September 1, 1992, in front of the international press, Fischer spat on the US order, saying "this is my reply".[408] His violation of the order led US Federal officials to initiate a warrant for his arrest upon completion of the match,[409] citing, in pertinent part, "Title 50 USC §§1701, 1702, and 1705 and Executive Order 12810".[410][411]

Before the rematch against Spassky, Fischer had won a training match against Svetozar Gligorić in Sveti Stefan with six wins, one loss, and three draws.[412]

Later life and death

Life as an émigré

After the 1992 match with Spassky, Fischer, now a fugitive, slid back into relative obscurity, taking up residence in Budapest, Hungary, and allegedly having a relationship with young Hungarian chess master Zita Rajcsányi.[391][413] Fischer stated that standard chess was stale and that he now played blitz games of chess variants, such as Chess960. He visited the Polgár family in Budapest and analyzed many games with Judit, Zsuzsa, and Zsófia Polgár.[414][415][416] In 1998 and 1999, he also stayed at the house of young Hungarian grandmaster Peter Leko.[417]

From 2000 to 2002, Fischer lived in Baguio in the Philippines, residing in the same compound as the Filipino grandmaster Eugenio Torre, a close friend who had acted as his second during his 1992 match with Spassky.[418] Torre introduced Fischer to a 22 year-old woman named Marilyn Young.[f] On May 21, 2001, Marilyn Young gave birth to a daughter named Jinky Young, and claimed that Fischer was the child's father,[420][421] a claim ultimately disproven by DNA after Fischer's death.[422][423]

Comments on September 11 attacks

Shortly after midnight on September 12, 2001, Philippines local time (approximately four hours after the September 11, 2001, terrorist attacks in the US), Fischer was interviewed live by Pablo Mercado on the Baguio station of the Bombo Radyo network. Fischer stated that he was happy that the attacks had happened, while expressing his view on United States and Israeli foreign policy, saying, "I applaud the act. Look, nobody gets ... that the US and Israel have been slaughtering the Palestinians ... for years."[424][425][426][427] He also said, "The horrible behavior that the US is committing all over the world ... This just shows you, that what goes around, comes around, even for the United States."[424][425] Fischer also referenced the movie Seven Days in May and said he hoped for a military coup d'état in the US: "[I hope] the country will be taken over by the military—they'll close down all the synagogues, arrest all the Jews, execute hundreds of thousands of Jewish ringleaders."[428][429] In response to Fischer's statements about 9/11, the US Chess Federation passed a motion to cancel his right to membership in the organization.[430] Fischer's right to become a member was reinstated in 2007.[431]

Detention in Japan

Fischer lived for a time in Japan. On July 13, 2004, acting in response to a letter from US officials, Japanese immigration authorities arrested him at Narita International Airport near Tokyo for allegedly using a revoked US passport while trying to board a Japan Airlines flight to Ninoy Aquino International Airport in Manila, Philippines.[432][433][434] Fischer resisted arrest, and claimed to have sustained bruises, cuts and a broken tooth in the process.[435] At the time, Fischer had a passport (originally issued in 1997 and updated in 2003 to add more pages) that, according to US officials, had been revoked in November 2003 due to his outstanding arrest-warrant for the Yugoslavia sanctions violation.[432] Despite the outstanding arrest-warrant in the US, Fischer said that he believed the passport was still valid.[436] The authorities held Fischer at a custody center for 16 days before transferring him to another facility. Fischer said that his cell was windowless and he had not seen the light of day during that period, and that the staff had ignored his complaints about constant tobacco smoke in his cell.[435][437][438]

Tokyo-based Canadian journalist and consultant John Bosnitch set up the "Committee to Free Bobby Fischer" after meeting Fischer at Narita Airport and offering to assist him.[439] Boris Spassky wrote a letter to US President George W. Bush, asking "For mercy, charity," and, if that was not possible, "to put [him] in the same cell with Bobby Fischer" and "to give [them] a chess set".[440] It was reported that Fischer and Miyoko Watai, the President of the Japanese Chess Association (with whom he had reportedly been living since 2000) wanted to become legally married.[432] It was also reported that Fischer had been living in the Philippines with Marilyn Young during the same period.[418] Fischer applied for German citizenship, on the grounds that his father was German.[441] Fischer stated that he wanted to renounce his US citizenship, and appealed to US Secretary of State Colin Powell to help him do so, though to no effect.[442][443] Japan's Justice Minister rejected Fischer's request for asylum and ordered his deportation.[444][445][446]

While in prison, Bobby Fischer legally married Miyoko Watai on September 6, 2004.[447]

Citizenship and residency in Iceland

Seeking ways to evade deportation to the United States, Fischer wrote a letter to the government of Iceland in early January 2005, requesting Icelandic citizenship.[448] Sympathetic to Fischer's plight, but reluctant to grant him the full benefits of citizenship, Icelandic authorities granted him an alien's passport. When this proved insufficient for the Japanese authorities, the Althing (the Icelandic Parliament), at the behest of William Lombardy,[449][450] agreed unanimously to grant Fischer full citizenship in late March for humanitarian reasons, as they felt he was being unjustly treated by the United States and Japanese governments,[451][452] and also in recognition of his 1972 match, which had "put Iceland on the map".[453]

After arriving in Reykjavík in late March, Fischer gave a press conference.[454][455] He lived a reclusive life in Iceland, avoiding entrepreneurs and others who approached him with various proposals.[456]

Fischer moved into an apartment in the same building as his close friend and spokesman, Garðar Sverrisson.[457] Garðar's wife, Kristín Þórarinsdóttir, was a nurse and later looked after Fischer as a terminally ill patient. Garðar's two children, especially his son, were very close to Fischer.[458] Fischer also developed a friendship with Magnús Skúlason, a psychiatrist and chess player who later recalled long discussions with him on a wide variety of subjects.[459]

On December 10, 2006, Fischer telephoned an Icelandic television station that had just broadcast a chess game in which one player blundered such that his opponent was able to mate on the next move. Although he tried to change his mind upon seeing the mate, the touch-move rule forced him to play the blunder. Fischer pointed out a winning combination that could have been played instead of the blunder or the other attempted move, but had been missed by the player and commentators.[460]

In 2005, some of Fischer's belongings were auctioned on eBay.[461] Fischer claimed, in 2006, that the belongings sold in the US without his permission were worth "hundreds of millions of [US] dollars; even billions of dollars."[462][463] In the same interview, Fischer also said that UBS Bank had closed an account of his and liquidated his assets against his wishes, transferring the funds to a bank in Iceland.[464]

Death, estate dispute, and exhumation

 
Fischer is buried at the Church of Laugardælir
 
Fischer's grave

On January 17, 2008, Fischer died at age 64 from degenerative kidney failure at the Landspítali Hospital (National University Hospital of Iceland) in Reykjavík.[465][466] He originally had a urinary tract blockage but refused surgery or medication.[467][468][469] Magnús Skúlason reported Fischer's response to leg massages: "Nothing soothes as much as the human touch."[470]

On January 21, Fischer was buried in the small Christian cemetery of Laugardælir church, outside the town of Selfoss, 60 kilometres (37 mi) southeast of Reykjavík, after a Catholic funeral presided over by Fr. Jakob Rolland of the diocese of Reykjavík. In accordance with Fischer's wishes, only Miyoko Watai, Garðar Sverrisson, and Garðar's family were present.[471]

Fischer's estate was estimated at 140 million ISK (about £1 million, or US$2 million). It quickly became the object of a legal battle involving claims from four parties, with Miyoko Watai ultimately inheriting what remained of Fischer's estate after government claims. The four parties were Fischer's Japanese wife, Miyoko Watai; his alleged Filipino daughter, Jinky Young, and her mother, Marilyn Young; his two American nephews, Alexander and Nicholas Targ, and their father, Russell Targ; and the US government (claiming unpaid taxes).[472][459][473][474]

Marilyn Young claimed that Jinky was Fischer's daughter, citing as evidence Jinky's birth and baptismal certificates, photographs, a transaction record dated December 4, 2007, of a bank remittance by Fischer to Jinky, and Jinky's DNA through her blood samples.[420][475][419] However, Magnús Skúlason, a friend of Fischer's, said that he was certain that Fischer was not the girl's father.[472] In addition, the validity of Miyoko Watai's marriage to Fischer was challenged.[476][420]

In June 2010, Iceland's supreme court ordered Fischer's remains exhumed so that a DNA sample could be obtained.[477][478] In August it was announced that DNA testing had ruled out Fischer as the father of Jinky Young,[422][423] and the following March an Icelandic court ruled that Miyoko Watai had married Fischer on September 6, 2004,[479] and was therefore entitled to his estate.[480] Fischer's nephews were ordered to pay Watai's legal costs, amounting to ISK 6.6 million (approximately $57,000).[479]

Personal life

Religious affiliation

Although Fischer's mother was Jewish, Fischer rejected attempts to label him as Jewish.[13] In a 1962 interview with Harper's, asked if he was Jewish, he replied that he was "part-Jewish" through his mother. In the same interview he was quoted as saying: "I read a book lately by Nietzsche and he says religion is just to dull the senses of the people. I agree."[481][482] In a 1984 letter to the editor of the Encyclopaedia Judaica, Fischer demanded that they remove his name from future editions.[483]

Fischer associated with the Worldwide Church of God in the mid-1960s. The church prescribed Saturday Sabbath, and forbade work (and competitive chess) on Sabbath.[484] According to his friend and colleague Larry Evans, in 1968 Fischer felt philosophically that "the world was coming to an end" and he might as well make some money by publishing My 60 Memorable Games;[485] Fischer thought that the Rapture was coming soon.[486]

During the mid-1970s, Fischer contributed significant money to the Worldwide Church of God.[487] In 1972, one journalist stated that "Fischer is almost as serious about religion as he is about chess", and the champion credited his faith with greatly improving his chess.[488][489] Yet prophecies by Herbert W. Armstrong went unfulfilled.[490] Fischer eventually left the church in 1977, "accusing it of being 'Satanic', and vigorously attacking its methods and leadership".[392]

Towards the end of his life, Fischer became interested in Catholicism. He bought his friend Garðar Sverrisson a copy of "Basic Catechism: Creed, Sacraments, Morality, Prayer" so Sverrisson could explain the religion better to him.[491] According to Sverrisson, Fischer talked to him about transformation of society through creation of harmony and that "the only hope for the world is through Catholicism."[491] Fischer was also known to have read a synopsis of G. K. Chesterton's works in the years leading up to his death. He requested a Catholic funeral, and this final service was presided over by Catholic priest Jakob Rolland.[492][493]

Antisemitism

Fischer made numerous antisemitic statements and professed a general hatred for Jews from at least the early 1960s.[494][495] Jan Hein Donner wrote that at the time of Bled 1961, "He idolized Hitler and read everything about him that he could lay his hands on. He also championed a brand of antisemitism that could only be thought up by a mind completely cut off from reality."[172] Donner took Fischer to a war museum, which "left a great impression, since [Fischer] is not an evil person, and afterwards he was more restrained in his remarks—to me, at least."[172]

From the 1980s on, Fischer's comments about Jews were a major theme in his public and private remarks.[496] He openly denied the Holocaust, and called the United States "a farce controlled by dirty, hook-nosed, circumcised Jew bastards".[497] Between 1999 and 2006, Fischer's primary means of communicating with the public was radio interviews. He participated in at least 34 such broadcasts, mostly with radio stations in the Philippines, but also in Hungary, Iceland, Colombia, and Russia. In 1999, he gave a radio call-in interview to a station in Budapest, Hungary, during which he described himself as the "victim of an International Jewish conspiracy". In another radio interview, Fischer said that it became clear to him in 1977, after reading The Secret World Government by Count Cherep-Spiridovich, that Jewish agencies were targeting him.[498] Fischer's sudden reemergence was apparently triggered when some of his belongings, which had been stored in a Pasadena, California, storage unit, were sold by the landlord, who claimed it was in response to nonpayment of rent.[499] Fischer was also upset that UBS had liquidated his assets and closed his account without his permission. When asked who he thought was responsible for the actions UBS had taken, Fischer replied: "There's no question that the Jew-controlled United States is behind this—that's obvious."[462][464] Fischer, at a press conference upon his return to Reykjavik, Iceland, lashed out at Jeremy Schaap, the son of the late Dick Schaap, a sportswriter who had been a father figure to Fischer when growing up, calling his father a "Jewish snake" for doubting Fischer's sanity in his later writings.[500][501]

Fischer's library contained antisemitic and racist literature such as Mein Kampf, The Protocols of the Elders of Zion, and The White Man's Bible and Nature's Eternal Religion by Ben Klassen, founder of the World Church of the Creator.[502][503][482] A notebook written by Fischer contains sentiments such as "12/13/99 It's time to start randomly killing Jews".[504] Despite his views, Fischer remained on good terms with Jewish chess players.[505]

Speculation on psychological condition

While as far as is known Fischer was never formally diagnosed with a mental disorder,[16] there has been widespread comment and speculation concerning his psychological condition based on his extreme views and unusual behavior.[506] Reuben Fine, psychologist and chess player, who met Fischer many times, said that "Some of Bobby's behavior is so strange, unpredictable, odd and bizarre that even his most ardent apologists have had a hard time explaining what makes him tick" and described him as "a troubled human being" with "obvious personal problems".[507]

Valery Krylov, advisor to Anatoly Karpov and a specialist in the "psycho-physiological rehabilitation of sportsmen", believed Fischer had schizophrenia.[506] Psychologist Joseph G. Ponterotto, from secondhand sources, concludes that "Bobby did not meet all the necessary criteria to reach diagnoses of schizophrenia or Asperger syndrome. The evidence is stronger for paranoid personality disorder."[506] Magnús Skúlason, a chess player, psychiatrist and head doctor of Sogn Institution for Mentally Ill Offenders near Selfoss, befriended Fischer towards the end of Fischer's life. From Endgame, Fischer's 2011 biography by Frank Brady:

Skulason was not "Bobby's psychiatrist", as has been implied in the general press, nor did he offer Bobby any analysis or psychotherapy. He was at Bobby's bedside as a friend, to try to do anything he could for him. Because of his training, however, he couldn't fail to take note of Bobby's mental condition. "He definitely was not schizophrenic", Skulason said. "He had problems, possibly certain childhood traumas that had affected him. He was misunderstood. Underneath I think he was a caring sensitive person."[470]

Contributions to chess

Writings

  • Bobby Fischer's Games of Chess (Simon and Schuster, New York, 1959). ISBN 0-923891-46-3. An early collection of 34 lightly annotated games, including "The Game of the Century" against Donald Byrne.
  • "A Bust to the King's Gambit" (American Chess Quarterly, Vol. 1, No. 1 (Summer 1961), pp. 3–9).[508]
  • "The Russians Have Fixed World Chess" (Sports Illustrated, Vol. 17, No. 8 (August 20, 1962), pp. 18–19, 64–65). This is the controversial article in which Fischer asserted that several of the Soviet players in the 1962 Curaçao Candidates' tournament had colluded with one another to prevent him [Fischer] from winning the tournament.
  • "The Ten Greatest Masters in History" (Chessworld, Vol. 1, No. 1 (January–February 1964), pp. 56–61). An article in which Fischer named Paul Morphy, Howard Staunton, Wilhelm Steinitz, Siegbert Tarrasch, Mikhail Chigorin, Alexander Alekhine, José Raúl Capablanca, Boris Spassky, Mikhail Tal, and Samuel Reshevsky as the greatest players of all time. Fischer's criterion for inclusion on his list was his own subjective appreciation of their games rather than their achievements.[509]
  • Bobby Fischer Teaches Chess (1966), co-written with Donn Mosenfelder and Stuart Margulies.[510] The extent of Fischer's contribution has been questioned.[511]
  • "Checkmate" column from December 1966 to December 1969 in Boys' Life, later assumed by Larry Evans.
  • My 60 Memorable Games (Simon and Schuster, New York, 1969, and Faber and Faber, London, 1969; Batsford 2008 (algebraic notation)). Studied by Kasparov at a young age;[512] "A classic of painstaking and objective analysis that modestly includes three of his losses."[513]
  • I Was Tortured in the Pasadena Jailhouse! (1982). A self-published booklet on an incident in which Fischer was booked for vagrancy.[390][514]

Opening theory

Fischer's opening repertoire was narrow in some ways. As White, Fischer almost exclusively played 1.e4, calling it "best by test",[515] throughout his career.[516] He played 1.d4 only once in a serious game, during a blitz tournament.[517] In spite of this narrowness, he was considered by some of his rivals to be unpredictable in his opening play, and a difficult opponent to prepare for.[518]

As Black, Fischer would usually play the Najdorf Sicilian against 1.e4, and the King's Indian Defense against 1.d4, only rarely venturing into the Nimzo-Indian, Benoni, Grünfeld or Neo-Grünfeld.[519] Fischer acknowledged difficulty playing against the Winawer Variation of the French Defense (1.e4 e6 2.d4 d5 3.Nc3 Bb4), but maintained that the Winawer was unsound because it exposed Black's kingside, and that, in his view, "Black was trading off his good bishop with 3...Bb4 and ...Bxc3."[520] Later on Fischer said: "I may yet be forced to admit that the Winawer is sound. But I doubt it! The defense is anti-positional and weakens the K-side."[521]

Fischer was renowned for his opening preparation and made numerous contributions to chess opening theory.[522] He was one of the foremost experts on the Ruy Lopez.[523] A line of the Exchange Variation (1.e4 e5 2.Nf3 Nc6 3.Bb5 a6 4.Bxc6 dxc6 5.0-0) is sometimes called the "Fischer Variation" after he successfully resurrected it at the 1966 Havana Olympiad.[524][525] Fischer's lifetime score with the move 5.0-0 in tournament and match games was eight wins, three draws, and no losses (86.36%).[526]

Fischer was a recognized expert in the black side of the Najdorf Sicilian and the King's Indian Defense.[527] He used the Grünfeld Defense and Neo-Grünfeld Defense to win his celebrated games against Donald and Robert Byrne, and played a theoretical novelty in the Grünfeld against reigning world champion Mikhail Botvinnik, refuting Botvinnik's prepared analysis over the board.[528][529] In the Nimzo-Indian Defense, the line beginning with 1.d4 Nf6 2.c4 e6 3.Nc3 Bb4 4.e3 b6 5.Ne2 Ba6 was named after him.[530][531][532]

Fischer established the viability of the so-called Poisoned Pawn Variation of the Najdorf Sicilian (1.e4 c5 2.Nf3 d6 3.d4 cxd4 4.Nxd4 Nf6 5.Nc3 a6 6.Bg5 e6 7.f4 Qb6). This bold queen sortie, to snatch a pawn at the expense of development, had been considered dubious,[533][534][535] but Fischer succeeded in proving its soundness.[536] Out of ten tournament and match games as Black in the Poisoned Pawn, Fischer scored 70%, winning five, drawing four, and losing only one: the 11th game of his 1972 match against Spassky.[537] Following Fischer's use, the Poisoned Pawn Variation became a respected line, utilized by many of the world's leading players.[538] Fischer's 10.f5 in this line against Efim Geller quickly became the main line of the Poisoned Pawn.

On the white side of the Sicilian, Fischer made advances to the theory of the line beginning 1.e4 c5 2.Nf3 d6 3.d4 cxd4 4.Nxd4 Nf6 5.Nc3 a6 (or e6) 6.Bc4,[536][539] which has sometimes been named after him.[540]

In 1961, prompted by a loss the year before to Spassky,[541] Fischer wrote an article titled "A Bust to the King's Gambit" for the first issue of the American Chess Quarterly, in which he stated, "In my opinion, the King's Gambit is busted. It loses by force."[508] Fischer recommended 1.e4 e5 2.f4 exf4 3.Nf3 d6,[542] which has since become known as the Fischer Defense, as a refutation to the King's Gambit.[543][544][545] Fischer later played the King's Gambit as White in three tournament games, winning them all.[546]

Endgame

Fischer had excellent endgame technique.[547] International Master Jeremy Silman listed him as one of the five best endgame players (along with Emanuel Lasker, Akiba Rubinstein, José Raúl Capablanca, and Vasily Smyslov), calling Fischer a "master of bishop endings".[548] The endgame of a rook, bishop, and pawns against a rook, knight, and pawns has sometimes been called the "Fischer Endgame" because of several instructive wins by Fischer (with the bishop), including three against Mark Taimanov in 1970 and 1971.[549][550][551]

Fischer clock

In 1988, Fischer filed for U.S. Patent 4,884,255 for a new type of chess clock, which gave each player a fixed period at the start of the game and then added a small increment after each completed move.[552]

An example of Fischer's patented clock was made for, and used in, the 1992 rematch between Fischer and Spassky.[553][401] Clocks based on the "Fischer clock" soon became standard in major chess tournaments.[554] Fischer would later complain that he was cheated out of the royalties for this invention.[555]

Fischer Random

Following his re-emergence onto the chess scene with his 1992 match against Spassky, Fischer heavily disparaged chess as it was being played at the highest levels.[556] As a result, on June 19, 1996, in Buenos Aires, Argentina, Fischer announced and advocated a variant of chess called Fischerandom (later also known as Chess960). The goal of Fischerandom was to ensure that a game between two players is a contest between their understandings of chess, rather than their abilities to prepare opening strategies or memorize opening lines.[557][558]

Legacy

Some grandmasters compared Fischer's play to that of a computer[559][560] or a player without noticeable weaknesses.[561]

Biographers David Edmonds and John Eidinow wrote:

Faced with Fischer's extraordinary coolness, his opponents [sic] assurance would begin to disintegrate. A Fischer move, which at first glance looked weak, would be reassessed. It must have a deep master plan behind it, undetectable by mere mortals (more often than not they were right, it did). The US grandmaster Robert Byrne labeled the phenomenon "Fischer-fear". Grandmasters would wilt, their suits would crumple, sweat would glisten on their brows, panic would overwhelm their nervous systems. Errors would creep in. Calculations would go awry. There was talk among grandmasters that Fischer hypnotized his opponents, that he undermined their intellectual powers with a dark, mystic, insidious force.[562]

Kasparov wrote that Fischer "became the detonator of an avalanche of new chess ideas, a revolutionary whose revolution is still in progress".[563] In January 2009, reigning world champion Viswanathan Anand described him as "the greatest chess player who ever lived".[564] Serbian GM Ljubomir Ljubojević called Fischer, "A man without frontiers. He didn't divide the East and the West, he brought them together in their admiration of him."[456]

German GM Karsten Müller wrote:

Fischer, who had taken the highest crown almost singlehandedly from the mighty, almost invincible Soviet chess empire, shook the whole world, not only the chess world, to its core. He started a chess boom not only in the United States and in the Western hemisphere, but worldwide. Teaching chess or playing chess as a career had truly become a respectable profession. After Bobby, the game was simply not the same.[565]

Head-to-head record versus selected grandmasters

(Rapid, blitz, and blindfold games not included; listed as +wins −losses =draws.)[566]
Players who have been World Champions in boldface

Internet chess playing speculation

In 2001, Nigel Short wrote in The Sunday Telegraph chess column that he believed he had been secretly playing Fischer on the Internet Chess Club (ICC) in speed chess matches.[567][568] Subsequently others claimed to have played Fischer as well.[569] Fischer denied ownership of the account.[570]

In popular culture

In film

Other media

Tournament, match, and team event summaries

Fischer played 752 tournament games in his career, winning 417, drawing 251, and losing 84.[583] These include, however, games when he was very young; if only the games after he turned 20 are considered, he played 311 tournament games and lost 23, a 7.4% loss percentage.[583]

Tournaments

The 1955 US Amateur Championship was the first tournament organized by the US Chess Federation in which Fischer entered. Before this tournament, he had played in the Brooklyn Chess Club Championships, in some tournaments organized by the Brooklyn YMCA Chess and Checker Club, and in a correspondence chess tournament organized by Chess Review.

Tournament record[137][584]
Year Tournament Location Wins Draws Losses Points Games Ranking Players %
1955 US Amateur Championship Mohegan Lake, New York unknown (6 games) ≤ 3 6 below 32nd[585] 75 ≤ 50%
US Junior Championship Lincoln, Nebraska 2 6 2 5 10 11th–21st (20th
on tie-break)
25 50%
Washington Square Park New York unknown (8 games) 5 8 15th 66[586] 56%
1956 Greater New York City Open[587] Manhattan 5 0 2 5 7 5th–7th 52 71%
Manhattan Chess Club
Tournament 'A'-Reserves
New York unknown (10 games) 10 1st–2nd[588] 6[589] 75%
Metropolitan League
(team event)
New York 4 1 0 5 Manhattan 'A'-Reserves
Team top scorer[590]
90%
US Amateur Championship Asbury Park, New Jersey 3 2 1 4 6 21st 88 67%
US Junior Championship Philadelphia 8 1 1 10 1st 28 85%
US Open Oklahoma City 5 7 0 12 4th–8th 102 71%
Canadian Open Montreal 6 2 2 7 10 8th–12th 88 70%
Rosenwald Trophy New York 2 5 4 11 8th–10th 12 41%
Eastern States Open Washington, D.C. 4 3 0 7 2nd–5th 56 79%
Manhattan Chess Club
Championship semifinals
New York 2 1 2 5 4th 6 50%
1957 Log Cabin Open West Orange, New Jersey 4 0 2 4 6 6th–14th 61 67%
Log Cabin 50–50, fast chess West Orange 3 2 0 4 5 unknown 80%
Metropolitan League
(team event)
New York 5 0 0 5 5 Manhattan team, Fischer
played at board 7.[591]
100%
New Western Open Milwaukee 5 2 1 6 8 6th–12th 122 75%
US Junior Championship San Francisco 8 1 0 9 1st 33 94%
US Open Cleveland[592] 7/
8[593]
4 0 9/
10
11/
12[593]
1st
(on tie-break)
176 82%/
83%[593]
New Jersey State Open East Orange 6 1 0 7 1st 81 93%
North Central Open Milwaukee 4 2 1 5 7 5th–11th 93 71%
US Championship New York 8 5 0 10½ 13 1st 14 81%
1958 Interzonal Portorož 6 12 2 12 20 5th–6th 21 60%
1958 US Championship New York 6 5 0 11 1st 12 77%
1959 Mar del Plata International Mar del Plata 8 4 1 10 13 3rd–4th 14 71%
International Santiago 7 1 4 12 4th–7th 13 63%
Zürich International Zürich 8 5 2 10½ 15 3rd–4th 16 70%
Candidates Bled, Zagreb & Belgrade 8 9 11 12½ 28 5th–6th 8 45%
US Championship New York 7 4 0 9 11 1st 12 82%
1960 Mar del Plata International Mar del Plata 13 1 1 13½ 15 1st–2nd 16 90%
Buenos Aires International Buenos Aires 3 11 5 19 13th–16th 20 45%
3-player double round-robin Reykjavík 3 1 0 4 1st 3 88%
US Championship New York 7 4 0 9 11 1st 12 82%
1961 "Tournament of the century" Bled 8 11 0 15 19 2nd 20 71%
1962 Interzonal Stockholm 13 9 0 17½ 22 1st 23 80%
Candidates Curaçao 8 12 7 14 27 4th 8 52%
US Championship New York 6 4 1 8 11 1st 12 73%
1963 Western Open Bay City, Michigan 7 1 0 8 1st 161[594] 94%
New York State Open Poughkeepsie 7 0 0 7 7 1st 57 100%
US Championship New York 11 0 0 11 11 1st 12 100%
1965 Capablanca Memorial Havana 12 6 3 15 21 2nd–4th 22 71%
1965 US Championship New York 8 1 2 11 1st 12 77%
1966 Piatigorsky Cup Santa Monica 7 8 3 11 18 2nd 10 61%
1966 US Championship New York 8 3 0 11 1st 12 86%
1967 Monaco International Monte Carlo 6 2 1 7 9 1st 10 78%
International Skopje 12 3 2 13½ 17 1st 18 79%
Interzonal Sousse 7 3 0 10 withdrew 22 85%
1968 International Netanya 10 3 0 11½ 13 1st 14 88%
International Vinkovci 9 4 0 11 13 1st 14 85%
Metropolitan League
(team event)
New York 1 0 0 1 1 Manhattan team, Fischer
played only one game.
100%
1970 Blitz (5-minute games) Herceg Novi 17 4 1 19 22 1st 12 86%
Tournament of Peace Rovinj & Zagreb 10 6 1 13 17 1st 18 76%
Buenos Aires International Buenos Aires 13 4 0 15 17 1st 18 88%
Interzonal Palma de Mallorca[595] 15 7 1 18½ 23 1st 24 80%
1971 Manhattan CC Blitz[596] New York 21 1 0 21½ 22 1st 12 98%

Matches

Match record[584][597][598]
Year Opponent Location Match Wins Draws Losses Result Score Percentage
1957 Max Euwe New York 2-game exhibition match 0 1 1 lost ½–1½ 25%
1957 Dan Jacobo Beninson New York 5-game training match 2 3 0[599] won 3½–1½ 70%[600]
1957 Rodolfo Tan Cardoso New York 5 2 1 won 6–2 75%
1958 Dragoljub Janošević Belgrade 2-game training match 0 2 0 tied 1–1 50%
1958 Milan Matulović Belgrade 2 1 1 won 2½–1½ 63%
1961 Samuel Reshevsky New York &
Los Angeles
16-game match 2 7 2 unfinished 5½–5½ 50%
1970 Tigran Petrosian Belgrade USSR vs. World Match 2 2 0 won 3–1 75%
1971 Mark Taimanov Vancouver Candidates quarterfinal 6 0 0 won 6–0 100%
Bent Larsen Denver Candidates semifinal 6 0 0 won 6–0 100%
Tigran Petrosian Buenos Aires Candidates final 5 3 1 won 6½–2½ 72%
1972 Boris Spassky Reykjavík World Championship[601] 7 11 3 won 12½–8½ 60%[602]
/63%[603]
1992 Svetozar Gligorić Sveti Stefan training match[604] 6 3 1 won 7½–2½ 75%
Boris Spassky Sveti Stefan
& Belgrade
Unofficial rematch 10 15 5 won 10–5[605] 58%[606]
/67%[605]

International Team events

International Team events record[584]
Year Event Location Board Opponents Wins Draws Losses Points Games Individual
ranking
Team
ranking
Individual
percentage
1960 14th Olympiad Leipzig 1 various 10 6 2 13 18 Bronze Silver 72%
1960 Berlin vs USA Match Berlin 1 Klaus Darga[607] 1 0 0 1 1 Game won Team won 100%
(1 game)
1962 Poland vs USA Match Warsaw 1 Bogdan Sliwa 1 0 0 1 1 Game won Team won
1962 15th Olympiad Varna 1 various 8 6 3 11 17 Eighth Fourth 65%
1966 17th Olympiad Havana 1 various 14 2 1 15 17 Silver Silver 88%
1970 USSR vs. World Match Belgrade 2 Tigran Petrosian 2 2 0 3 4 best world
team result
Team lost 75%
1970 19th Olympiad Siegen 1 various 8 4 1 10 13 Silver Fourth 77%

Notable games

abcdefgh
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8
77
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abcdefgh
Position after 22...Nxg3
1.d4 Nf6 2.c4 g6 3.Nc3 Bg7 4.e4 d6 5.Nf3 0-0 6.Be2 e5 7.0-0 Nc6 8.d5 Ne7 9.Ne1 Nd7 10.Nd3 f5 11.exf5 Nxf5 12.f3 Nf6 13.Nf2 Nd4 14.Nfe4 Nh5 15.Bg5 Qd7 16.g3 h6 17.Be3 c5 18.Bxd4 exd4 19.Nb5 a6 20.Nbxd6 d3 21.Qxd3 Bd4+ 22.Kg2 Nxg3 (diagram) 23.Nxc8 Nxf1 24.Nb6 Qc7 25.Rxf1 Qxb6 26.b4 Qxb4 27.Rb1 Qa5 28.Nxc5 Qxc5 29.Qxg6+ Bg7 30.Rxb7 Qd4 31.Bd3 Rf4 32.Qe6+ Kh8 33.Qg6 ½–½
abcdefgh
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8
77
66
55
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abcdefgh
Position after 18.Qd2
1.d4 Nf6 2.c4 g6 3.g3 c6 4.Bg2 d5 5.cxd5 cxd5 6.Nc3 Bg7 7.e3 0-0 8.Nge2 Nc6 9.0-0 b6 10.b3 Ba6 11.Ba3 Re8 12.Qd2 e5 13.dxe5 Nxe5 14.Rfd1 Nd3 15.Qc2 Nxf2 16.Kxf2 Ng4+ 17.Kg1 Nxe3 18.Qd2 (diagram) Nxg2 19.Kxg2 d4 20.Nxd4 Bb7+ 21.Kf1 Qd7 0–1
abcdefgh
8
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
8
77
66
55
44
33
22
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abcdefgh
Position after 23...Kxd7
1.e4 c5 2.Nf3 Nc6 3.d4 cxd4 4.Nxd4 Qc7 5.Nc3 e6 6.g3 a6 7.Bg2 Nf6 8.0-0 Nxd4 9.Qxd4 Bc5 10.Bf4 d6 11.Qd2 h6 12.Rad1 e5 13.Be3 Bg4 14.Bxc5 dxc5 15.f3 Be6 16.f4 Rd8 17.Nd5 Bxd5 18.exd5 e4 19.Rfe1 Rxd5 20.Rxe4+ Kd8 21.Qe2 Rxd1+ 22.Qxd1+ Qd7 23.Qxd7+ Kxd7 (diagram) 24.Re5 b6 25.Bf1 a5 26.Bc4 Rf8 27.Kg2 Kd6 28.Kf3 Nd7 29.Re3 Nb8 30.Rd3+ Kc7 31.c3 Nc6 32.Re3 Kd6 33.a4 Ne7 34.h3 Nc6 35.h4 h5 36.Rd3+ Kc7 37.Rd5 f5 38.Rd2 Rf6 39.Re2 Kd7 40.Re3 g6 41.Bb5 Rd6 42.Ke2 Kd8 43.Rd3 Kc7 44.Rxd6 Kxd6 45.Kd3 Ne7 46.Be8 Kd5 47.Bf7+ Kd6 48.Kc4 Kc6 49.Be8+ Kb7 50.Kb5 Nc8 51.Bc6+ Kc7 52.Bd5 Ne7 53.Bf7 Kb7 54.Bb3 Ka7 55.Bd1 Kb7 56.Bf3+ Kc7 57.Ka6 Ng8 58.Bd5 Ne7 59.Bc4 Nc6 60.Bf7 Ne7 61.Be8 Kd8 62.Bxg6 Nxg6 63.Kxb6 Kd7 64.Kxc5 Ne7 65.b4 axb4 66.cxb4 Nc8 67.a5 Nd6 68.b5 Ne4+ 69.Kb6 Kc8 70.Kc6 Kb8 71.b6 1–0
abcdefgh
8
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
8
77
66
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11
abcdefgh
Position after 21...Bd7
1.e4 c5 2.Nf3 e6 3.d4 cxd4 4.Nxd4 a6 5.Bd3 Nc6 6.Nxc6 bxc6 7.0-0 d5 8.c4 Nf6 9.cxd5 cxd5 10.exd5 exd5 11.Nc3 Be7 12.Qa4+ Qd7 13.Re1 Qxa4 14.Nxa4 Be6 15.Be3 0-0 16.Bc5 Rfe8 17.Bxe7 Rxe7 18.b4 Kf8 19.Nc5 Bc8 20.f3 Rea7 21.Re5 Bd7 (diagram) 22.Nxd7+ Rxd7 23.Rc1 Rd6 24.Rc7 Nd7 25.Re2 g6 26.Kf2 h5 27.f4 h4 28.Kf3 f5 29.Ke3 d4+ 30.Kd2 Nb6 31.Ree7 Nd5 32.Rf7+ Ke8 33.Rb7 Nxf4 34.Bc4 1–0

See also

Notes

  1. ^ Just before Larsen played Fischer in their individual game, Larsen predicted that he would be victorious, only to find out quite the opposite: "Once we were well into the tournament, Larsen, Fridrik Olafsson and I were engaged in a friendly debate over Fischer's performance. 'Lucky to have 50%!' quipped Larsen, who went on to say, 'I will spank that baby!'… With wisdom Fridrik supplied a thought for me, 'Watch out the baby doesn't spank you!' At that comment, Larsen waved his hand. In the very next round, Fischer crushed Larsen ..."[100]
  2. ^ This record stood until 1991, when it was broken by Judit Polgár.[104]
  3. ^ According to Lombardy, Fischer's lack of a sole second proved a main reason for his failure.[194]
  4. ^ According to Miguel Quinteros, Fischer had the flu at the beginning of the match.[315]
  5. ^ Perhaps the best-selling book on the match was subtitled The New York Times Report on the Chess Match of the Century.[345]
  6. ^ Marilyn Young's name was written behind a photograph dated December 14, 2000, sent to her by Fischer.[419]

References

  1. ^ "Fischer, Robert James". Olimpbase. Retrieved September 18, 2015.
  2. ^ a b Brady 1973, p. 2.
  3. ^ William Addams Reitwiesner. "Ancestry of Bobby Fischer (Extracts from the U.S. Federal Decennial Census)". ancestry.com. Retrieved January 28, 2014.
  4. ^ a b Ben Quinn & Alan Hamilton (January 28, 2008). "Bobby Fischer, chess genius, heartless son". The Sunday Times. Retrieved September 14, 2008.(subscription required)
  5. ^ Edmonds & Eidinow 2004, p. 313.
  6. ^ Edmonds & Eidinow 2004, p. 27. "… she appears to have been religiously unobservant."
  7. ^ André Schulz (October 8, 2004). "Mutmaßungen über Fischer". chessbase.com. Retrieved October 17, 2008.
  8. ^ "WHO WAS FISCHER'S FATHER?". Chess Life. US Chess Federation. March 2004. p. 10.
  9. ^ a b Brady 2011, pp. 7–8.
  10. ^ Brady 2011, p. 8.
  11. ^ Brady 2011, p. 9. "The family lived in [California, Idaho, Oregon, Illinois, and Arizona] before moving to New York. Regina's flexibility and desperation led her to a surprising gamut of jobs. She was a welder, schoolteacher, riveter, farm worker, toxicologist's assistant, and stenographer, all throughout the early and mid 1940s."
  12. ^ a b c Edmonds & Eidinow 2004, p. 5.
  13. ^ a b c d e Nicholas, Peter (September 21, 2009). . Los Angeles Times. Archived from the original on September 25, 2009.
  14. ^ Brady 2011, p. 10. "In early 1949 Regina Fischer took the least expensive housing she could find when she moved the family—Bobby, Joan, and herself—to East 13th Street in Manhattan, facing the kitchen back entrance of the famed Luchow's restaurant, where many of the best chess players would occasionally dine. The Fischers could never afford to eat there. The apartment's entrance was marred by a rusty fire escape running up the front, and there was only one small bedroom—but the rent was $45 a month."
  15. ^ a b Nicholas, Peter; Benson, Clea (November 17, 2002). . The Philadelphia Inquirer. Archived from the original on January 23, 2008.
  16. ^ a b c Nicholas, Peter; Benson, Clea (February 9, 2003). . The Philadelphia Inquirer. Archived from the original on January 23, 2008.
  17. ^ Charles Laurence (November 24, 2002). "FBI targeted chess genius Bobby Fischer and his mother". The Telegraph. London. Retrieved September 13, 2008.
  18. ^ Böhm & Jongkind 2003, p. 22.
  19. ^ Regina Fischer entry, passenger manifest, SS Manhattan, January 18, 1939, p. 74, line 6, accessed January 20, 2008, via ancestry.com
  20. ^ Böhm & Jongkind 2003, pp. 22, 135.
  21. ^ "Bobby Fischer Autobiographical Essay". Parade. October 27, 1957. p. 22. In March of 1949, on a rainy day when Bobby had just turned six, his sister, Joan … bought a plastic chess set for $1 at the candy store [located just below their apartment] … Neither Joan nor Bobby had ever seen a chess set before but they followed instructions printed on the inside of the top of the box ... Quoted in Brady 2011, pp. 10–11.
  22. ^ Brady 2011, pp. 10–12.
  23. ^ Brady 1973, p. 5.
  24. ^ Brady 2011, p. 12.
  25. ^ Fischer 1959, p. xi.
  26. ^ Brady 1973, pp. 5–6.
  27. ^ Brady 2011, pp. 17–18.
  28. ^ a b Brady 2011, p. 18.
  29. ^ Brady 2011, p. 20.
  30. ^ Fischer 1959, pp. xi–xii.
  31. ^ Brady 1973, p. 7.
  32. ^ Brady 2011, pp. 19–21.
  33. ^ Fischer 1959, p. 2.
  34. ^ Brady 2011, p. 21.
  35. ^ Fischer 1959, p. xii.
  36. ^ Brady 2011, pp. 38–39.
  37. ^ Brady 2011, p. 52.
  38. ^ "Carmine Nigro, 91, Bobby Fischer's First Chess Teacher". The New York Times. September 2, 2001. Retrieved August 24, 2013.
  39. ^ Brady 2011, p. 6.
  40. ^ Dylan Loeb McClain (December 4, 2001). "John W. Collins, 89, Dies; Was Fischer's Chess Tutor". The New York Times. Retrieved January 4, 2014.
  41. ^ Collins 1974, p. 47. "'He taught Bobby Fischer to play chess' is the way I am sometimes publicly and privately introduced."
  42. ^ "Collins, for his part, said that he never 'taught' Bobby in the strictest sense" and that Fischer "knew before instructed". Collins 1974, pp. 48–49. Quoted in Brady 2011, p. 52.
  43. ^ "Fischer was also extremely fortunate in having John W. (Jack) Collins, a chess master, who was a friend, guide, and mentor to him during his early formative years". Arthur Bisguier, in Wade & O'Connell 1973, p. 44.
  44. ^ Brady 1973, pp. 10–11.
  45. ^ Collins 1974, pp. 34–35.
  46. ^ Fischer 1959, p. xiii.
  47. ^ Brady 1973, p. 15.
  48. ^ Collins 1974, pp. 55–56.
  49. ^ The New York Times, March 5, 1956, p. 36. Quoted in Brady 2011, p. 49.
  50. ^ Brady 2011 p. 56.
  51. ^ Chess Life, July 20, 1956, p. 1. Also available on DVD (p. 105 in "Chess Life 1956" PDF file").
  52. ^ Wade & O'Connell 1973, p. 100.
  53. ^ Wade & O'Connell 1973, p. 101.
  54. ^ Wade & O'Connell 1973, p. 105.
  55. ^ Di Felice 2010, p. 76.
  56. ^ a b Brady 1973, p. 16.
  57. ^ Wade & O'Connell 1973, p. 108.
  58. ^ Brady 2011, p. 65.
  59. ^ Di Felice 2010, p. 48.
  60. ^ Chess Review, December 1956, p. 374. Also available on DVD (p. 418 in Chess Review 1956 PDF file).
  61. ^ Fred Wilson (1981). A Picture History of Chess. Dover. p. 170. ISBN 978-0-486-23856-2. While, objectively, it is not one of the greatest games ever played, it is certainly the finest game ever produced by one so young
  62. ^ Brady 2011, p. 64.
  63. ^ AP wire story, February 24, 1957. Quoted in Brady 2011, p. 64.
  64. ^ Wade & O'Connell 1973, p. 123.
  65. ^ a b Brady 1973, p. 17.
  66. ^ Brady 2011, p. 67. "To wrest a draw from a former World Champion was neither small cheese nor minor chess, but Bobby was unhappy since he'd lost the match, 1½–½."
  67. ^ Wade & O'Connell 1973, p. 127.
  68. ^ Wade & O'Connell 1973, p. 130.
  69. ^ Collins 1974, p. 56.
  70. ^ Chess Review, September 1957, p. 260. Also available on DVD (p. 294 in "Chess Review 1957" PDF file).
  71. ^ Brady 2011, p. 75. "No one as young as Bobby had won the United States Open before, and no one had ever held the United States Junior and Open titles concurrently. When Bobby returned to New York, both the Marshall and Manhattan chess clubs conducted victory celebrations, and he was lauded as America's new chess hero."
  72. ^ Wade & O'Connell 1973, pp. 138–40.
  73. ^ a b Brady 1973, p. 19.
  74. ^ Wade & O'Connell 1973, pp. 135–37.
  75. ^ Kenneth Harkness (1967). Official Chess Handbook. David McKay. p. 272. ASIN B009NNTGSM.
  76. ^ a b Brady 1973, p. 20.
  77. ^ A writer in Chess Life, apparently Editor Fred M. Wren, expected Fischer to score about 50%. "The Monday-Morning Quarterback Speaks", Chess Life, January 20. 1958, p. 4. Also available on DVD (p. 12 on Chess Life 1958 PDF file).
  78. ^ Wade & O'Connell 1973, p. 51.
  79. ^ Di Felice 2010, p. 196.
  80. ^ Brady 1973, pp. 20–21.
  81. ^ Edward Winter, Chess Note 6428 (citing Chess Life, February 5, 1958).
  82. ^ Edward Winter, Chess Note 6436 (citing FIDE Revue, April 1958, p. 106).
  83. ^ Edmonds & Eidinow 2004, p. 8.
  84. ^ Brady 2011, pp. 89–90.
  85. ^ ""Teenage Appreciation" episode of "I've Got a Secret"". March 26, 1958. Event occurs at 17:40. Archived from the original on October 28, 2021 – via YouTube.
  86. ^ Regina Fischer (June 1958). "none". Letter to Bobby Fischer – via Marshall Chess Foundation Archive. The Soviet Union had agreed to invite Bobby to Moscow, and generously pay all expenses for him and his sister ... Quoted in Brady 2011, p. 93.
  87. ^ Brady 2011, p. 91.
  88. ^ a b Brady 2011, p. 92.
  89. ^ Edmonds & Eidinow 2004, p. 9.
  90. ^ Linder V.I. & Linder I.M. 1994. Quoted in Plisetsky & Voronkov 2005, pp. 120–21.
  91. ^ Harry Golombek (1977). Golombek's Encyclopedia of Chess. Crown Publishers. pp. 236–37. ISBN 978-0-517-53146-4.. Quoted in Brady 2011, p. 93.
  92. ^ Brady 2011, p. 94.
  93. ^ Daniel Johnson (2007). White King and Red Queen: How the Cold War Was Fought on the Chessboard. Houghton Mifflin Harcourt. p. 128. ISBN 978-0-547-13337-9.. Quoted in Brady 2011, p. 94.
  94. ^ Brady 2011, pp. 94–96.
  95. ^ Wade & O'Connell 1973, pp. 163–64.
  96. ^ Brady 2011, pp. 98–100.
  97. ^ Plisetsky & Voronkov 2005, p. 26.
  98. ^ Brady 1973, p. 25.
  99. ^ Leonard Barden, "From Portorož to Petrosian", in Wade & O'Connell 1973, p. 332.
  100. ^ Lombardy 2011, p. 87.
  101. ^ Wade & O'Connell 1973. pp. 332–34, 347.
  102. ^ Kasparov 2004, pp. 225–26.
  103. ^ Plisetsky & Voronkov 2005, pp. 20–21.
  104. ^ Cathy Forbes (1992). The Polgar Sisters: Training or Genius?. Henry Holt. p. 171. ISBN 978-0-8050-2426-5.
  105. ^ Allen Kaufman (April 9, 2006). "Interview". Anything to Win: The Mad Genius of Bobby Fischer (television documentary).
  106. ^ Di Felice 2010, p. 301.
  107. ^ Di Felice 2010, p. 340.
  108. ^ Wall, Bill. "Bobby Fischer's Tournaments and Matches". billwall.phpwebhosting.com. Retrieved December 28, 2020.
  109. ^ Di Felice 2010, p. 356.
  110. ^ Brady 1973, p. 28.
  111. ^ Plisetsky & Voronkov 2005, p. 27.
  112. ^ Wade & O'Connell 1973, pp. 165, 171, 176.
  113. ^ Paul Keres "From the Opposite Side of the Board" in Wade & O'Connell 1973
  114. ^ Plisetsky & Voronkov 2005, p. 41.
  115. ^ Brady 1965, p. 34.
  116. ^ Brady 1965, p. 35.
  117. ^ Hooper & Whyld 1992, p. 136. "At 16 he was able to earn his living from chess, and soon began to dress well, with suits tailored in London and New York."
  118. ^ Ginzburg 1962, pp. 53–54.
  119. ^ Di Felice 2010, p. 310.
  120. ^ Wade & O'Connell 1973, p. 356.
  121. ^ Brady 2011, pp. 105, 125.
  122. ^ Joseph G. Ponterotto (2012). A Psychobiography of Bobby Fischer. Charles C. Thomas. p. 29. ISBN 978-0-398-08742-5.
  123. ^ Brady 2011, p. 25. "Attempts by Regina and Joan to engage Bobby in schoolwork were usually fruitless. Bobby could concentrate on puzzles or chess for hours, but he fidgeted and grew restless when confronted with reading, writing, and arithmetic… he was accepted by Community Woodward with the understanding that he'd teach the other students to play, and also as a result of his astronomically high IQ test score of 180."
  124. ^ Christopher Andersen (2006). Barbra: The Way She Is. HarperCollins. pp. 15, 41. ISBN 978-0-06-056256-4. Streisand later said that Fischer was "always alone and very peculiar … But I found him very sexy." Id. at 41.
  125. ^ David Boyer (March 11, 2001). "NEIGHBORHOOD REPORT: FLATBUSH; Grads Hail Erasmus as It Enters a Fourth Century". The New York Times. Retrieved August 15, 2009.
  126. ^ Brady 1965, pp. 1, 25.
  127. ^ Collins 1974, p. 52.
  128. ^ Arthur Bisguier, in Wade & O'Connell 1973, p. 47.
  129. ^ Brady 1965, p. 25.
  130. ^ Ginzburg 1962, p. 51.
  131. ^ Schonberg 1973, p. 261. "In his junior year Bobby left school for good because 'the stuff they teach you in school I can't use one way or the other.'"
  132. ^ Ginzburg 1962, p. 55.
  133. ^ Brady 2011, p. 131. "Probing into the activities of the American Chess Foundation, she demonstrated that some players (such as Reshevsky) received support while others (such as Bobby) did not… she sent out indignant press releases, [and] letters to the government demanding a public accounting."
  134. ^ a b Bisguier & Soltis 1974, pp. 282–84.
  135. ^ Hooper & Whyld 1992, pp. 136–37.
  136. ^ Wade & O'Connell 1973, pp. 51 (1-point margin in 1957/58), 57 (1-point margin in 1958/59), 62 (1-point margin in 1959/60), 67 (2-point margin in 1960/61), 71 (1-point margin in 1962/63), 77 (2½-point margin in 1963/64), 82 (1-point margin in 1965), 87 (2-point margin in 1966/67).
  137. ^ a b Müller 2009, pp. 399–400.
  138. ^ Wade & O'Connell 1973, pp. 51, 57, 62, 67, 71, 76, 82, 87.
  139. ^ Müller 2009, p. 85.
  140. ^ Müller 2009, p. 104.
  141. ^ Müller 2009, p. 148.
  142. ^ Müller 2009, p. 181.
  143. ^ Müller 2009, p. 231.
  144. ^ a b Müller 2009, p. 243.
  145. ^ Müller 2009, p. 262.
  146. ^ Müller 2009, p. 263.
  147. ^ Müller 2009, p. 285.
  148. ^ Bisguier & Soltis 1974, p. 283.
  149. ^ Mednis 1997, pp. x–xi, 179–83, 202–11.
  150. ^ Larry Evans, in Müller 2009, p. 7.
  151. ^ Robert Wade (1972). "Olympiads". In Robert G. Wade & Kevin J. O'Connell (eds.). The Games of Robert J. Fischer. Batsford. ISBN 978-0-713-40370-1.
  152. ^ "Fischer, Robert James, Men's Chess Olympiads". Olimpbase. 2015. Retrieved September 23, 2015.
  153. ^ "United States (USA) Men's Chess Olympiads". Olimpbase. 2015. Retrieved September 23, 2015.
  154. ^ Di Felice 2010, p. 485.
  155. ^ Di Felice 2013a, p. 251.
  156. ^ Di Felice 2013b, p. 326.
  157. ^ a b Di Felice 2013c, p. 366.
  158. ^ Kažić 1974, pp. 75, 81, 94, 108.
  159. ^ "Fischer, Robert James". Olimpbase. August 2003. Retrieved February 17, 2014.
  160. ^ Müller 2009, pp. 276–77.
  161. ^ Brady 1973, p. 120. "Later Gheorghiu stated that when he offered Fischer the draw, he was convinced he actually had a won game but that he wanted Fischer to be awarded the gold medal. It was obvious that Fischer was trying too hard and had tired and overextended himself. He lost the game decisively. Nevertheless, all of the players and spectators considered Bobby to be the real hero of the most magnificent chess event in history."
  162. ^ Brady 1973, p. 65.
  163. ^ Müller 2009, pp. 224–25.
  164. ^ Wade & O'Connell 1973, pp. 286–87.
  165. ^ Kasparov 2004, p. 335. "'It is important to draw a distinction between the myth of the 'extravagant, capricious, uncontrollable' Fischer and those actions that he undertook quite consciously. Many of his demands in Lugano were absolutely justified. 'It was not only Fischer who did not like the conditions,' writes Petrosian. 'This also applied to me and my colleagues. Imagine a hall, in which three thousand players, trainers and spectators are gathered, a hall without any ventilation and in addition with poor lighting. I have never complained about my eyesight, but I only needed once or twice in a game to think intensively over a move, and my eyes began to hurt.'"
  166. ^ Lombardy 2011, p. 184. "Fischer was clearly the best and highest rated U.S. player and also the U.S. Champion. But in consideration of his lifelong prestige, Reshevsky would not yield first board."
  167. ^ "OlimpBase :: 21st Chess Olympiad, Nice 1974, information". Olimpbase.org. Retrieved December 7, 2021.
  168. ^ Müller 2009, p. 156.
  169. ^ Wade & O'Connell 1973, p. 183.
  170. ^ Edmonds & Eidinow 2004, p. 12.
  171. ^ Bronstein & Fürstenberg 1995, p. 121. "They became friends instantly and have remained so until this day."
  172. ^ a b c Donner 2006, p. 228.
  173. ^ Wade & O'Connell 1973, p. 189.
  174. ^ Benko & Silman 2003, p. 422 (interview with Evans).
  175. ^ Donner 2006, p. 228. "One of his rivals in that tournament was American GM Larry Evans, and the story goes that he found a Bovaryan lady prepared for a small sum to surround Fischer with her charms. This approach proved successful for Evans, as Fischer finished thirteenth in the tournament …"
  176. ^ Benko & Silman 2003, pp. 426–27 (interview with Benko).
  177. ^ Wade & O'Connell 1973, pp. 196–97.
  178. ^ Wade & O'Connell 1973, p. 198.
  179. ^ Brady 2011, p. 135. "The officers of the American Chess Foundation maintained that Reshevsky was the better player, and they arranged to have him prove it."
  180. ^ Brady 1973, pp. 42–46.
  181. ^ Di Felice 2013a, p. 17.
  182. ^ Plisetsky & Voronkov 2005, p. 68.
  183. ^ Wade & O'Connell 1973, p. 199.
  184. ^ Di Felice 2013a, p. 223.
  185. ^ Plisetsky & Voronkov 2005, p. 75.
  186. ^ Wade & O'Connell 1973, p. 369.
  187. ^ Brady 1973, p. 51.
  188. ^ Plisetsky & Voronkov 2005, p. 81.
  189. ^ Brady 1973, pp. 53–54.
  190. ^ Leonard Barden (January 18, 2008). "Obituary, Bobby Fischer". The Guardian. Retrieved January 28, 2014.
  191. ^ Plisetsky & Voronkov 2005, p. 82.
  192. ^ Kažić 1974, pp. 188–89.
  193. ^ Benko & Silman 2003, p. 155.
  194. ^ Lombardy 2011, p. 122. "As a second, Grandmaster Arthur Bisguier had to divide his talents between Bobby and Pal Benko… Bobby was hopping mad over the miserable arrangement made by the American Chess Foundation, which was responsible for the funding for the American participants at Curaçao."
  195. ^ Bobby Fischer (August 20, 1962). "The Russians Have Fixed World Chess". Sports Illustrated. Vol. 17, no. 8. pp. 18–19, 64–65. Retrieved January 14, 2020.
  196. ^ Böhm & Jongkind 2003, pp. 29–30, 37, 40, 83.
  197. ^ a b c "Victim of His Own Success: The Tragedy of Bobby Fischer". The Wall Street Journal. January 22, 2008. p. D8.
  198. ^ a b Wade & O'Connell 1973, pp. 331–46.
  199. ^ Wade & O'Connell 1973, pp. 207–08.
  200. ^ a b c Arthur Bisguier, in Wade & O'Connell 1973, p. 49.
  201. ^ Müller 2009, p. 237. "At the time he was also writing for Chess Life, a column called "Fischer Talks Chess," and he made some very favorable comments about the overall quality of the opposition he faced as well as the organization of the tournaments."
  202. ^ Wade & O'Connell 1973, pp. 49, 149–51.
  203. ^ Wade & O'Connell 1973, pp. 49, 152–53.
  204. ^ Brady 1973, p. 70.
  205. ^ a b David Levy (1975). How Fischer Plays Chess. R.H.M. Press. p. 91. ISBN 978-0-89058-011-0.
  206. ^ "The Amazing Victory Streak of Bobby Fischer". Sports Illustrated. January 13, 1964. Retrieved May 12, 2007.
  207. ^ Arthur Bisguier, in Wade & Connell 1973, pp. 49–50.
  208. ^ a b Hooper & Whyld 1992, p. 81.
  209. ^ a b Andy Soltis (2002). Chess Lists (2nd ed.). McFarland and Company. pp. 81–83. ISBN 978-0-7864-1296-9.
  210. ^ Anne Sunnucks (1976) [1970]. The Encyclopaedia of Chess (2nd ed.). St. Martin's Press. p. 76. ISBN 978-0-7091-4697-1.
  211. ^ Fischer 1969, p. 305.
  212. ^ Quoted in Brady 1973, p. 74.
  213. ^ a b Müller 2009, p. 248.
  214. ^ Chess Life, August 1964, p. 202. Quoted in Brady 2011, p. 155.
  215. ^ Brady 1973, pp. 80–81.
  216. ^ a b John Donaldson (2005). A Legend on the Road: Bobby Fischer's 1964 Simul Tour. International Chess Enterprises. pp. 7, 11. ISBN 978-1-888690-25-5.
  217. ^ Wade & O'Connell 1973, p. 285.
  218. ^ Plisetsky & Voronkov 2005, pp. 127–28.
  219. ^ a b Wade & O'Connell 1973, p. 209.
  220. ^ Bisguier & Soltis 1974, p. 213.
  221. ^ Brady 1973, pp. 86–89.
  222. ^ Plisetsky & Voronkov 2005, pp. 127–31.
  223. ^ Wade & O'Connell 1973, pp. 160, 209.
  224. ^ a b Luděk Pachman (1975). Pachman's Decisive Games. Pitman. p. 215. ISBN 978-0-273-31812-5.
  225. ^ Brady 1973, pp. 88–89.
  226. ^ Plisetsky & Voronkov 2005, p. 127.
  227. ^ Brady 1973, pp. 86–88.
  228. ^ a b Di Felice 2013b, p. 167.
  229. ^ Brady 1973, pp. 92–94.
  230. ^ Wade & O'Connell 1973, pp. 82–86.
  231. ^ Plisetsky & Voronkov 2005, p. 134.
  232. ^ Isaac Kashdan (1977) [1968]. Second Piatigorsky Cup: International Grandmaster Tournament held in Santa Monica, California August 1966. Dover. p. v. ISBN 978-0-486-23572-1.
  233. ^ Kasparov 2004, p. 322.
  234. ^ Müller 2009, pp. 284–85.
  235. ^ Wade & O'Connell 1973, pp. 87–91.
  236. ^ Di Felice 2013b, p. 396.
  237. ^ Di Felice 2013b, pp. 423–24.
  238. ^ Wade & O'Connell 1973, pp. 236–47.
  239. ^ Wade & O'Connell 1973, pp. 450–53.
  240. ^ Schonberg 1973, pp. 256–57. "[At the Sousse Internzonal], Fischer quit at the halfway mark… faced with four games in four consecutive days… for religious reasons, [Bobby] will not play between sundowns on Friday and Saturday. He objected to the consecutive playoffs, claiming that the judges were taking advantage of him, subjecting him to cruel and inhuman punishment. He also pointed out, correctly, that he had entered the tournament with the assurance that such conditions would not prevail. But the judges would not change their ruling …"
  241. ^ Plisetsky & Voronkov 2005, pp. 161–66.
  242. ^ Al Horowitz (1973) The World Chess Championship: A History. Macmillan. New York.
  243. ^ Di Felice 2013c, pp. 56–57.
  244. ^ Di Felice 2013c, p. 91.
  245. ^ Wade & O'Connell 1973, pp. 248–59.
  246. ^ Müller 2009, pp. 320–21.
  247. ^ Wade & O'Connell 1973, pp. 154–55.
  248. ^ Donaldson & Tangborn 1999, p. 170.
  249. ^ Brady 2011, pp. 162–63. "In this new book, his first—and, ultimately, only—serious work as an adult, Fischer was anything but sparse… what he produced was one of the most painstakingly precise and delightful chess books ever written, rivaling the works of Tarrasch, Alekhine, and Reti… If Fischer had never played another game of chess, his reputation, certainly as an analyst, would have been preserved through its publication."
  250. ^ Benko & Silman 2003, p. 426.
  251. ^ Edmonds & Eidinow 2004, pp. 84–86.
  252. ^ Müller 2009, p. 343.
  253. ^ Leonard Barden, in Wade & O'Connell 1973, p. 342.
  254. ^ Brady 1973, p. 174.
  255. ^ Chess Life & Review, July 1975, Vol. XXX, No. 7. "The only condition I asked for stepping down was for Fischer to agree not to withdraw from the Interzonal or the ensuing matches should he qualify for them – and he fulfilled this condition."
  256. ^ Jeff Sonas (May 25, 2005). "The Greatest Chess Player of All Time – Part IV". chessbase.com. Retrieved February 23, 2014.
  257. ^ Edmonds & Eidinow 2004, p. 82.
  258. ^ Larry Melvyn Evans (April 20, 1970). "The Rest Of The World Sort Of Strikes Back". Sports Illustrated. Retrieved September 19, 2015 – via chessgames.com. I was acting as Fischer's second ...
  259. ^ Brady 2011, p. 164.
  260. ^ a b c Müller 2009, p. 321.
  261. ^ "USSR vs Rest of the World: Belgrade 1970". Olimpbase. August 2003. Retrieved September 19, 2015.
  262. ^ Brady 1973, p. 161.
  263. ^ Edmonds & Eidinow 2004, pp. 82–83.
  264. ^ Brady 2011, p. 165.
  265. ^ a b Schonberg 1973, p. 267.
  266. ^ a b c Bobby Fischer: His Games and His Openings 1969 through 1971. Chess Digest. 1971. pp. 83–92.
  267. ^ a b Denker & Parr 1995, p. 105.
  268. ^ Plisetsky & Voronkov 2005, pp. 188–89.
  269. ^ a b Kasparov 2004, p. 343.
  270. ^ Plisetsky & Voronkov 2005, p. 183.
  271. ^ Lombardy 2011, p. 90. "I was among the best blitz players around [due to the fact that] I trained regularly with Bobby since he was 11-years old."
  272. ^ Lombardy 2011, pp. 90–91. "As for Bobby's ability at speed chess, it came as no shock that Bobby would win the world blitz championship in 1970 in Belgrade. I expected Bobby to win by a wide margin, but his winning by a margin of 4½ points ahead of Tal did come as a pleasant surprise!"
  273. ^ Kasparov 2004, p. 342.
  274. ^ Wade & O'Connell 1973, pp. 263–70.
  275. ^ Wade & O'Connell 1973, pp. 271–78.
  276. ^ Plisetsky & Voronkov 2005, pp. 201–02.
  277. ^ Wade & O'Connell 1973, p. 279.
  278. ^ Kasparov 2004, pp. 342–44.
  279. ^ Di Felice 2013c, pp. 320–21.
  280. ^ Mark Weeks (1997–2008). "World Chess Championship 1970 Palma de Mallorca Interzonal Tournament". Printer. Retrieved October 4, 2008.
  281. ^ Kažić 1974, pp. 171–72. "Fischer's 3½-point margin set a new record for an Interzonal, beating Alexander Kotov's 3-point margin at Saltsjöbaden 1952."
  282. ^ Brady 1973, p. 179. "Panno refused to play in protest of the organizers' rescheduling of the game to accommodate Fischer's desire not to play on his religion's Sabbath. Panno was not present when the game was to begin. Fischer waited ten minutes before playing his first move (1.c4) and went to get Panno to convince him to play. Forty-five minutes later, Panno came to the board and resigned."
  283. ^ Wade & O'Connell 1973, pp. 344, 410.
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  292. ^ Plisetsky & Voronkov 2005, p. 232. "'What happened next during the resumption of the 5th game,' Tal wrote later, 'had to be seen to be believed. It is simply incredible that three grandmasters could have left a rook en prise a mere three moves after the resumption of the game.'"
  293. ^ Wade & O'Connell 1973, pp. 412–16.
  294. ^ Leonard Barden "From Portorož to Petrosian", in Wade & O'Connell 1973, p. 345. "The record books showed that the only comparable achievement to the 6–0 score against Taimanov was Wilhelm Steinitz's 7–0 win against Joseph Henry Blackburne in 1876 in an era of more primitive defensive technique."
  295. ^ Brady 1973, p. 188. Quoted in Brady 2011, p. 168.
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  298. ^ Edmonds & Eidinow 2004, p. 92.
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  300. ^ Müller 2009, p. 360. "… the chess world… was positively sent reeling by Bobby's crushing 6–0 defeat of Larsen."
  301. ^ Byrne & Nei 1974, p. 19.
  302. ^ Kasparov 2004, pp. 405–06.
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  305. ^ Steiner 1974, p. 21. "Petrosian's opponents have declared him to be 'the hardest player in history to defeat.'"
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  307. ^ Plisetsky & Voronkov 2005, p. 273. "Karpov: It was already clear that the winner [of the Petrosian-Korchnoi Semi-Final Candidates Match] would have to play Fischer, who on the other staircase was rapidly ascending to the chess throne. There was practically no doubt that Spassky would be able to deal with him, but in the Sports Committee they decided that it was better if it didn't come to this… And so the officials summoned Petrosian and Korchnoi and asked them directly which of them had the better chances against Fischer. Korchnoi said that the 'generation beaten by Fischer' had practically no chances. But Petrosian said that he believed in himself. After this it was suggested to Korchnoi that he should allow Petrosian to win, and in compensation they promised to send him to three major tournaments (which for a Soviet player in those times was a princely reward)."
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  320. ^ Schonberg 1973, p. 269.
  321. ^ a b Plisetsky & Voronkov 2005, p. 293.
  322. ^ Alexander 1972, p. 74.
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  329. ^ Plisetsky & Voronkov 2005, p. 336. "[Petrosian:]' … I must warn Spassky that Fischer is armed with all the new ideas in chess. As soon as Fischer gains even the slightest advantage, he begins playing like a machine. You cannot hope for some mistake. Fischer is a quite extraordinary player. His match with Spassky will be tough.'"
  330. ^ Gligorić 1972, pp. 10–11.
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  343. ^ Byrne & Nei 1974, p. vii.
  344. ^ Donner 2006, p. 136 (originally published in De Tijd, June 28, 1972). "Even before a move has been made, this breathtaking, blood-curdling and heartrending encounter is justly being labelled as 'the Match of the Century'."
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  346. ^ Müller 2009, p. 370. The match made the covers of Time and Newsweek. Id. at 19.
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  352. ^ Anthony Saidy & Norman Lessing (1974). The World of Chess. Random House. pp. 224–226. ISBN 978-0-394-48777-9. Wearing city's gold medal and accompanied by Mayor John Lindsay, Bobby shakes hands with some 3,000 fans attending ...
  353. ^ Larry Evans, in Müller 2009, p. 13.
  354. ^ . Sports Illustrated. August 14, 1972. Archived from the original on March 13, 2016. Retrieved May 12, 2007.
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  357. ^ Edmonds & Eidinow 2004, pp. 2–3. "The 1972 championship will become immortalized in film, on the stage, in song. It will remain incontrovertibly the most notorious chess duel in history. There will never be another like it… A lone American star was challenging the long Soviet grip on the world title. His success would dispose of the Soviet's claim that their chess hegemony reflected the superiority of their political system …"
  358. ^ Robert Byrne (1976). Anatoly Karpov: The Road to the World Chess Championship. Bantam Books. ISBN 978-0-553-02876-8.
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  365. ^ Böhm & Jongkind 2003, p. 46. "Grandmaster Hans Ree remarked of Fischer's demand that the champion keep his title in the event of a 9–9 tie, 'They [FIDE] thought that this demand was too severe. It was rejected, understandably'."
  366. ^ Plisetsky & Voronkov 2005, pp. 417–18.
  367. ^ Plisetsky & Voronkov 2005, pp. 418–19.
  368. ^ Donaldson & Tangborn 1999, p. 159. "In a letter to Larry Evans, published in Chess Life in November 1974, Fischer claimed the usual system (24 games with the first player to get 12½ points winning, and the champion retaining his title in the event of a 12–12 tie) encouraged the player in the lead to draw games, which he regarded as bad for chess. Not counting draws would be 'an accurate test of who is the world's best player'."
  369. ^ Denker & Parr 1995, pp. 110–11. "Former US Champion Arnold Denker, who was in contact with Fischer during the negotiations with FIDE, claimed that Fischer wanted a long match to be able to play himself into shape after a three-year layoff."
  370. ^ Plisetsky & Voronkov 2005, p. 418.
  371. ^ Mednis 1997, p. 282.
  372. ^ Bozidar Kazic (1975). "Anatoly Karpov New World Champion." Chess Informant 19.
  373. ^ Plisetsky & Voronkov 2005, pp. 414–16.
  374. ^ Kasparov 2004, p. 473.
  375. ^ Karpov 1991, pp. 159–65.
  376. ^ Plisetsky & Voronkov 2005, pp. 419–20.
  377. ^ Brady 2011, p. 247. "Roger Cohen: Why, after turning down so many offers to make a comeback, did you accept this one? Bobby Fischer: That's not quite true. As I recall, for example, Karpov in 1975 was the one who refused to play me under my conditions …"
  378. ^ Plisetsky & Voronkov 2005, p. 419.
  379. ^ a b "From all of the people I spoke to, the opinions split right down the middle with a small edge for Bobby." , Susan Polgar, Chesscafe, 2004
  380. ^ Kasparov, My Great Predecessors, part IV: Fischer, p. 474
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  382. ^ Seirawan & Stefanovic (1992), p. 22.
  383. ^ Bisguier, Arthur (June 22, 1988). "When Bobby Fischer took on a computer". The Christian Science Monitor. Retrieved January 27, 2014.
  384. ^ Brady 2011, p. 210. "His connection to the Church was always somewhat ambiguous. He was not a registered member, since he hadn't agreed to be baptized by full immersion in water by Armstrong or one of his ministers. And since he wasn't considered a duly recognized convert, he was sometimes referred to as a 'co-worker' or, less politely, as a 'fringer' — someone on the fringes or edges of the Church but not totally committed to its mission. The Church imposed a number of rules that Bobby thought were ridiculous and refused to adhere to [...]"
  385. ^ Fischer 1982, p. 1.
  386. ^ Fischer 1982, p. 2.
  387. ^ Fischer 1982, pp. 3–14.
  388. ^ Fischer 1982, pp. 10–12.
  389. ^ Fischer 1982, p. 14.
  390. ^ a b Fischer, Bobby (1982). "I Was Tortured in the Pasadena Jailhouse!" (PDF). Retrieved March 30, 2022.
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  395. ^ Dautov, Petra (1995). Bobby Fischer – wie er wirklich ist. Ein Jahr mit dem Schachgenie [Bobby Fischer – how he really is. A year with the chess genius] (in German). Darmstadt: California-Verlag. ISBN 9783980428132.
  396. ^ Brady 2011, p. 225
  397. ^ Mark Weeks (1997–2008). "1992 Fischer – Spassky Rematch Highlights". Printer. Retrieved January 28, 2014.
  398. ^ Seirawan & Stefanovic 1992, p. 8.
  399. ^ "Bobby Fischer arrives in Iceland". BBC News. March 25, 2005. Retrieved January 28, 2014.
  400. ^ Soltis 2003, p. 280.
  401. ^ a b Müller 2009, p. 382.
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  403. ^ Seirawan & Stefanovic 1992, p. 283.
  404. ^ Seirawan & Stefanovic 1992. The content of the first nine press conferences, in full, at pp. 13, 15–21, 53–57, 86–90, 114–18, 149–54, 170–75, 208–14, 227–31, 256–60. The tenth press conference was not transcribed, p. 272.
  405. ^ Seirawan & Stefanovic 1992, p. 291.
  406. ^ Seirawan & Stefanovic 1992, pp. 85, 96, 303.
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  409. ^ Stephen Labaton (December 16, 1992). "FISCHER IS INDICTED OVER CHESS MATCH". The New York Times. Retrieved January 28, 2014.
  410. ^ "Indictment" (PDF). U.S. District Court for the District of Columbia (Federal Circuit). December 15, 1992. Retrieved January 28, 2014 – via chessbase.com.
  411. ^ Brady 2011, p. 255. "On December 15, 1992, a single count indictment in federal court in Washington, D.C., was handed down by a grand jury against Bobby Fischer for violating economic sanctions, through an executive order issued by President George Bush. A letter to that effect was sent to Bobby in Belgrade, and upon announcement of the indictment, federal officials issued a warrant for his arrest."
  412. ^ Edward Winter. "Fischer v Gligorić Training Match (1992)", Chess Notes
  413. ^ Daniszewski, John (September 4, 1992). "Fischer's 19 year-old companion shares chess limelight". The Seattle Times. Retrieved November 12, 2011.
  414. ^ Böhm & Jongkind 2003, pp. 65, 106–09.
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  425. ^ a b "The Bin Laden defense; Diatribe; Bobby Fischer speaks out in favor of 9/11 attacks; Brief Article; Transcript". Harper's Magazine. Vol. 304, no. 1822. March 1, 2002. p. 27. 0017-789X.
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  433. ^ "Will Fischer be extradited?". chessbase.com. July 19, 2004. Retrieved January 28, 2014.
  434. ^ Brady 2011, p. 2. "[Fischer's] worry was that the U.S. government might finally have caught up with him. He'd violated State Department economic sanctions against Yugoslavia by playing a $5 million chess match against Boris Spassky in Sveti Stefan, Montenegro, in 1992, and an arrest warrant had been issued at that time. If he went back to the United States, he'd have to stand trial, and the penalty, if he was convicted, would be anywhere from ten years in prison to $250,000 in fines, or both, plus possible forfeiture of his $3.5 million winnings."
  435. ^ a b "Fischer er jákvæður og skýr í hugsun" (in Icelandic).
  436. ^ Brady 2011, pp. 281–82. "There were problems with the revocation of the passport, however. Fischer never received the notice and therefore couldn't appeal it, which according to law he had the right to do. The Justice Department claimed that the letter had been sent to the hotel in Bern (the location Bobby had given to the embassy) and was returned to them with no forwarding address appended. It was dated December 11, 2003, and when a faxed copy of the letter was ultimately examined, it didn't have an address for Fischer on it, the implication being that the embassy had never sent the letter to Bern."
  437. ^ Brady 2011, p. 282. "Not knowing that his arrest was imminent, and believing that his passport was legal, on July 13, 2004, [Fischer] went to Narita Airport in Tokyo to board a plane bound for Manila. He was arrested and shackled in chains."
  438. ^ Brady 2011, pp. 282, 293. "... on July 13, 2004... [Fischer] was arrested ..." "... on March 23, 2005, [Fischer] was released from his cell."
  439. ^ Hiroshi Suzuki (August 6, 2004). "Bobby Fischer Renounces U.S. Citizenship, Seeks Refugee Status". Bloomberg. Retrieved August 2, 2010.
  440. ^ . chessbase.com. August 10, 2004. Archived from the original on September 28, 2015. Retrieved October 7, 2015. I would not like to defend or justify Bobby Fischer. He is what he is. I am asking only for one thing. For mercy, charity. If for some reason it is impossible, I would like to ask you the following: Please correct the mistake of President François Mitterrand in 1992. Bobby and myself committed the same crime. Put sanctions against me also. Arrest me. And put me in the same cell with Bobby Fischer. And give us a chess set.
  441. ^ . The Sunday Times. Archived from the original on October 13, 2008. Retrieved July 18, 2009.
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  445. ^ "Iceland grants Fischer passport". BBC News. March 21, 2005. Retrieved January 28, 2014.
bobby, fischer, bobby, fisher, redirects, here, english, footballer, bobby, fisher, footballer, other, people, with, similar, names, fisher, robert, james, fischer, march, 1943, january, 2008, american, chess, grandmaster, eleventh, world, chess, champion, che. Bobby Fisher redirects here For the English footballer see Bobby Fisher footballer For other people with similar names see Bob Fisher Robert James Fischer March 9 1943 January 17 2008 was an American chess grandmaster and the eleventh World Chess Champion A chess prodigy he won his first of a record eight US Championships at the age of 14 In 1964 he won with an 11 0 score the only perfect score in the history of the tournament Qualifying for the 1972 World Championship Fischer swept matches with Mark Taimanov and Bent Larsen by 6 0 scores After winning another qualifying match against Tigran Petrosian Fischer won the title match against Boris Spassky of the USSR in Reykjavik Iceland Publicized as a Cold War confrontation between the US and USSR the match attracted more worldwide interest than any chess championship before or since Bobby FischerFischer in 1972Full nameRobert James FischerCountryUnited StatesBorn 1943 03 09 March 9 1943Chicago Illinois USDiedJanuary 17 2008 2008 01 17 aged 64 Reykjavik IcelandTitleGrandmaster 1958 World Champion1972 1975Peak rating2785 July 1972 1 Peak rankingNo 1 July 1971 In 1975 Fischer refused to defend his title when an agreement could not be reached with FIDE chess s international governing body over the match conditions Consequently the Soviet challenger Anatoly Karpov was named World Champion by default Fischer subsequently disappeared from the public eye though occasional reports of erratic behavior emerged In 1992 he reemerged to win an unofficial rematch against Spassky It was held in Yugoslavia which was under a United Nations embargo at the time His participation led to a conflict with the US government which warned Fischer that his participation in the match would violate an executive order imposing US sanctions on Yugoslavia The US government ultimately issued a warrant for his arrest After that Fischer lived as an emigre In 2004 he was arrested in Japan and held for several months for using a passport that the US government had revoked Eventually he was granted Icelandic citizenship by a special act of the Icelandic parliament allowing him to live there until his death in 2008 Fischer made numerous lasting contributions to chess His book My 60 Memorable Games published in 1969 is regarded as essential reading in chess literature In the 1990s he patented a modified chess timing system that added a time increment after each move now a standard practice in top tournament and match play He also invented Fischer random chess also known as Chess960 a chess variant in which the initial position of the pieces is randomized to one of 960 possible positions Fischer made numerous antisemitic statements including Holocaust denial His antisemitism was a major theme in his public and private remarks and there has been widespread comment and speculation concerning his psychological condition based on his extreme views and eccentric behavior Contents 1 Early years 1 1 Paul Nemenyi as Fischer s father 1 2 Chess beginnings 1 3 The Hawthorne Chess Club 2 Young champion 2 1 Wins first US title 3 Grandmaster candidate and author 3 1 Drops out of school 4 US Championships 5 Olympiads 6 1960 61 7 1962 success setback accusations of collusion 7 1 Accuses Soviets of collusion 8 Semi retirement in the mid 1960s 9 Successful return 9 1 Withdrawal while leading Interzonal 9 2 Second semi retirement 10 1969 1972 Road to World Champion 10 1 Road to the World Championship 10 2 World Championship match 10 3 Forfeiture of title 11 Sudden obscurity 12 1992 Spassky rematch 13 Later life and death 13 1 Life as an emigre 13 2 Comments on September 11 attacks 13 3 Detention in Japan 13 4 Citizenship and residency in Iceland 13 5 Death estate dispute and exhumation 14 Personal life 14 1 Religious affiliation 14 2 Antisemitism 14 3 Speculation on psychological condition 15 Contributions to chess 15 1 Writings 15 2 Opening theory 15 3 Endgame 15 4 Fischer clock 15 5 Fischer Random 15 6 Legacy 15 7 Head to head record versus selected grandmasters 15 8 Internet chess playing speculation 16 In popular culture 16 1 In film 16 2 Other media 17 Tournament match and team event summaries 17 1 Tournaments 17 2 Matches 17 3 International Team events 18 Notable games 19 See also 20 Notes 21 References 21 1 Bibliography 22 External linksEarly yearsBobby Fischer was born at Michael Reese Hospital in Chicago Illinois on March 9 1943 2 His mother Regina Wender Fischer was a US citizen 3 4 born in Switzerland her parents were Polish Jews 5 6 Raised in St Louis Missouri 2 Regina became a teacher a registered nurse and later a physician 7 After graduating from college in her teens Regina traveled to Germany to visit her brother It was there she met geneticist and future Nobel Prize winner Hermann Joseph Muller who persuaded her to move to Moscow to study medicine She enrolled at I M Sechenov First Moscow State Medical University where she met Hans Gerhardt Fischer also known as Gerardo Liebscher 8 a German biophysicist whom she married in November 1933 9 In 1938 Hans Gerhardt and Regina had a daughter Joan Fischer The reemergence of antisemitism under Stalin prompted Regina to go with Joan to Paris where Regina became an English teacher The threat of a German invasion led her and Joan to go to the United States in 1939 Regina and Hans Gerhardt had already separated in Moscow although they did not officially divorce until 1945 9 At the time of her son s birth Regina was homeless 10 and shuttled to different jobs and schools around the country to support her family She engaged in political activism and raised both Bobby and Joan as a single parent 11 12 13 In 1949 Regina moved the family to Manhattan 14 and the following year to Brooklyn New York City where she studied for her master s degree in nursing and subsequently began working in that field 12 Paul Nemenyi as Fischer s father In 2002 Peter Nicholas and Clea Benson of The Philadelphia Inquirer published an investigative report which stated that Bobby Fischer s biological father was actually Paul Nemenyi 15 16 13 Nemenyi a Hungarian mathematician and physicist of Jewish heritage specialized in continuum mechanics His work applied geometrical solutions to fluid dynamics Like Bobby he was a child prodigy and won the Hungarian national mathematics competition at the age of 17 Benson and Nicholas continued their work and gathered additional evidence in court records personal interviews and a summary of an FBI investigation written by J Edgar Hoover which confirmed their earlier conclusions 13 Throughout the 1950s the FBI investigated Regina and her circle due to her supposed communist views and due to her time living in Moscow 17 FBI files note that Hans Gerhardt Fischer never entered the United States while recording that Nemenyi took a keen interest in Fischer s upbringing 15 18 19 Not only were Regina and Nemenyi reported to have had an affair in 1942 but Nemenyi made monthly child support payments to Regina and paid for Bobby s schooling until Paul Nemenyi s death in 1952 20 13 Chess beginnings nbsp William Lombardy and Fischer analyzing with Jack Collins looking onIn March 1949 six year old Bobby and his sister Joan learned how to play chess using the instructions from a set bought at a candy store 21 When Joan lost interest in chess and Regina did not have time to play Fischer was left to play many of his first games against himself 22 When the family vacationed at Patchogue Long Island New York that summer Bobby found a book of old chess games and studied it intensely 23 In 1950 the family moved to Brooklyn first to an apartment at the corner of Union Street and Franklin Avenue and later to a two bedroom apartment at 560 Lincoln Place 24 It was there that Fischer soon became so engrossed in the game that Regina feared he was spending too much time alone 12 As a result on November 14 1950 Regina sent a postcard to the Brooklyn Eagle newspaper seeking to place an ad inquiring whether other children of Bobby s age might be interested in playing chess with him The paper rejected her ad because no one could figure out how to classify it but forwarded her inquiry to Hermann Helms the Dean of American Chess who told her that Master Max Pavey former Scottish champion would be giving a simultaneous exhibition on January 17 1951 25 26 Fischer played in the exhibition Although he held on for 15 minutes drawing a crowd of onlookers he eventually lost to the chess master 27 One of the spectators was Brooklyn Chess Club President 28 Carmine Nigro an American chess expert of near master strength and an instructor 29 Nigro was so impressed with Fischer s play 28 that he introduced him to the club and began teaching him 30 31 32 Fischer noted of his time with Nigro Mr Nigro was possibly not the best player in the world but he was a very good teacher Meeting him was probably a decisive factor in my going ahead with chess 33 Nigro hosted Fischer s first chess tournament at his home in 1952 34 In the summer of 1955 Fischer then 12 years old joined the Manhattan Chess Club 35 36 Fischer s relationship with Nigro lasted until 1956 when Nigro moved away 37 38 The Hawthorne Chess Club In June 1956 Fischer began attending the Hawthorne Chess Club based in master John Jack W Collins s home 39 Collins taught chess to children and has been described as Fischer s teacher 40 41 but Collins himself suggested that he did not actually teach Fischer 42 and the relationship might be more accurately described as one of mentorship 43 Fischer played thousands of blitz and offhand games with Collins and other strong players studied the books in Collins large chess library and ate almost as many dinners at Collins home as his own 44 45 46 Young champion nbsp Fischer in Cuba March 1956In March 1956 the Log Cabin Chess Club of West Orange New Jersey based in the home of the club s eccentric multi millionaire founder and patron Elliott Forry Laucks took Fischer on a tour to Cuba where he gave a 12 board simultaneous exhibition at Havana s Capablanca Chess Club winning ten games and drawing two 47 48 On this tour the club played a series of matches against other clubs Fischer played second board behind International Master Norman Whitaker Whitaker and Fischer were the club s leading scorers each scoring 5 points out of 7 games 49 Fischer experienced a meteoric rise in his playing strength during 1956 50 Fischer s first real tournament success occurred in July 1956 when he won the US Junior Chess Championship in Philadelphia He scored 8 10 to become the youngest ever Junior Champion at age 13 51 52 a record that still stands At the 1956 US Open Chess Championship in Oklahoma City he scored 8 12 to tie for 4th 8th places with Arthur Bisguier winning 53 In the first Canadian Open Chess Championship at Montreal 1956 he scored 7 10 to tie for 8th 12th places with Larry Evans winning 54 In November Fischer played in the 1956 Eastern States Open Championship in Washington D C tying for second with William Lombardy Nicholas Rossolimo and Arthur Feuerstein with Hans Berliner taking first by a half point 55 Fischer accepted an invitation to play in the Third Lessing J Rosenwald Trophy Tournament in New York City 1956 a premier tournament limited to the 12 players considered the best in the US 56 Playing against top opposition the 13 year old Fischer could only score 4 11 tying for 8th 9th place 57 Yet he won the brilliancy prize 58 for his game against International Master Donald Byrne 56 in which Fischer sacrificed his queen to unleash an unstoppable attack Hans Kmoch called it The Game of the Century 59 writing The following game a stunning masterpiece of combination play performed by a boy of 13 against a formidable opponent matches the finest on record in the history of chess prodigies 60 61 According to Frank Brady The Game of the Century has been talked about analyzed and admired for more than fifty years and it will probably be a part of the canon of chess for many years to come 62 In reflecting on his game a while after it occurred Bobby was refreshingly modest I just made the moves I thought were best I was just lucky 63 In 1957 Fischer played a two game match against former world champion Max Euwe at New York losing 1 64 65 66 When the US Chess Federation published its rating list in May Fischer had the rank of Master the youngest player to earn that title up to that point 65 In July he successfully defended his US Junior title scoring 8 9 at San Francisco 67 In August he scored 10 12 at the US Open Chess Championship in Cleveland winning on tie breaking points over Arthur Bisguier 68 69 This made Fischer the youngest ever US Open Champion 70 71 He won the New Jersey Open Championship scoring 6 7 72 He then defeated the young Filipino master Rodolfo Tan Cardoso 6 2 in a New York match sponsored by Pepsi Cola 73 74 Wins first US title Based on Fischer s rating and strong results the USCF invited him to play in the 1957 58 US Championship 75 The tournament included six time US champion Samuel Reshevsky defending US champion Arthur Bisguier and William Lombardy who in August had won the World Junior Championship 76 Bisguier predicted that Fischer would finish slightly over the center mark 76 77 Despite all the predictions to the contrary Fischer scored eight wins and five draws to win the tournament by a one point margin with 10 13 78 79 Still two months shy of his 15th birthday Fischer became the youngest ever US Champion 80 Since the championship that year was also the US Zonal Championship Fischer s victory earned him the title of International Master 81 82 Fischer s victory in the US Championship qualified him to participate in the 1958 Portoroz Interzonal the next step toward challenging the World Champion 73 Grandmaster candidate and authorIn 1957 Fischer wanted to go to Moscow At his pleading Regina wrote directly to the Soviet leader Nikita Khrushchev requesting an invitation for Fischer to participate in the 6th World Youth and Student Festival of 1957 The reply affirmative came too late for him to go 83 Regina did not have the money to pay the airfare but in 1958 Fischer was invited onto the game show I ve Got a Secret where thanks to Regina s efforts the producers of the show arranged two round trip tickets to the Soviet Union for Bobby and his sister Joan 84 85 Once in Russia Fischer was invited by the Soviet Union to Moscow 86 where International Master Lev Abramov would serve as a guide to Bobby and his sister Joan 87 Upon arrival Fischer immediately demanded that he be taken to the Moscow Central Chess Club 88 where he played speed chess with two young Soviet masters Evgeni Vasiukov and Alexander Nikitin 89 winning every game 88 Chess author V I Linder writes about the impression Fischer gave grandmaster GM Vladimir Alatortsev when he played blitz against the Soviet masters Back in 1958 in the Central Chess Club Vladimir Alatortsev saw a tall angular 15 year old youth who in blitz games crushed almost everyone who crossed his path Alatortsev was no exception losing all three games He was astonished by the young American Robert Fischer s play his fantastic self confidence amazing chess erudition and simply brilliant play Vladimir said in admiration to his wife on arriving home This is the future world champion 90 Fischer demanded to play against Mikhail Botvinnik the reigning World Champion When told that this was impossible Fischer asked to play Paul Keres Finally Tigran Petrosian was on a semi official basis summoned to the club where he played speed games with Fischer winning the majority 91 When Bobby discovered that he wasn t going to play any formal games he went into a not so silent rage 92 saying he was fed up with these Russian pigs 93 which angered the Soviets who saw Fischer as their honored guest It was then that the Yugoslavian chess officials offered to take in Fischer and Joan as early guests to the Interzonal Fischer took them up on the offer arriving in Yugoslavia to play two short training matches against masters Dragoljub Janosevic and Milan Matulovic 94 Fischer drew both games against Janosevic and then defeated Matulovic in Belgrade by 2 1 95 At Portoroz Fischer was accompanied by Lombardy 96 97 The top six finishers in the Interzonal would qualify for the Candidates Tournament 98 Most observers doubted that a 15 year old with no international experience could finish among the six qualifiers at the Interzonal but Fischer told journalist Miro Radoicic I can draw with the grandmasters and there are half a dozen patzers in the tournament I reckon to beat 99 a Despite some bumps in the road and a problematic start Fischer succeeded in his plan after a strong finish he ended up with 12 20 6 2 12 to tie for 5th 6th 101 The Soviet GM Yuri Averbakh observed In the struggle at the board this youth almost still a child showed himself to be a full fledged fighter demonstrating amazing composure precise calculation and devilish resourcefulness I was especially struck not even by his extensive opening knowledge but his striving everywhere to seek new paths In Fischer s play an enormous talent was noticeable and in addition one sensed an enormous amount of work on the study of chess 102 Soviet GM David Bronstein said of Fischer s time in Portoroz It was interesting for me to observe Fischer but for a long time I couldn t understand why this 15 year old boy played chess so well 103 Fischer became the youngest person ever to qualify for the Candidates and the youngest ever grandmaster at 15 years 6 months 1 day b By then everyone knew we had a genius on our hands 105 Before the Candidates Tournament Fischer won the 1958 59 US Championship scoring 8 11 106 He tied for third with Borislav Ivkov in Mar del Plata scoring 10 14 a half point behind Ludek Pachman and Miguel Najdorf 107 He tied for 4th 6th at Santiago scoring 7 12 behind Ivkov Pachman and Herman Pilnik 108 109 At the Zurich International Tournament spring 1959 Fischer finished a point behind future world champion Mikhail Tal and a half point behind Yugoslavian GM Svetozar Gligoric 110 111 112 Although Fischer had ended his formal education at age 16 dropping out of Erasmus Hall High School in Brooklyn he subsequently taught himself several foreign languages so he could read foreign chess periodicals 113 According to Latvian chess master Alexander Koblencs even he and Tal could not match the commitment that Fischer had made to chess Recalling a conversation from the tournament Tell me Bobby Tal continued what do you think of the playing style of Larissa Volpert She s too cautious But you have another girl Dmitrieva Her games do appeal to me Here we were left literally open mouthed in astonishment Misha and I have looked at thousands of games but it never occurred to us to study our women players games How could we find the time for this Yet Bobby it turns out had found the time 114 Until late 1959 Fischer had dressed atrociously for a champion appearing at the most august and distinguished national and international events in sweaters and corduroys 115 Now encouraged by Pal Benko to dress more smartly Fischer began buying suits from all over the world hand tailored and made to order 116 117 He told journalist Ralph Ginzburg that he had 17 hand tailored suits and that all of his shirts and shoes were handmade 118 At the age of 16 Fischer finished equal fifth out of eight at the 1959 Candidates Tournament in Bled Zagreb Belgrade Yugoslavia 119 scoring 12 28 He was outclassed by tournament winner Tal who won all four of their individual games 120 That year Fischer released his first book of collected games Bobby Fischer s Games of Chess published by Simon amp Schuster 121 Drops out of school Fischer s interest in chess became more important than schoolwork to the point that by the time he reached the fourth grade he d been in and out of six schools 122 In 1952 Regina got Bobby a scholarship based on his chess talent and astronomically high IQ to Brooklyn Community Woodward 123 Fischer later attended Erasmus Hall High School at the same time as Barbra Streisand and Neil Diamond 124 125 In 1959 its student council awarded him a gold medal for his chess achievements 126 127 The same year Fischer dropped out of high school when he turned 16 the earliest he could legally do so 128 129 He later explained to Ralph Ginzburg You don t learn anything in school 130 131 When Fischer was 16 his mother moved out of their apartment to pursue medical training Her friend Joan Rodker who had met Regina when the two were idealistic communists living in Moscow in the 1930s believes that Fischer resented his mother for being mostly absent a communist activist and an admirer of the Soviet Union and that this led to his hatred for the Soviets In letters to Rodker Fischer s mother stated her desire to pursue her own obsession of training in medicine and wrote that her son would have to live in their Brooklyn apartment without her It sounds terrible to leave a 16 year old to his own devices but he is probably happier that way 4 The apartment was on the edge of Bedford Stuyvesant a neighborhood that had one of the highest homicide and general crime rates in New York City 132 Despite the alienation from her son Regina in 1960 protested the practices of the American Chess Foundation 133 and staged a five hour protest in front of the White House urging President Dwight D Eisenhower to send an American team to that year s chess Olympiad set for Leipzig East Germany behind the Iron Curtain and to help support the team financially 16 US ChampionshipsFischer played in eight US Championships winning all of them 134 135 by at least a one point margin 136 His results were 134 137 138 US Champ Score Place Margin of victory Percentage Age1957 58 10 13 8 0 5 139 First 1 point 81 141958 59 8 11 6 0 5 140 First 1 point 77 151959 60 9 11 7 0 4 141 First 1 point 82 161960 61 9 11 7 0 4 142 First 2 points 82 171962 63 8 11 6 1 4 143 First 1 point 73 191963 64 11 11 11 0 0 144 First 3 points 100 201965 145 8 11 8 2 1 146 First 1 point 77 221966 67 9 11 8 0 3 147 First 2 points 86 23Fischer missed the 1961 62 Championship he was preparing for the 1962 Interzonal and there was no 1964 65 event 148 In his eight US Chess Championships Fischer lost only three games to Edmar Mednis in the 1962 63 event and in consecutive rounds to Samuel Reshevsky and Robert Byrne in the 1965 championship culminating in a total score of 74 90 61 wins 26 draws 3 losses 149 Olympiads nbsp Fischer at 17 playing 23 year old World Champion Mikhail Tal in Leipzig East GermanyFischer refused to play in the 1958 Munich Olympiad when his demand to play first board ahead of Samuel Reshevsky was rejected 150 Some sources claim that 15 year old Fischer was unable to arrange leave from attending high school 151 Fischer later represented the United States on first board at four Men s Chess Olympiads winning two individual Silver and one individual Bronze medals 152 Olympiad Individual result Percentage US team result Percentage 153 Leipzig 1960 13 18 154 Bronze 72 2 Silver 72 5 Varna 1962 11 17 155 Eighth 64 7 Fourth 68 1 Havana 1966 15 17 156 Silver 88 2 Silver 68 4 Siegen 1970 10 13 157 Silver 76 9 Fourth 67 8 Out of four Men s Chess Olympiads Fischer scored 40 7 18 for 49 65 75 4 158 159 In 1966 Fischer narrowly missed the individual gold medal scoring 88 23 to World Champion Tigran Petrosian s 88 46 He played four games more than Petrosian faced stiffer opposition 160 and would have won the gold if he had accepted Florin Gheorghiu s draw offer rather than declining it and suffering his only loss 161 At the 1962 Varna Olympiad Fischer predicted that he would defeat Argentinian GM Miguel Najdorf in 25 moves Fischer actually did it in 24 becoming the only player to beat Najdorf in the tournament 162 Najdorf lost the game while employing the very opening variation named after him the Sicilian Najdorf 163 Fischer had planned to play for the US at the 1968 Lugano Olympiad but backed out when he saw the poor playing conditions 164 Both former world champion Tigran Petrosian and Belgian American International Master George Koltanowski the leader of the American team that year felt that Fischer was justified in not participating in the Olympiad 165 According to Lombardy Fischer s non participation was due to Reshevsky s refusal to yield first board 166 In 1974 Fischer was willing to play the 21st Chess Olympiad in Nice France but FIDE rejected his demand to play in a separate room with only Fischer his opponent and spectators 167 1960 61In 1960 Fischer tied for first place with Soviet star Boris Spassky at the strong Mar del Plata Tournament in Argentina winning by a two point margin scoring 13 15 13 1 1 168 169 ahead of David Bronstein 170 Fischer lost only to Spassky this was the start of their lifelong friendship and rivalry 171 Fischer experienced a rare failure in his competitive career 172 at the Buenos Aires Tournament 1960 finishing with 8 19 3 5 11 far behind winners Viktor Korchnoi and Samuel Reshevsky with 13 19 173 According to Larry Evans Fischer s first sexual experience was with a girl to whom Evans introduced him during the tournament 174 175 Pal Benko said that Fischer did horribly in the tournament because he got caught up in women and sex Afterwards Fischer said he d never mix women and chess together and kept the promise 176 Fischer concluded 1960 by winning a small tournament in Reykjavik with 4 5 177 and defeating Klaus Darga in an exhibition game in West Berlin 178 In 1961 Fischer started a 16 game match with Reshevsky split between New York and Los Angeles 179 Reshevsky 32 years Fischer s senior was considered the favorite since he had far more match experience and had never lost a set match After 11 games and a tie score two wins apiece with seven draws the match ended prematurely due to a scheduling dispute between Fischer and match organizer and sponsor Jacqueline Piatigorsky Fischer forfeited 2 games and even though the score was now 7 to 5 with 8 required to win Reshevsky was declared the winner by default and received the winner s share of the prize fund 180 Fischer was second in a super class field behind only former world champion Tal at Bled 1961 181 Yet Fischer defeated Tal head to head for the first time in their individual game scored 3 4 against the Soviet contingent and finished as the only unbeaten player with 13 19 8 0 11 182 183 1962 success setback accusations of collusionFischer won the 1962 Stockholm Interzonal by a 2 point margin 184 going undefeated with 17 22 13 0 9 185 186 He was the first non Soviet player to win an Interzonal since FIDE instituted the tournament in 1948 187 Russian GM Alexander Kotov said of Fischer 188 I have discussed Fischer s play with Max Euwe and Gideon Stahlberg All of us experienced tournament old timers were surprised by Fischer s endgame expertise When a young player is good at attacking or at combinations this is understandable but a faultless endgame technique at the age of 19 is something rare I can recall only one other player who at that age was equally skillful at endgames Vasily Smyslov Fischer s victory made him a favorite for the Candidates Tournament in Curacao 189 190 Yet despite his result in the Interzonal Fischer only finished fourth out of eight with 14 27 8 7 12 191 far behind Tigran Petrosian 17 27 Efim Geller and Paul Keres both 17 27 192 Tal fell very ill during the tournament and had to withdraw before completion Fischer a friend of Tal s was the only contestant who visited him in the hospital 193 Accuses Soviets of collusion See also World Chess Championship 1963 Following his failure in the 1962 Candidates c Fischer asserted in a Sports Illustrated article 195 that three of the five Soviet players Tigran Petrosian Paul Keres and Efim Geller had a prearranged agreement to quickly draw their games against each other in order to conserve their energy for playing against Fischer It is generally thought that this accusation is correct 196 197 Fischer stated that he would never again participate in a Candidates tournament since the format combined with the alleged collusion made it impossible for a non Soviet player to win Following Fischer s article FIDE in late 1962 voted to implement a radical reform of the playoff system replacing the Candidates tournament with a format of one on one knockout matches the format that Fischer would dominate in 1971 197 198 Fischer defeated Bent Larsen in a summer 1962 exhibition game in Copenhagen for Danish TV Later that year Fischer beat Bogdan Sliwa in a team match against Poland in Warsaw 199 In the 1962 63 US Championship Fischer lost to Edmar Mednis in round one It was his first loss ever in a US Championship Bisguier was in excellent form and Fischer caught up to him only at the end Tied at 7 3 the two met in the final round Bisguier stood well in the middlegame but blundered handing Fischer his fifth consecutive US championship 200 Semi retirement in the mid 1960sInfluenced by ill will over the aborted 1961 match against Reshevsky Fischer declined an invitation to play in the 1963 Piatigorsky Cup tournament in Los Angeles which had a world class field 200 He instead played in the Western Open in Bay City Michigan which he won with 7 8 201 202 In August September 1963 Fischer won the New York State Championship at Poughkeepsie with 7 7 his first perfect score 203 ahead of Arthur Bisguier and James Sherwin 204 In the 1963 64 US Championship Fischer achieved his second perfect score this time against the top ranked chess players in the country 144 200 This result brought Fischer heightened fame including a profile in Life magazine 205 Sports Illustrated diagrammed each of the 11 games in its article The Amazing Victory Streak of Bobby Fischer 206 Such extensive chess coverage was groundbreaking for the top American sports magazine His 11 0 win in the 1963 64 Championship is the only perfect score in the history of the tournament 207 and one of about ten perfect scores in high level chess tournaments ever 208 209 210 David Hooper and Kenneth Whyld called it the most remarkable achievement of this kind 208 Fischer recalls 211 Motivated by my lopsided result 11 0 Dr Hans Kmoch congratulated Larry Evans the runner up on winning the tournament and then he congratulated me on winning the exhibition Fischer s 21 move victory against Robert Byrne won the brilliancy prize for the tournament Byrne wrote The culminating combination is of such depth that even at the very moment at which I resigned both grandmasters who were commenting on the play for the spectators in a separate room believed I had a won game 212 International Master Anthony Saidy recalled his last round encounter with the undefeated Fischer 213 Going into the final game I certainly did not expect to upset Fischer I hardly knew the opening but played simply and he went along with the scenario opting for a N v B i e Knight vs Bishop endgame with a minimal edge In the corridor Evans said to me Good Show him we re not all children At adjournment Saidy saw a way to force a draw yet he had already sealed a different wrong move and lost 213 Chess publications around the world wrote of the unparalleled achievement Only Bent Larsen always a Fischer detractor was unimpressed Fischer was playing against children 214 Fischer eligible as US Champion decided against his participation in the 1964 Amsterdam Interzonal taking himself out of the 1966 World Championship cycle 215 even after FIDE changed the format of the eight player Candidates Tournament from a round robin to a series of knockout matches which eliminated the possibility of collusion 205 Instead Fischer embarked on a tour of the United States and Canada from February through May playing a simultaneous exhibition and giving a lecture in each of more than 40 cities 216 He had a 94 winning percentage over more than 2 000 games 216 Fischer declined an invitation to play for the US in the 1964 Olympiad in Tel Aviv 217 Successful return nbsp Fischer in 1971Fischer wanted to play in the Capablanca Memorial Tournament in Havana in August and September 1965 218 Since the State Department refused to endorse Fischer s passport as valid for visiting Cuba 219 he proposed and the tournament officials and players accepted a unique arrangement Fischer played his moves from a room at the Marshall Chess Club which were then transmitted by teleprinter to Cuba 220 221 222 223 Ludek Pachman observed that Fischer was handicapped by the longer playing session resulting from the time wasted in transmitting the moves and that is one reason why he lost to three of his chief rivals 224 The tournament was an ordeal for Fischer who had to endure eight hour and sometimes even twelve hour playing sessions 225 Despite the handicap Fischer tied for second through fourth places with 15 21 12 3 6 226 behind former world champion Vasily Smyslov whom Fischer defeated in their individual game 224 The tournament received extensive media coverage 227 219 In December Fischer won his seventh US Championship 1965 with the score of 8 11 8 2 1 228 despite losing to Robert Byrne and Reshevsky in the eighth and ninth rounds 229 230 Fischer also reconciled with Mrs Piatigorsky accepting an invitation to the very strong second Piatigorsky Cup 1966 tournament in Santa Monica Fischer began disastrously and after eight rounds was tied for last with 3 8 He then staged a strong comeback scoring 7 8 in the next eight rounds In the end World Chess Championship finalist Boris Spassky edged him out by a half point scoring 11 18 to Fischer s 11 18 7 3 8 231 232 Now aged 23 Fischer would win every match or tournament he completed for the rest of his life 233 Fischer won the US Championship 1966 67 for the eighth and final time ceding only three draws 8 0 3 234 235 In March April and August September Fischer won strong tournaments at Monte Carlo with 7 9 6 1 2 236 and Skopje with 13 17 12 2 3 237 238 In the Philippines Fischer played nine exhibition games against master opponents scoring 8 9 239 Withdrawal while leading Interzonal Fischer s win in the 1966 67 US Championship qualified him for the next World Championship cycle 228 At the 1967 Interzonal held at Sousse Tunisia Fischer scored 8 points in the first 10 games to lead the field His observance of the Worldwide Church of God s seventh day Sabbath was honored by the organizers but deprived Fischer of several rest days which led to a scheduling dispute 240 causing Fischer to forfeit two games in protest and later withdraw eliminating himself from the 1969 World Championship cycle 241 Communications difficulties with the highly inexperienced local organizers were also a significant factor since Fischer knew little French and the organizers had very limited English No one in Tunisian chess had previous experience running an event of this stature 242 Since Fischer had completed fewer than half of his scheduled games all of his results were annulled meaning players who had played Fischer had those games cancelled and the scores nullified from the official tournament record 198 Second semi retirement In 1968 Fischer won tournaments at Netanya with 11 13 10 0 3 243 and Vinkovci with 11 13 9 0 4 244 by large margins 245 Fischer then stopped playing for the next 18 months except for a win against Anthony Saidy in a 1969 New York Metropolitan League team match 246 247 That year Fischer assisted by GM Larry Evans released his second book of collected games My 60 Memorable Games published by Simon amp Schuster 248 The book was an immediate success 249 1969 1972 Road to World ChampionIn 1970 Fischer began a new effort to become World Champion His dramatic march toward the title made him a household name and made chess front page news for a time He won the title in 1972 but forfeited it three years later Road to the World Championship nbsp Fischer s scoresheet from his round 3 game against Miguel Najdorf in the 1970 Chess Olympiad in Siegen GermanyThe 1969 US Championship was also a zonal qualifier with the top three finishers advancing to the Interzonal Fischer however had sat out the US Championship because of disagreements about the tournament s format and prize fund Benko one of the three qualifiers agreed to give up his spot in the Interzonal to give Fischer another shot at the World Championship Lombardy who would have been next in line after Benko did the same 250 251 252 253 254 255 In 1970 and 1971 Fischer dominated his contemporaries to an extent never seen before or since 256 Before the Interzonal in March and April 1970 the world s best players competed in the USSR vs Rest of the World match in Belgrade Yugoslavia often referred to as the Match of the Century There was much surprise when Fischer decided to participate 257 With Evans as his second 258 Fischer flew to Belgrade 259 with the intention of playing first board for the rest of the world 260 Danish GM Bent Larsen however due to his recent tournament victories demanded to play first board instead of Fischer even though Fischer had the higher Elo rating 260 261 To the surprise of everyone Fischer agreed 262 263 Although the USSR team eked out a 20 19 victory On the top four boards the Soviets managed to win only one game out of a possible sixteen Bobby Fischer was the high scorer for his team with a 3 1 score against Petrosian two wins and two draws 264 Fischer left no doubt in anyone s mind that he had put his temporary break from the tournament circuit to good use Petrosian was almost unrecognizable in the first two games and by the time he had collected himself although pressing his opponent he could do no more than draw the last two games of the four game set 260 After the USSR versus the Rest of the World Match the unofficial World Championship of Lightning Chess 5 minute games was held at Herceg Novi The Russians figured on teaching Fischer a lesson and on bringing him down a peg or two 265 Petrosian and Tal were considered the favorites 266 but Fischer overwhelmed the super class field with 19 22 17 1 4 far ahead of Tal 14 Korchnoi 14 Petrosian 13 and Bronstein 13 266 267 Fischer lost only one game to Korchnoi who was also the only player to achieve an even score against him in the double round robin tournament 266 268 Fischer crushed such blitz kings as Tal Petrosian and Vasily Smyslov by a clean score 269 Tal marveled that During the entire tournament he didn t leave a single pawn en prise while the other players blundered knights and bishops galore 269 270 For Lombardy who had played many blitz games with Fischer 271 Fischer s 4 point margin of victory came as a pleasant surprise 272 nbsp Fischer in Belgrade for the USSR vs Rest of the World match in 1970In April May 1970 Fischer won at Rovinj Zagreb with 13 17 10 1 6 by a two point margin ahead of Gligoric Hort Korchnoi Smyslov and Petrosian 273 274 In July August Fischer crushed the mostly grandmaster field at Buenos Aires winning by a 3 point margin scoring 15 17 13 0 4 275 Fischer then played first board for the US Team in the 19th Chess Olympiad in Siegen where he won an individual Silver medal scoring 10 13 8 1 4 157 with his only loss being to World Champion Boris Spassky 276 Right after the Olympiad Fischer defeated Ulf Andersson in an exhibition game for the Swedish newspaper Expressen 277 Fischer had taken his game to a new level 278 Fischer won the Interzonal held in Palma de Mallorca in November and December 1970 with 18 23 15 1 7 279 far ahead of Larsen Efim Geller and Robert Hubner with 15 23 280 281 Fischer finished the tournament with seven consecutive wins 282 283 Setting aside the Sousse Interzonal which Fischer withdrew from while leading Fischer s victory gave him a string of eight consecutive first prizes in tournaments 284 Former world champion Mikhail Botvinnik was not however impressed by Fischer s results stating Fischer has been declared a genius I do not agree with this In order to rightly be declared a genius in chess you have to defeat equal opponents by a big margin As yet he has not done this 285 Despite Botvinnik s remarks Fischer began a miraculous year in the history of chess 286 In the 1971 Candidates matches Fischer was set to play against Soviet grandmaster and concert pianist Mark Taimanov in the quarter finals The match began in mid May in Vancouver British Columbia Canada 287 Fischer was generally favored to win 287 288 Taimanov had reason to be confident He was backed by the firm guidance of Botvinnik who had thoroughly analysed Fischer s record and put together a dossier on him from when he was in talks to play Fischer in a match a couple of years earlier 289 After Fischer defeated Taimanov in the second game of the match Taimanov asked Fischer how he managed to come up with the move 12 N1c3 to which Fischer replied that the idea was not his he had come across it in the monograph by the Soviet master Alexander Nikitin in a footnote 290 Taimanov said of this It is staggering that I an expert on the Sicilian should have missed this theoretically significant idea by my compatriot while Fischer had uncovered it in a book in a foreign language 291 With the score at 4 0 in Fischer s favor the fifth game adjournment was a sight to behold 292 Schonberg explains the scene 265 Taimanov came to Vancouver with two seconds both grandmasters Fischer was alone He thought that the sight of Taimanov and his seconds was the funniest thing he had ever seen There Taimanov and his seconds would sit six hands flying pocket sets waving in the air while variations were being spouted all over the place And there sat Taimanov with a confused look on his face Just before resuming play in the fifth game the seconds were giving Taimanov some last minute advice When poor Taimanov entered the playing room and sat down to confront Fischer his head was so full of conflicting continuations that he became rattled left a Rook en prise and immediately resigned Fischer beat Taimanov by the score of 6 0 293 There was little precedent for such a lopsided score in a match leading to the World Championship 294 Upon losing the final game of the match Taimanov shrugged his shoulders saying sadly to Fischer Well I still have my music 295 As a result of his performance Taimanov was thrown out of the USSR team and forbidden to travel for two years He was banned from writing articles was deprived of his monthly stipend and the authorities prohibited him from performing on the concert platform 296 The crushing loss virtually ended Taimanov s chess career 297 Fischer was next scheduled to play against Danish GM Bent Larsen Spassky predicted a tight struggle Larsen is a little stronger in spirit 298 Before the match Botvinnik had told a Soviet television audience 299 It is hard to say how their match will end but it is clear that such an easy victory as in Vancouver against Taimanov will not be given to Fischer I think Larsen has unpleasant surprises in store for Fischer all the more since having dealt with Taimanov thus Fischer will want to do just the same to Larsen and this is impossible Fischer beat Larsen by the identical score of 6 0 300 Robert Byrne writes To a certain extent I could grasp the Taimanov match as a kind of curiosity almost a freak a strange chess occurrence that would never occur again But now I am at a loss for anything whatever to say So it is out of the question for me to explain how Bobby how anyone could win six games in a row from such a genius of the game as Bent Larsen 301 Just a year before Larsen had played first board for the Rest of the World team ahead of Fischer and had handed Fischer his only loss at the Interzonal Garry Kasparov later wrote that no player had ever shown a superiority over his rivals comparable to Fischer s incredible 12 0 score in the two matches 302 Chess statistician Jeff Sonas concludes that the victory over Larsen gave Fischer the highest single match performance rating ever 303 On August 8 1971 while preparing for his last Candidates match with former world champion Tigran Petrosian Fischer won the Manhattan Chess Club Rapid Tournament scoring 21 22 against a strong field 267 304 Despite Fischer s results against Taimanov and Larsen his upcoming match against Petrosian seemed a daunting task 305 Nevertheless the Soviet government was concerned about Fischer 306 307 Reporters asked Petrosian whether the match would last the full twelve games It might be possible that I win it earlier Petrosian replied 308 and then stated Fischer s nineteen consecutive wins do not impress me He is a great chess player but no genius 309 Petrosian played a strong theoretical novelty in the first game gaining the advantage but Fischer eventually won the game after Petrosian faltered 310 311 312 This gave Fischer a run of 20 consecutive wins against the world s top players in the Interzonal and Candidates matches a winning streak topped only by Steinitz s 25 straight wins in 1873 1882 313 209 Petrosian won the second game finally snapping Fischer s streak 314 d After three consecutive draws Fischer swept the next four games to win the match 6 2 5 1 3 316 Sports Illustrated ran an article on the match highlighting Fischer s domination of Petrosian as being due to Petrosian s outdated system of preparation 317 Fischer s recent record raises the distinct possibility that he has made a breakthrough in modern chess theory His response to Petrosian s elaborately plotted 11th move in the first game is an example Russian experts had worked on the variation for weeks yet when it was thrown at Fischer suddenly he faced its consequences alone and won by applying simple classic principles Upon completion of the match Petrosian remarked After the sixth game Fischer really did become a genius I on the other hand either had a breakdown or was tired or something else happened but the last three games were no longer chess 318 319 Some experts kept insisting that Petrosian was off form and that he should have had a plus score at the end of the sixth game to which Fischer replied People have been playing against me below strength for fifteen years 320 Fischer s match results befuddled Botvinnik It is hard to talk about Fischer s matches Since the time that he has been playing them miracles have begun 321 When Petrosian played like Petrosian Fischer played like a very strong grandmaster but when Petrosian began making mistakes Fischer was transformed into a genius 321 Fischer gained a far higher rating than any player in history up to that time 322 On the July 1972 FIDE rating list his Elo rating of 2785 was 125 points above World No 2 Spassky s rating of 2660 323 324 325 326 His results put him on the cover of Life magazine 327 and allowed him to challenge World Champion Boris Spassky whom he had never beaten 0 3 2 328 329 World Championship match Main article World Chess Championship 1972 Fischer s career long stubbornness about match and tournament conditions was again seen in the run up to his match with Spassky Of the possible sites Fischer s first choice was Belgrade Yugoslavia while Spassky s was Reykjavik Iceland 330 For a time it appeared that the dispute would be resolved by splitting the match between the two locations but that arrangement failed 331 After that issue was resolved Fischer refused to appear in Iceland until the prize fund was increased London financier Jim Slater donated an additional US 125 000 bringing the prize fund up to an unprecedented 250 000 1 75 million today and Fischer finally agreed to play 332 Before and during the match Fischer paid special attention to his physical training and fitness which was a relatively novel approach for top chess players at that time Leading up to this match he conducted interviews with 60 Minutes and Dick Cavett explaining the importance of physical fitness in his preparation He had developed his tennis skills to a good level and played frequently during off days in Reykjavik He had also arranged for exclusive use of his hotel s swimming pool during specified hours and swam for extended periods usually late at night 333 According to Soviet Grandmaster Nikolai Krogius Fischer was paying great attention to sport and that he was swimming and even boxing 334 The match took place in Reykjavik from July to September 1972 Fischer was accompanied by William Lombardy besides assisting with analysis 335 Lombardy may have played an important role in getting Fischer to play in the match and to stay in it 336 The match was the first to receive an American broadcast in prime time 337 338 Fischer lost the first two games in strange fashion the first when he played a risky pawn grab in a drawn endgame the second by forfeit when he refused to play the game in a dispute over playing conditions 339 Fischer would likely have forfeited the entire match but Spassky not wanting to win by default yielded to Fischer s demands to move the next game to a back room away from the cameras whose presence had upset Fischer 340 341 After that game the match was moved back to the stage and proceeded without further serious incident Fischer won seven of the next 19 games losing only one and drawing eleven to win the match 12 8 and become the 11th World Chess Champion 337 The Cold War trappings made the match a media sensation 342 It was called The Match of the Century 343 344 e and received front page media coverage in the United States and around the world 345 346 Fischer s win was an American victory in a field that Soviet players closely identified with and subsidized by the state had dominated for the previous quarter century Kasparov remarked Fischer fits ideologically into the context of the Cold War era a lone American genius challenges the Soviet chess machine and defeats it 347 348 Dutch Grandmaster Jan Timman calls Fischer s victory the story of a lonely hero who overcomes an entire empire 349 Fischer s sister observed Bobby did all this in a country almost totally without a chess culture It was as if an Eskimo had cleared a tennis court in the snow and gone on to win the world championship 350 Upon Fischer s return to New York 351 a Bobby Fischer Day was held 352 He was offered numerous product endorsement offers worth at least 5 million 35 million today all of which he declined 353 He appeared on the cover of Sports Illustrated 354 with American Olympic swimming champion Mark Spitz and also appeared on The Dick Cavett Show as well as on a Bob Hope TV special 355 Membership in the US Chess Federation doubled in 1972 356 and peaked in 1974 in American chess these years are commonly referred to as the Fischer Boom This match attracted more worldwide interest than any chess championship before or since 357 Forfeiture of title Fischer was scheduled to defend his title in 1975 against Anatoly Karpov who had emerged as his challenger 358 Fischer who had played no competitive games since his World Championship match with Spassky laid out a proposal for the match in September 1973 in consultation with FIDE official Fred Cramer He made three principal non negotiable demands The match continues until one player wins 10 games draws not counting No limit to the total number of games played In case of a 9 9 score the champion Fischer retains the title and the prize fund is split equally 359 A FIDE Congress was held in 1974 during the Nice Olympiad The delegates voted in favor of Fischer s 10 win proposal but rejected his other two proposals and limited the number of games in the match to 36 360 In response to FIDE s ruling Fischer sent a cable to Euwe on June 27 1974 361 362 363 As I made clear in my telegram to the FIDE delegates the match conditions I proposed were non negotiable Mr Cramer informs me that the rules of the winner being the first player to win ten games draws not counting unlimited number of games and if nine wins to nine match is drawn with champion regaining title and prize fund split equally were rejected by the FIDE delegates By so doing FIDE has decided against my participation in the 1975 World Chess Championship Therefore I resign my FIDE World Chess Championship title Sincerely Bobby Fischer The delegates responded by reaffirming their prior decisions but did not accept Fischer s resignation and requested that he reconsider 364 Many observers considered Fischer s requested 9 9 clause unfair because it would require the challenger to win by at least two games 10 8 365 Botvinnik called the 9 9 clause unsporting 366 Korchnoi David Bronstein and Lev Alburt considered the 9 9 clause reasonable 367 368 369 Korchnoi in particular stated 370 Was Fischer right in demanding that the world title be protected by a two point handicap that the challenger would be considered the winner with a 10 8 score and that the champion would retain his title in the event of a 9 9 draw Yes this was quite natural the champion deserves this not to mention the fact that further play to the first win in the event of an even score would be nothing short of a lottery the winner in that case could not claim to have won a convincing victory Due to the continued efforts of US Chess Federation officials 371 a special FIDE Congress was held in March 1975 in Bergen Netherlands 372 in which it was accepted that the match should be of unlimited duration but the 9 9 clause was once again rejected by a narrow margin of 35 votes to 32 373 FIDE set a deadline of April 1 1975 for Fischer and Karpov to confirm their participation in the match No reply was received from Fischer by April 3 Thus by default Karpov officially became World Champion 374 In his 1991 autobiography Karpov professed regret that the match had not taken place and claimed that the lost opportunity to challenge Fischer held back his own chess development Karpov met with Fischer several times after 1975 in friendly but ultimately unsuccessful attempts to arrange a match since Karpov would never agree to play to 10 375 Brian Carney opined in The Wall Street Journal that Fischer s victory over Spassky in 1972 left him nothing to prove except that perhaps someone could someday beat him and he was not interested in the risk of losing He also opined that Fischer s refusal to recognize peers also allowed his paranoia to flower The world championship he won validated his view of himself as a chess player but it also insulated him from the humanizing influences of the world around him He descended into what can only be considered a kind of madness 197 Bronstein felt that Fischer had the right to play the match with Karpov on his own conditions 376 Years later in his 1992 match against Spassky Fischer similarly said that it was Karpov who refused to play against him under Fischer s conditions 377 Whether Karpov could have beaten Fischer is a matter of speculation Soviet GM Lev Alburt felt that the decision to not concede to Fischer s demands rested on Karpov s sober view of what he was capable of 378 Spassky thought that Fischer would have won in 1975 but Karpov would have qualified again and beaten Fischer in 1978 379 According to Susan Polgar commentators are divided with a slight majority believing Fischer would have won an opinion she shares 379 Former world champion Garry Kasparov argued that Karpov would have had good chances because he had beaten Spassky convincingly and was a new breed of tough professional and indeed had higher quality games while Fischer had been inactive for three years 380 Karpov himself said in 2020 that he thought he had chances although he could not say he would be favored 381 Sudden obscurityAfter the 1972 World Chess Championship Fischer did not play a competitive game in public for nearly 20 years 382 In 1977 in Cambridge Massachusetts he played three games against the MIT Greenblatt computer program winning them all 383 He moved to the Los Angeles area and associated with the Worldwide Church of God for a time 384 On May 26 1981 while walking in Pasadena Fischer was arrested by a police patrolman because he resembled a man who had just committed a robbery in the area 385 Fischer who alleged that he was slightly injured during the arrest 386 said that he was held for two days subjected to assault and various types of mistreatment 387 and released on 1 000 bail 388 Fischer published a 14 page pamphlet detailing his allegations of police misconduct saying that his arrest had been a frame up and set up 389 390 391 In 1981 Fischer stayed at the home of grandmaster Peter Biyiasas in San Francisco where over a period of four months he defeated Biyiasas seventeen times in a series of speed games 392 393 In an interview with Sports Illustrated reporter William Nack Biyiasas assessed Fischer s play 391 394 He was too good There was no use in playing him It wasn t interesting I was getting beaten and it wasn t clear to me why It wasn t like I made this mistake or that mistake It was like I was being gradually outplayed from the start He wasn t taking any time to think The most depressing thing about it is that I wasn t even getting out of the middle game to an endgame I don t ever remember an endgame He honestly believes there is no one for him to play no one worthy of him I played him and I can attest to that In 1988 1990 Fischer had a relationship with German chess player Petra Stadler who had been put in touch with Fischer by Spassky When Stadler later published a book about the affair 395 Spassky apologized to Fischer 396 1992 Spassky rematchMain article Fischer Spassky 1992 match Fischer emerged after twenty years of isolation to play Spassky then tied for 96th 102nd on the FIDE rating list in a Revenge Match of the 20th century in 1992 This match took place in Sveti Stefan and Belgrade Yugoslavia in spite of a United Nations embargo that included sanctions on commercial activities Fischer demanded that the organizers bill the match as The World Chess Championship although Garry Kasparov was the recognized FIDE World Champion Fischer insisted he was still the true World Champion and that for all the games in the FIDE sanctioned World Championship matches involving Karpov Korchnoi and Kasparov the outcomes had been prearranged 397 The purse for the rematch was US 5 million with 3 35 million of the purse going to the winner 398 399 This was and still is the largest purse for a match in chess history According to grandmaster Andrew Soltis 400 The match games were of a fairly high quality particularly when compared with Kasparov s championship matches of 1993 1995 and 2000 for example Yet the games also reminded many fans of how out of place Fischer was in 1992 He was still playing the openings of a previous generation He was moreover the only strong player in the world who didn t trust computers and wasn t surrounded by seconds and supplicants Fischer won the match with 10 wins 5 losses and 15 draws 401 Kasparov stated Bobby is playing OK nothing more Maybe his strength is 2600 or 2650 It wouldn t be close between us 402 Yasser Seirawan believed that the match proved that Fischer s playing strength was somewhere in the top ten in the world 403 Fischer and Spassky gave ten press conferences during the match 404 Seirawan attended the match and met with Fischer on several occasions the two analyzed some match games and had personal discourse Seirawan later wrote After September 23 1992 I threw most of what I d ever read about Bobby out of my head Sheer garbage Bobby is the most misunderstood misquoted celebrity walking the face of the earth 405 He added that Fischer was not camera shy smiled and laughed easily was a fine wit and wholly enjoyable conversationalist 406 The US Department of the Treasury warned Fischer before the start of the match that his participation was illegal that it would violate President George H W Bush s Executive Order 12810 imposing United Nations Security Council Resolution 757 sanctions against engaging in economic activities in Yugoslavia 407 In response during the first scheduled press conference on September 1 1992 in front of the international press Fischer spat on the US order saying this is my reply 408 His violation of the order led US Federal officials to initiate a warrant for his arrest upon completion of the match 409 citing in pertinent part Title 50 USC 1701 1702 and 1705 and Executive Order 12810 410 411 Before the rematch against Spassky Fischer had won a training match against Svetozar Gligoric in Sveti Stefan with six wins one loss and three draws 412 Later life and deathLife as an emigre After the 1992 match with Spassky Fischer now a fugitive slid back into relative obscurity taking up residence in Budapest Hungary and allegedly having a relationship with young Hungarian chess master Zita Rajcsanyi 391 413 Fischer stated that standard chess was stale and that he now played blitz games of chess variants such as Chess960 He visited the Polgar family in Budapest and analyzed many games with Judit Zsuzsa and Zsofia Polgar 414 415 416 In 1998 and 1999 he also stayed at the house of young Hungarian grandmaster Peter Leko 417 From 2000 to 2002 Fischer lived in Baguio in the Philippines residing in the same compound as the Filipino grandmaster Eugenio Torre a close friend who had acted as his second during his 1992 match with Spassky 418 Torre introduced Fischer to a 22 year old woman named Marilyn Young f On May 21 2001 Marilyn Young gave birth to a daughter named Jinky Young and claimed that Fischer was the child s father 420 421 a claim ultimately disproven by DNA after Fischer s death 422 423 Comments on September 11 attacks Shortly after midnight on September 12 2001 Philippines local time approximately four hours after the September 11 2001 terrorist attacks in the US Fischer was interviewed live by Pablo Mercado on the Baguio station of the Bombo Radyo network Fischer stated that he was happy that the attacks had happened while expressing his view on United States and Israeli foreign policy saying I applaud the act Look nobody gets that the US and Israel have been slaughtering the Palestinians for years 424 425 426 427 He also said The horrible behavior that the US is committing all over the world This just shows you that what goes around comes around even for the United States 424 425 Fischer also referenced the movie Seven Days in May and said he hoped for a military coup d etat in the US I hope the country will be taken over by the military they ll close down all the synagogues arrest all the Jews execute hundreds of thousands of Jewish ringleaders 428 429 In response to Fischer s statements about 9 11 the US Chess Federation passed a motion to cancel his right to membership in the organization 430 Fischer s right to become a member was reinstated in 2007 431 Detention in Japan Fischer lived for a time in Japan On July 13 2004 acting in response to a letter from US officials Japanese immigration authorities arrested him at Narita International Airport near Tokyo for allegedly using a revoked US passport while trying to board a Japan Airlines flight to Ninoy Aquino International Airport in Manila Philippines 432 433 434 Fischer resisted arrest and claimed to have sustained bruises cuts and a broken tooth in the process 435 At the time Fischer had a passport originally issued in 1997 and updated in 2003 to add more pages that according to US officials had been revoked in November 2003 due to his outstanding arrest warrant for the Yugoslavia sanctions violation 432 Despite the outstanding arrest warrant in the US Fischer said that he believed the passport was still valid 436 The authorities held Fischer at a custody center for 16 days before transferring him to another facility Fischer said that his cell was windowless and he had not seen the light of day during that period and that the staff had ignored his complaints about constant tobacco smoke in his cell 435 437 438 Tokyo based Canadian journalist and consultant John Bosnitch set up the Committee to Free Bobby Fischer after meeting Fischer at Narita Airport and offering to assist him 439 Boris Spassky wrote a letter to US President George W Bush asking For mercy charity and if that was not possible to put him in the same cell with Bobby Fischer and to give them a chess set 440 It was reported that Fischer and Miyoko Watai the President of the Japanese Chess Association with whom he had reportedly been living since 2000 wanted to become legally married 432 It was also reported that Fischer had been living in the Philippines with Marilyn Young during the same period 418 Fischer applied for German citizenship on the grounds that his father was German 441 Fischer stated that he wanted to renounce his US citizenship and appealed to US Secretary of State Colin Powell to help him do so though to no effect 442 443 Japan s Justice Minister rejected Fischer s request for asylum and ordered his deportation 444 445 446 While in prison Bobby Fischer legally married Miyoko Watai on September 6 2004 447 Citizenship and residency in Iceland Seeking ways to evade deportation to the United States Fischer wrote a letter to the government of Iceland in early January 2005 requesting Icelandic citizenship 448 Sympathetic to Fischer s plight but reluctant to grant him the full benefits of citizenship Icelandic authorities granted him an alien s passport When this proved insufficient for the Japanese authorities the Althing the Icelandic Parliament at the behest of William Lombardy 449 450 agreed unanimously to grant Fischer full citizenship in late March for humanitarian reasons as they felt he was being unjustly treated by the United States and Japanese governments 451 452 and also in recognition of his 1972 match which had put Iceland on the map 453 After arriving in Reykjavik in late March Fischer gave a press conference 454 455 He lived a reclusive life in Iceland avoiding entrepreneurs and others who approached him with various proposals 456 Fischer moved into an apartment in the same building as his close friend and spokesman Gardar Sverrisson 457 Gardar s wife Kristin THorarinsdottir was a nurse and later looked after Fischer as a terminally ill patient Gardar s two children especially his son were very close to Fischer 458 Fischer also developed a friendship with Magnus Skulason a psychiatrist and chess player who later recalled long discussions with him on a wide variety of subjects 459 On December 10 2006 Fischer telephoned an Icelandic television station that had just broadcast a chess game in which one player blundered such that his opponent was able to mate on the next move Although he tried to change his mind upon seeing the mate the touch move rule forced him to play the blunder Fischer pointed out a winning combination that could have been played instead of the blunder or the other attempted move but had been missed by the player and commentators 460 In 2005 some of Fischer s belongings were auctioned on eBay 461 Fischer claimed in 2006 that the belongings sold in the US without his permission were worth hundreds of millions of US dollars even billions of dollars 462 463 In the same interview Fischer also said that UBS Bank had closed an account of his and liquidated his assets against his wishes transferring the funds to a bank in Iceland 464 Death estate dispute and exhumation nbsp Fischer is buried at the Church of Laugardaelir nbsp Fischer s grave On January 17 2008 Fischer died at age 64 from degenerative kidney failure at the Landspitali Hospital National University Hospital of Iceland in Reykjavik 465 466 He originally had a urinary tract blockage but refused surgery or medication 467 468 469 Magnus Skulason reported Fischer s response to leg massages Nothing soothes as much as the human touch 470 On January 21 Fischer was buried in the small Christian cemetery of Laugardaelir church outside the town of Selfoss 60 kilometres 37 mi southeast of Reykjavik after a Catholic funeral presided over by Fr Jakob Rolland of the diocese of Reykjavik In accordance with Fischer s wishes only Miyoko Watai Gardar Sverrisson and Gardar s family were present 471 Fischer s estate was estimated at 140 million ISK about 1 million or US 2 million It quickly became the object of a legal battle involving claims from four parties with Miyoko Watai ultimately inheriting what remained of Fischer s estate after government claims The four parties were Fischer s Japanese wife Miyoko Watai his alleged Filipino daughter Jinky Young and her mother Marilyn Young his two American nephews Alexander and Nicholas Targ and their father Russell Targ and the US government claiming unpaid taxes 472 459 473 474 Marilyn Young claimed that Jinky was Fischer s daughter citing as evidence Jinky s birth and baptismal certificates photographs a transaction record dated December 4 2007 of a bank remittance by Fischer to Jinky and Jinky s DNA through her blood samples 420 475 419 However Magnus Skulason a friend of Fischer s said that he was certain that Fischer was not the girl s father 472 In addition the validity of Miyoko Watai s marriage to Fischer was challenged 476 420 In June 2010 Iceland s supreme court ordered Fischer s remains exhumed so that a DNA sample could be obtained 477 478 In August it was announced that DNA testing had ruled out Fischer as the father of Jinky Young 422 423 and the following March an Icelandic court ruled that Miyoko Watai had married Fischer on September 6 2004 479 and was therefore entitled to his estate 480 Fischer s nephews were ordered to pay Watai s legal costs amounting to ISK 6 6 million approximately 57 000 479 Personal lifeReligious affiliation Although Fischer s mother was Jewish Fischer rejected attempts to label him as Jewish 13 In a 1962 interview with Harper s asked if he was Jewish he replied that he was part Jewish through his mother In the same interview he was quoted as saying I read a book lately by Nietzsche and he says religion is just to dull the senses of the people I agree 481 482 In a 1984 letter to the editor of the Encyclopaedia Judaica Fischer demanded that they remove his name from future editions 483 Fischer associated with the Worldwide Church of God in the mid 1960s The church prescribed Saturday Sabbath and forbade work and competitive chess on Sabbath 484 According to his friend and colleague Larry Evans in 1968 Fischer felt philosophically that the world was coming to an end and he might as well make some money by publishing My 60 Memorable Games 485 Fischer thought that the Rapture was coming soon 486 During the mid 1970s Fischer contributed significant money to the Worldwide Church of God 487 In 1972 one journalist stated that Fischer is almost as serious about religion as he is about chess and the champion credited his faith with greatly improving his chess 488 489 Yet prophecies by Herbert W Armstrong went unfulfilled 490 Fischer eventually left the church in 1977 accusing it of being Satanic and vigorously attacking its methods and leadership 392 Towards the end of his life Fischer became interested in Catholicism He bought his friend Gardar Sverrisson a copy of Basic Catechism Creed Sacraments Morality Prayer so Sverrisson could explain the religion better to him 491 According to Sverrisson Fischer talked to him about transformation of society through creation of harmony and that the only hope for the world is through Catholicism 491 Fischer was also known to have read a synopsis of G K Chesterton s works in the years leading up to his death He requested a Catholic funeral and this final service was presided over by Catholic priest Jakob Rolland 492 493 Antisemitism Fischer made numerous antisemitic statements and professed a general hatred for Jews from at least the early 1960s 494 495 Jan Hein Donner wrote that at the time of Bled 1961 He idolized Hitler and read everything about him that he could lay his hands on He also championed a brand of antisemitism that could only be thought up by a mind completely cut off from reality 172 Donner took Fischer to a war museum which left a great impression since Fischer is not an evil person and afterwards he was more restrained in his remarks to me at least 172 From the 1980s on Fischer s comments about Jews were a major theme in his public and private remarks 496 He openly denied the Holocaust and called the United States a farce controlled by dirty hook nosed circumcised Jew bastards 497 Between 1999 and 2006 Fischer s primary means of communicating with the public was radio interviews He participated in at least 34 such broadcasts mostly with radio stations in the Philippines but also in Hungary Iceland Colombia and Russia In 1999 he gave a radio call in interview to a station in Budapest Hungary during which he described himself as the victim of an International Jewish conspiracy In another radio interview Fischer said that it became clear to him in 1977 after reading The Secret World Government by Count Cherep Spiridovich that Jewish agencies were targeting him 498 Fischer s sudden reemergence was apparently triggered when some of his belongings which had been stored in a Pasadena California storage unit were sold by the landlord who claimed it was in response to nonpayment of rent 499 Fischer was also upset that UBS had liquidated his assets and closed his account without his permission When asked who he thought was responsible for the actions UBS had taken Fischer replied There s no question that the Jew controlled United States is behind this that s obvious 462 464 Fischer at a press conference upon his return to Reykjavik Iceland lashed out at Jeremy Schaap the son of the late Dick Schaap a sportswriter who had been a father figure to Fischer when growing up calling his father a Jewish snake for doubting Fischer s sanity in his later writings 500 501 Fischer s library contained antisemitic and racist literature such as Mein Kampf The Protocols of the Elders of Zion and The White Man s Bible and Nature s Eternal Religion by Ben Klassen founder of the World Church of the Creator 502 503 482 A notebook written by Fischer contains sentiments such as 12 13 99 It s time to start randomly killing Jews 504 Despite his views Fischer remained on good terms with Jewish chess players 505 Speculation on psychological condition While as far as is known Fischer was never formally diagnosed with a mental disorder 16 there has been widespread comment and speculation concerning his psychological condition based on his extreme views and unusual behavior 506 Reuben Fine psychologist and chess player who met Fischer many times said that Some of Bobby s behavior is so strange unpredictable odd and bizarre that even his most ardent apologists have had a hard time explaining what makes him tick and described him as a troubled human being with obvious personal problems 507 Valery Krylov advisor to Anatoly Karpov and a specialist in the psycho physiological rehabilitation of sportsmen believed Fischer had schizophrenia 506 Psychologist Joseph G Ponterotto from secondhand sources concludes that Bobby did not meet all the necessary criteria to reach diagnoses of schizophrenia or Asperger syndrome The evidence is stronger for paranoid personality disorder 506 Magnus Skulason a chess player psychiatrist and head doctor of Sogn Institution for Mentally Ill Offenders near Selfoss befriended Fischer towards the end of Fischer s life From Endgame Fischer s 2011 biography by Frank Brady Skulason was not Bobby s psychiatrist as has been implied in the general press nor did he offer Bobby any analysis or psychotherapy He was at Bobby s bedside as a friend to try to do anything he could for him Because of his training however he couldn t fail to take note of Bobby s mental condition He definitely was not schizophrenic Skulason said He had problems possibly certain childhood traumas that had affected him He was misunderstood Underneath I think he was a caring sensitive person 470 Contributions to chessWritings Bobby Fischer s Games of Chess Simon and Schuster New York 1959 ISBN 0 923891 46 3 An early collection of 34 lightly annotated games including The Game of the Century against Donald Byrne A Bust to the King s Gambit American Chess Quarterly Vol 1 No 1 Summer 1961 pp 3 9 508 The Russians Have Fixed World Chess Sports Illustrated Vol 17 No 8 August 20 1962 pp 18 19 64 65 This is the controversial article in which Fischer asserted that several of the Soviet players in the 1962 Curacao Candidates tournament had colluded with one another to prevent him Fischer from winning the tournament The Ten Greatest Masters in History Chessworld Vol 1 No 1 January February 1964 pp 56 61 An article in which Fischer named Paul Morphy Howard Staunton Wilhelm Steinitz Siegbert Tarrasch Mikhail Chigorin Alexander Alekhine Jose Raul Capablanca Boris Spassky Mikhail Tal and Samuel Reshevsky as the greatest players of all time Fischer s criterion for inclusion on his list was his own subjective appreciation of their games rather than their achievements 509 Bobby Fischer Teaches Chess 1966 co written with Donn Mosenfelder and Stuart Margulies 510 The extent of Fischer s contribution has been questioned 511 Checkmate column from December 1966 to December 1969 in Boys Life later assumed by Larry Evans My 60 Memorable Games Simon and Schuster New York 1969 and Faber and Faber London 1969 Batsford 2008 algebraic notation Studied by Kasparov at a young age 512 A classic of painstaking and objective analysis that modestly includes three of his losses 513 I Was Tortured in the Pasadena Jailhouse 1982 A self published booklet on an incident in which Fischer was booked for vagrancy 390 514 Opening theory This section uses algebraic notation to describe chess moves Fischer s opening repertoire was narrow in some ways As White Fischer almost exclusively played 1 e4 calling it best by test 515 throughout his career 516 He played 1 d4 only once in a serious game during a blitz tournament 517 In spite of this narrowness he was considered by some of his rivals to be unpredictable in his opening play and a difficult opponent to prepare for 518 As Black Fischer would usually play the Najdorf Sicilian against 1 e4 and the King s Indian Defense against 1 d4 only rarely venturing into the Nimzo Indian Benoni Grunfeld or Neo Grunfeld 519 Fischer acknowledged difficulty playing against the Winawer Variation of the French Defense 1 e4 e6 2 d4 d5 3 Nc3 Bb4 but maintained that the Winawer was unsound because it exposed Black s kingside and that in his view Black was trading off his good bishop with 3 Bb4 and Bxc3 520 Later on Fischer said I may yet be forced to admit that the Winawer is sound But I doubt it The defense is anti positional and weakens the K side 521 Fischer was renowned for his opening preparation and made numerous contributions to chess opening theory 522 He was one of the foremost experts on the Ruy Lopez 523 A line of the Exchange Variation 1 e4 e5 2 Nf3 Nc6 3 Bb5 a6 4 Bxc6 dxc6 5 0 0 is sometimes called the Fischer Variation after he successfully resurrected it at the 1966 Havana Olympiad 524 525 Fischer s lifetime score with the move 5 0 0 in tournament and match games was eight wins three draws and no losses 86 36 526 Fischer was a recognized expert in the black side of the Najdorf Sicilian and the King s Indian Defense 527 He used the Grunfeld Defense and Neo Grunfeld Defense to win his celebrated games against Donald and Robert Byrne and played a theoretical novelty in the Grunfeld against reigning world champion Mikhail Botvinnik refuting Botvinnik s prepared analysis over the board 528 529 In the Nimzo Indian Defense the line beginning with 1 d4 Nf6 2 c4 e6 3 Nc3 Bb4 4 e3 b6 5 Ne2 Ba6 was named after him 530 531 532 Fischer established the viability of the so called Poisoned Pawn Variation of the Najdorf Sicilian 1 e4 c5 2 Nf3 d6 3 d4 cxd4 4 Nxd4 Nf6 5 Nc3 a6 6 Bg5 e6 7 f4 Qb6 This bold queen sortie to snatch a pawn at the expense of development had been considered dubious 533 534 535 but Fischer succeeded in proving its soundness 536 Out of ten tournament and match games as Black in the Poisoned Pawn Fischer scored 70 winning five drawing four and losing only one the 11th game of his 1972 match against Spassky 537 Following Fischer s use the Poisoned Pawn Variation became a respected line utilized by many of the world s leading players 538 Fischer s 10 f5 in this line against Efim Geller quickly became the main line of the Poisoned Pawn On the white side of the Sicilian Fischer made advances to the theory of the line beginning 1 e4 c5 2 Nf3 d6 3 d4 cxd4 4 Nxd4 Nf6 5 Nc3 a6 or e6 6 Bc4 536 539 which has sometimes been named after him 540 In 1961 prompted by a loss the year before to Spassky 541 Fischer wrote an article titled A Bust to the King s Gambit for the first issue of the American Chess Quarterly in which he stated In my opinion the King s Gambit is busted It loses by force 508 Fischer recommended 1 e4 e5 2 f4 exf4 3 Nf3 d6 542 which has since become known as the Fischer Defense as a refutation to the King s Gambit 543 544 545 Fischer later played the King s Gambit as White in three tournament games winning them all 546 Endgame Fischer had excellent endgame technique 547 International Master Jeremy Silman listed him as one of the five best endgame players along with Emanuel Lasker Akiba Rubinstein Jose Raul Capablanca and Vasily Smyslov calling Fischer a master of bishop endings 548 The endgame of a rook bishop and pawns against a rook knight and pawns has sometimes been called the Fischer Endgame because of several instructive wins by Fischer with the bishop including three against Mark Taimanov in 1970 and 1971 549 550 551 Fischer clock Further information Chess clock Fischer clock and related designs In 1988 Fischer filed for U S Patent 4 884 255 for a new type of chess clock which gave each player a fixed period at the start of the game and then added a small increment after each completed move 552 An example of Fischer s patented clock was made for and used in the 1992 rematch between Fischer and Spassky 553 401 Clocks based on the Fischer clock soon became standard in major chess tournaments 554 Fischer would later complain that he was cheated out of the royalties for this invention 555 Fischer Random Main article Fischer random chess Following his re emergence onto the chess scene with his 1992 match against Spassky Fischer heavily disparaged chess as it was being played at the highest levels 556 As a result on June 19 1996 in Buenos Aires Argentina Fischer announced and advocated a variant of chess called Fischerandom later also known as Chess960 The goal of Fischerandom was to ensure that a game between two players is a contest between their understandings of chess rather than their abilities to prepare opening strategies or memorize opening lines 557 558 Legacy Some grandmasters compared Fischer s play to that of a computer 559 560 or a player without noticeable weaknesses 561 Biographers David Edmonds and John Eidinow wrote Faced with Fischer s extraordinary coolness his opponents sic assurance would begin to disintegrate A Fischer move which at first glance looked weak would be reassessed It must have a deep master plan behind it undetectable by mere mortals more often than not they were right it did The US grandmaster Robert Byrne labeled the phenomenon Fischer fear Grandmasters would wilt their suits would crumple sweat would glisten on their brows panic would overwhelm their nervous systems Errors would creep in Calculations would go awry There was talk among grandmasters that Fischer hypnotized his opponents that he undermined their intellectual powers with a dark mystic insidious force 562 Kasparov wrote that Fischer became the detonator of an avalanche of new chess ideas a revolutionary whose revolution is still in progress 563 In January 2009 reigning world champion Viswanathan Anand described him as the greatest chess player who ever lived 564 Serbian GM Ljubomir Ljubojevic called Fischer A man without frontiers He didn t divide the East and the West he brought them together in their admiration of him 456 German GM Karsten Muller wrote Fischer who had taken the highest crown almost singlehandedly from the mighty almost invincible Soviet chess empire shook the whole world not only the chess world to its core He started a chess boom not only in the United States and in the Western hemisphere but worldwide Teaching chess or playing chess as a career had truly become a respectable profession After Bobby the game was simply not the same 565 Head to head record versus selected grandmasters Rapid blitz and blindfold games not included listed as wins losses draws 566 Players who have been World Champions in boldface nbsp Mikhail Tal 2 4 5 nbsp Mikhail Botvinnik 0 0 1 nbsp Vasily Smyslov 3 1 5 nbsp Boris Spassky 17 11 28 nbsp Max Euwe 1 1 1 nbsp Tigran Petrosian 8 4 15 nbsp Efim Geller 3 5 2 nbsp Svetozar Gligoric 7 4 8 nbsp Paul Keres 4 3 3 nbsp Victor Korchnoi 2 2 4 nbsp Bent Larsen 9 2 1 nbsp Miguel Najdorf 4 1 4 nbsp Lev Polugaevsky 0 0 1 nbsp David Bronstein 0 0 2 nbsp Samuel Reshevsky 9 4 13 nbsp Mark Taimanov 7 0 1 nbsp Borislav Ivkov 4 2 4 nbsp Pal Benko 8 3 7 Internet chess playing speculation In 2001 Nigel Short wrote in The Sunday Telegraph chess column that he believed he had been secretly playing Fischer on the Internet Chess Club ICC in speed chess matches 567 568 Subsequently others claimed to have played Fischer as well 569 Fischer denied ownership of the account 570 In popular cultureIn film The 1993 film Searching for Bobby Fischer adopted from its eponymous book uses Fischer s name in the title even though the film and book are about the life of chess prodigy Joshua Waitzkin whose father wrote the book 571 Outside of the United States it was released as Innocent Moves 572 The title refers to the search for Fischer s successor after his disappearance from competitive chess since Waitzkin s father feels that his son could be that successor Fischer claimed never to have seen the film and complained that it invaded his privacy by using his name without his permission 573 Fischer never received any compensation from the film calling it a monumental swindle 574 In April 2009 the documentary Me and Bobby Fischer about Fischer s last years as his old friend Saemundur Palsson gets him out of jail in Japan and helps him settle in Iceland was premiered in Iceland The film was produced by Fridrik Gudmundsson with music by Gudlaugur Kristinn ottarsson Bjork and Einar Arnaldur Melax In October 2009 the biographical film Bobby Fischer Live 575 was released with Damien Chapa directing and starring as Fischer In 2011 documentary filmmaker Liz Garbus released Bobby Fischer Against the World which explores the life of Fischer with interviews from Garry Kasparov Anthony Saidy and others 576 On September 16 2015 the American biographical film Pawn Sacrifice was released starring Tobey Maguire as Fischer Liev Schreiber as Boris Spassky Lily Rabe as Joan Fischer and Peter Sarsgaard as William Lombardy 577 Other media The musical Chess with lyrics by Tim Rice and music by Bjorn Ulvaeus and Benny Andersson tells the story of two chess champions The musical is loosely based on the 1972 World Championship match between Fischer and Spassky and in later stage productions the American player is named Freddie Trumper a reference to Fischer 578 During the 1972 Fischer Spassky match the Soviet bard Vladimir Vysotsky wrote an ironic two song cycle Honor of the Chess Crown The first song is about a rank and file Soviet worker s preparation for the match with Fischer the second is about the game Many expressions from the songs have become catchphrases in Russian culture 579 British sophisti pop band Prefab Sprout reference Fischer in their 1984 song Cue Fanfare in the lyrics When Bobby Fischer s plane touches the ground He ll take those Russian boys and play them out of town 580 In a season 21 episode of Saturday Night Live in a sketch set at a chess tournament the Spartan cheerleaders played by Will Ferrell and Cheri Oteri sang a cheer with references to Fischer and his reclusion including the lyrics Where is he I don t know I don t know 581 In episode 6 of season 3 of Drunk History titled Games comedian and author Rich Fulcher retold the story of the 1972 World Chess Championship match between Fischer and Spassky In the episode Taran Killam plays Fischer and Jake Johnson plays Spassky 582 Tournament match and team event summariesFischer played 752 tournament games in his career winning 417 drawing 251 and losing 84 583 These include however games when he was very young if only the games after he turned 20 are considered he played 311 tournament games and lost 23 a 7 4 loss percentage 583 Tournaments The 1955 US Amateur Championship was the first tournament organized by the US Chess Federation in which Fischer entered Before this tournament he had played in the Brooklyn Chess Club Championships in some tournaments organized by the Brooklyn YMCA Chess and Checker Club and in a correspondence chess tournament organized by Chess Review Tournament record 137 584 Year Tournament Location Wins Draws Losses Points Games Ranking Players 1955 US Amateur Championship Mohegan Lake New York unknown 6 games 3 6 below 32nd 585 75 50 US Junior Championship Lincoln Nebraska 2 6 2 5 10 11th 21st 20th on tie break 25 50 Washington Square Park New York unknown 8 games 5 8 15th 66 586 56 1956 Greater New York City Open 587 Manhattan 5 0 2 5 7 5th 7th 52 71 Manhattan Chess Club Tournament A Reserves New York unknown 10 games 7 10 1st 2nd 588 6 589 75 Metropolitan League team event New York 4 1 0 4 5 Manhattan A ReservesTeam top scorer 590 90 US Amateur Championship Asbury Park New Jersey 3 2 1 4 6 21st 88 67 US Junior Championship Philadelphia 8 1 1 8 10 1st 28 85 US Open Oklahoma City 5 7 0 8 12 4th 8th 102 71 Canadian Open Montreal 6 2 2 7 10 8th 12th 88 70 Rosenwald Trophy New York 2 5 4 4 11 8th 10th 12 41 Eastern States Open Washington D C 4 3 0 5 7 2nd 5th 56 79 Manhattan Chess Club Championship semifinals New York 2 1 2 2 5 4th 6 50 1957 Log Cabin Open West Orange New Jersey 4 0 2 4 6 6th 14th 61 67 Log Cabin 50 50 fast chess West Orange 3 2 0 4 5 unknown 80 Metropolitan League team event New York 5 0 0 5 5 Manhattan team Fischerplayed at board 7 591 100 New Western Open Milwaukee 5 2 1 6 8 6th 12th 122 75 US Junior Championship San Francisco 8 1 0 8 9 1st 33 94 US Open Cleveland 592 7 8 593 4 0 9 10 11 12 593 1st on tie break 176 82 83 593 New Jersey State Open East Orange 6 1 0 6 7 1st 81 93 North Central Open Milwaukee 4 2 1 5 7 5th 11th 93 71 US Championship New York 8 5 0 10 13 1st 14 81 1958 Interzonal Portoroz 6 12 2 12 20 5th 6th 21 60 1958 US Championship New York 6 5 0 8 11 1st 12 77 1959 Mar del Plata International Mar del Plata 8 4 1 10 13 3rd 4th 14 71 International Santiago 7 1 4 7 12 4th 7th 13 63 Zurich International Zurich 8 5 2 10 15 3rd 4th 16 70 Candidates Bled Zagreb amp Belgrade 8 9 11 12 28 5th 6th 8 45 US Championship New York 7 4 0 9 11 1st 12 82 1960 Mar del Plata International Mar del Plata 13 1 1 13 15 1st 2nd 16 90 Buenos Aires International Buenos Aires 3 11 5 8 19 13th 16th 20 45 3 player double round robin Reykjavik 3 1 0 3 4 1st 3 88 US Championship New York 7 4 0 9 11 1st 12 82 1961 Tournament of the century Bled 8 11 0 15 19 2nd 20 71 1962 Interzonal Stockholm 13 9 0 17 22 1st 23 80 Candidates Curacao 8 12 7 14 27 4th 8 52 US Championship New York 6 4 1 8 11 1st 12 73 1963 Western Open Bay City Michigan 7 1 0 7 8 1st 161 594 94 New York State Open Poughkeepsie 7 0 0 7 7 1st 57 100 US Championship New York 11 0 0 11 11 1st 12 100 1965 Capablanca Memorial Havana 12 6 3 15 21 2nd 4th 22 71 1965 US Championship New York 8 1 2 8 11 1st 12 77 1966 Piatigorsky Cup Santa Monica 7 8 3 11 18 2nd 10 61 1966 US Championship New York 8 3 0 9 11 1st 12 86 1967 Monaco International Monte Carlo 6 2 1 7 9 1st 10 78 International Skopje 12 3 2 13 17 1st 18 79 Interzonal Sousse 7 3 0 8 10 withdrew 22 85 1968 International Netanya 10 3 0 11 13 1st 14 88 International Vinkovci 9 4 0 11 13 1st 14 85 Metropolitan League team event New York 1 0 0 1 1 Manhattan team Fischerplayed only one game 100 1970 Blitz 5 minute games Herceg Novi 17 4 1 19 22 1st 12 86 Tournament of Peace Rovinj amp Zagreb 10 6 1 13 17 1st 18 76 Buenos Aires International Buenos Aires 13 4 0 15 17 1st 18 88 Interzonal Palma de Mallorca 595 15 7 1 18 23 1st 24 80 1971 Manhattan CC Blitz 596 New York 21 1 0 21 22 1st 12 98 Matches Match record 584 597 598 Year Opponent Location Match Wins Draws Losses Result Score Percentage1957 Max Euwe New York 2 game exhibition match 0 1 1 lost 1 25 1957 Dan Jacobo Beninson New York 5 game training match 2 3 0 599 won 3 1 70 600 1957 Rodolfo Tan Cardoso New York 5 2 1 won 6 2 75 1958 Dragoljub Janosevic Belgrade 2 game training match 0 2 0 tied 1 1 50 1958 Milan Matulovic Belgrade 2 1 1 won 2 1 63 1961 Samuel Reshevsky New York amp Los Angeles 16 game match 2 7 2 unfinished 5 5 50 1970 Tigran Petrosian Belgrade USSR vs World Match 2 2 0 won 3 1 75 1971 Mark Taimanov Vancouver Candidates quarterfinal 6 0 0 won 6 0 100 Bent Larsen Denver Candidates semifinal 6 0 0 won 6 0 100 Tigran Petrosian Buenos Aires Candidates final 5 3 1 won 6 2 72 1972 Boris Spassky Reykjavik World Championship 601 7 11 3 won 12 8 60 602 63 603 1992 Svetozar Gligoric Sveti Stefan training match 604 6 3 1 won 7 2 75 Boris Spassky Sveti Stefan amp Belgrade Unofficial rematch 10 15 5 won 10 5 605 58 606 67 605 International Team events International Team events record 584 Year Event Location Board Opponents Wins Draws Losses Points Games Individual ranking Team ranking Individual percentage1960 14th Olympiad Leipzig 1 various 10 6 2 13 18 Bronze Silver 72 1960 Berlin vs USA Match Berlin 1 Klaus Darga 607 1 0 0 1 1 Game won Team won 100 1 game 1962 Poland vs USA Match Warsaw 1 Bogdan Sliwa 1 0 0 1 1 Game won Team won1962 15th Olympiad Varna 1 various 8 6 3 11 17 Eighth Fourth 65 1966 17th Olympiad Havana 1 various 14 2 1 15 17 Silver Silver 88 1970 USSR vs World Match Belgrade 2 Tigran Petrosian 2 2 0 3 4 best world team result Team lost 75 1970 19th Olympiad Siegen 1 various 8 4 1 10 13 Silver Fourth 77 Notable gamesThis section uses algebraic notation to describe chess moves Donald Byrne vs Fischer New York 1956 Grunfeld Defense 5 Bf4 D92 0 1 608 Played when Fischer was 13 years old this game appeared in chess magazines around the world provoking the delight of the public and the amazement of the experts 609 It was dubbed The Game of the Century by Hans Kmoch in Chess Review 610 Svetozar Gligoric vs Fischer Bled 1961 King s Indian Defense Classical Variation Mar del Plata Variation E98 611 A genuine drawn masterpiece according to Garry Kasparov 612 Andrew Soltis rated it as one of The 100 Best Chess Games of the 20th Century 613 abcdefgh8 nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp 877665544332211abcdefghPosition after 22 Nxg3 1 d4 Nf6 2 c4 g6 3 Nc3 Bg7 4 e4 d6 5 Nf3 0 0 6 Be2 e5 7 0 0 Nc6 8 d5 Ne7 9 Ne1 Nd7 10 Nd3 f5 11 exf5 Nxf5 12 f3 Nf6 13 Nf2 Nd4 14 Nfe4 Nh5 15 Bg5 Qd7 16 g3 h6 17 Be3 c5 18 Bxd4 exd4 19 Nb5 a6 20 Nbxd6 d3 21 Qxd3 Bd4 22 Kg2 Nxg3 diagram 23 Nxc8 Nxf1 24 Nb6 Qc7 25 Rxf1 Qxb6 26 b4 Qxb4 27 Rb1 Qa5 28 Nxc5 Qxc5 29 Qxg6 Bg7 30 Rxb7 Qd4 31 Bd3 Rf4 32 Qe6 Kh8 33 Qg6 Robert Byrne vs Fischer 1963 64 US Championship Neo Grunfeld Defense 0 1 614 annotated From an almost symmetrical position Fischer beats a strong international master in just 21 moves a game that was immediately recognized as an all time classic 615 abcdefgh8 nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp 877665544332211abcdefghPosition after 18 Qd2 1 d4 Nf6 2 c4 g6 3 g3 c6 4 Bg2 d5 5 cxd5 cxd5 6 Nc3 Bg7 7 e3 0 0 8 Nge2 Nc6 9 0 0 b6 10 b3 Ba6 11 Ba3 Re8 12 Qd2 e5 13 dxe5 Nxe5 14 Rfd1 Nd3 15 Qc2 Nxf2 16 Kxf2 Ng4 17 Kg1 Nxe3 18 Qd2 diagram Nxg2 19 Kxg2 d4 20 Nxd4 Bb7 21 Kf1 Qd7 0 1 Fischer vs Mark Taimanov Vancouver Candidates Final 1971 4th match game Sicilian Defense Taimanov Variation B47 1 0 616 Fischer s patient and accurate handling of bishop vs knight first in the rook and minor piece endgame and then after rooks were exchanged has become a staple of endgame instructional literature 617 abcdefgh8 nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp 877665544332211abcdefghPosition after 23 Kxd7 1 e4 c5 2 Nf3 Nc6 3 d4 cxd4 4 Nxd4 Qc7 5 Nc3 e6 6 g3 a6 7 Bg2 Nf6 8 0 0 Nxd4 9 Qxd4 Bc5 10 Bf4 d6 11 Qd2 h6 12 Rad1 e5 13 Be3 Bg4 14 Bxc5 dxc5 15 f3 Be6 16 f4 Rd8 17 Nd5 Bxd5 18 exd5 e4 19 Rfe1 Rxd5 20 Rxe4 Kd8 21 Qe2 Rxd1 22 Qxd1 Qd7 23 Qxd7 Kxd7 diagram 24 Re5 b6 25 Bf1 a5 26 Bc4 Rf8 27 Kg2 Kd6 28 Kf3 Nd7 29 Re3 Nb8 30 Rd3 Kc7 31 c3 Nc6 32 Re3 Kd6 33 a4 Ne7 34 h3 Nc6 35 h4 h5 36 Rd3 Kc7 37 Rd5 f5 38 Rd2 Rf6 39 Re2 Kd7 40 Re3 g6 41 Bb5 Rd6 42 Ke2 Kd8 43 Rd3 Kc7 44 Rxd6 Kxd6 45 Kd3 Ne7 46 Be8 Kd5 47 Bf7 Kd6 48 Kc4 Kc6 49 Be8 Kb7 50 Kb5 Nc8 51 Bc6 Kc7 52 Bd5 Ne7 53 Bf7 Kb7 54 Bb3 Ka7 55 Bd1 Kb7 56 Bf3 Kc7 57 Ka6 Ng8 58 Bd5 Ne7 59 Bc4 Nc6 60 Bf7 Ne7 61 Be8 Kd8 62 Bxg6 Nxg6 63 Kxb6 Kd7 64 Kxc5 Ne7 65 b4 axb4 66 cxb4 Nc8 67 a5 Nd6 68 b5 Ne4 69 Kb6 Kc8 70 Kc6 Kb8 71 b6 1 0 Fischer vs Tigran Petrosian Buenos Aires Candidates Final 1971 7th match game Sicilian Defense Taimanov Variation B42 1 0 618 Fischer s unconventional choice of 22 Nxd7 exchanging a well posted knight for an apparently passive bishop has been widely praised 619 However in 2020 engine assisted analysis by Karsten Muller and ChessBase News readers came to the conclusion that 22 a4 wins while 22 Nxd7 only draws against correct defense 620 abcdefgh8 nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp 877665544332211abcdefghPosition after 21 Bd7 1 e4 c5 2 Nf3 e6 3 d4 cxd4 4 Nxd4 a6 5 Bd3 Nc6 6 Nxc6 bxc6 7 0 0 d5 8 c4 Nf6 9 cxd5 cxd5 10 exd5 exd5 11 Nc3 Be7 12 Qa4 Qd7 13 Re1 Qxa4 14 Nxa4 Be6 15 Be3 0 0 16 Bc5 Rfe8 17 Bxe7 Rxe7 18 b4 Kf8 19 Nc5 Bc8 20 f3 Rea7 21 Re5 Bd7 diagram 22 Nxd7 Rxd7 23 Rc1 Rd6 24 Rc7 Nd7 25 Re2 g6 26 Kf2 h5 27 f4 h4 28 Kf3 f5 29 Ke3 d4 30 Kd2 Nb6 31 Ree7 Nd5 32 Rf7 Ke8 33 Rb7 Nxf4 34 Bc4 1 0 Fischer vs Boris Spassky World Chess Championship 1972 6th match game Queen s Gambit Declined Tartakower Defense D59 1 0 621 annotated on the 1972 match page Fischer called this game his best of the match 622 Efim Geller had told Spassky about the strong move 14 Qb7 during their preparation but Spassky had forgotten the advice and played 14 a6 Geller won with 14 Qb7 against Jan Timman in the AVRO 1973 tournament 623 Boris Spassky vs Fischer World Chess Championship 1972 13th match game Alekhine Defense Modern Variation Alburt Variation B04 0 1 624 annotated on the 1972 match page Botvinnik called this game the highest creative achievement of Fischer He resolved a drawish opposite colored bishops endgame by sacrificing his bishop and trapping his own rook Then five passed pawns struggled with the white rook Nothing similar had been seen before in chess 625 Fischer vs Boris Spassky 1992 1st match game Ruy Lopez Breyer Variation C95 1 0 626 annotated on the 1992 match page Fischer s fine victory in his first competitive game in 20 years made a great impression on the chess world although in Kasparov s view Spassky s play was below the standard of the leading grandmasters of the time 627 See also nbsp Chess portalBibliography of works on Bobby Fischer List of chess players by peak FIDE rating List of Jewish chess playersNotes Just before Larsen played Fischer in their individual game Larsen predicted that he would be victorious only to find out quite the opposite Once we were well into the tournament Larsen Fridrik Olafsson and I were engaged in a friendly debate over Fischer s performance Lucky to have 50 quipped Larsen who went on to say I will spank that baby With wisdom Fridrik supplied a thought for me Watch out the baby doesn t spank you At that comment Larsen waved his hand In the very next round Fischer crushed Larsen 100 This record stood until 1991 when it was broken by Judit Polgar 104 According to Lombardy Fischer s lack of a sole second proved a main reason for his failure 194 According to Miguel Quinteros Fischer had the flu at the beginning of the match 315 Perhaps the best selling book on the match was subtitled The New York Times Report on the Chess Match of the Century 345 Marilyn Young s name was written behind a photograph dated December 14 2000 sent to her by Fischer 419 References Fischer Robert James Olimpbase Retrieved September 18 2015 a b Brady 1973 p 2 William Addams Reitwiesner Ancestry of Bobby Fischer Extracts from the U S Federal Decennial Census ancestry com Retrieved January 28 2014 a b Ben Quinn amp Alan Hamilton January 28 2008 Bobby Fischer chess genius heartless son The Sunday Times Retrieved September 14 2008 subscription required Edmonds amp Eidinow 2004 p 313 Edmonds amp Eidinow 2004 p 27 she appears to have been religiously unobservant Andre Schulz October 8 2004 Mutmassungen uber Fischer chessbase com Retrieved October 17 2008 WHO WAS FISCHER S FATHER Chess Life US Chess Federation March 2004 p 10 a b Brady 2011 pp 7 8 Brady 2011 p 8 Brady 2011 p 9 The family lived in California Idaho Oregon Illinois and Arizona before moving to New York Regina s flexibility and desperation led her to a surprising gamut of jobs She was a welder schoolteacher riveter farm worker toxicologist s assistant and stenographer all throughout the early and mid 1940s a b c Edmonds amp Eidinow 2004 p 5 a b c d e Nicholas Peter September 21 2009 Chasing the king of chess Los Angeles Times Archived from the original on September 25 2009 Brady 2011 p 10 In early 1949 Regina Fischer took the least expensive housing she could find when she moved the family Bobby Joan and herself to East 13th Street in Manhattan facing the kitchen back entrance of the famed Luchow s restaurant where many of the best chess players would occasionally dine The Fischers could never afford to eat there The apartment s entrance was marred by a rusty fire escape running up the front and there was only one small bedroom but the rent was 45 a month a b Nicholas Peter Benson Clea November 17 2002 Files reveal how FBI hounded chess king The Philadelphia Inquirer Archived from the original on January 23 2008 a b c Nicholas Peter Benson Clea February 9 2003 Life is not a board game The Philadelphia Inquirer Archived from the original on January 23 2008 Charles Laurence November 24 2002 FBI targeted chess genius Bobby Fischer and his mother The Telegraph London Retrieved September 13 2008 Bohm amp Jongkind 2003 p 22 Regina Fischer entry passenger manifest SS Manhattan January 18 1939 p 74 line 6 accessed January 20 2008 via ancestry com Bohm amp Jongkind 2003 pp 22 135 Bobby Fischer Autobiographical Essay Parade October 27 1957 p 22 In March of 1949 on a rainy day when Bobby had just turned six his sister Joan bought a plastic chess set for 1 at the candy store located just below their apartment Neither Joan nor Bobby had ever seen a chess set before but they followed instructions printed on the inside of the top of the box Quoted in Brady 2011 pp 10 11 Brady 2011 pp 10 12 Brady 1973 p 5 Brady 2011 p 12 Fischer 1959 p xi Brady 1973 pp 5 6 Brady 2011 pp 17 18 a b Brady 2011 p 18 Brady 2011 p 20 Fischer 1959 pp xi xii Brady 1973 p 7 Brady 2011 pp 19 21 Fischer 1959 p 2 Brady 2011 p 21 Fischer 1959 p xii Brady 2011 pp 38 39 Brady 2011 p 52 Carmine Nigro 91 Bobby Fischer s First Chess Teacher The New York Times September 2 2001 Retrieved August 24 2013 Brady 2011 p 6 Dylan Loeb McClain December 4 2001 John W Collins 89 Dies Was Fischer s Chess Tutor The New York Times Retrieved January 4 2014 Collins 1974 p 47 He taught Bobby Fischer to play chess is the way I am sometimes publicly and privately introduced Collins for his part said that he never taught Bobby in the strictest sense and that Fischer knew before instructed Collins 1974 pp 48 49 Quoted in Brady 2011 p 52 Fischer was also extremely fortunate in having John W Jack Collins a chess master who was a friend guide and mentor to him during his early formative years Arthur Bisguier in Wade amp O Connell 1973 p 44 Brady 1973 pp 10 11 Collins 1974 pp 34 35 Fischer 1959 p xiii Brady 1973 p 15 Collins 1974 pp 55 56 The New York Times March 5 1956 p 36 Quoted in Brady 2011 p 49 Brady 2011 p 56 Chess Life July 20 1956 p 1 Also available on DVD p 105 in Chess Life 1956 PDF file Wade amp O Connell 1973 p 100 Wade amp O Connell 1973 p 101 Wade amp O Connell 1973 p 105 Di Felice 2010 p 76 a b Brady 1973 p 16 Wade amp O Connell 1973 p 108 Brady 2011 p 65 Di Felice 2010 p 48 Chess Review December 1956 p 374 Also available on DVD p 418 in Chess Review 1956 PDF file Fred Wilson 1981 A Picture History of Chess Dover p 170 ISBN 978 0 486 23856 2 While objectively it is not one of the greatest games ever played it is certainly the finest game ever produced by one so young Brady 2011 p 64 AP wire story February 24 1957 Quoted in Brady 2011 p 64 Wade amp O Connell 1973 p 123 a b Brady 1973 p 17 Brady 2011 p 67 To wrest a draw from a former World Champion was neither small cheese nor minor chess but Bobby was unhappy since he d lost the match 1 Wade amp O Connell 1973 p 127 Wade amp O Connell 1973 p 130 Collins 1974 p 56 Chess Review September 1957 p 260 Also available on DVD p 294 in Chess Review 1957 PDF file Brady 2011 p 75 No one as young as Bobby had won the United States Open before and no one had ever held the United States Junior and Open titles concurrently When Bobby returned to New York both the Marshall and Manhattan chess clubs conducted victory celebrations and he was lauded as America s new chess hero Wade amp O Connell 1973 pp 138 40 a b Brady 1973 p 19 Wade amp O Connell 1973 pp 135 37 Kenneth Harkness 1967 Official Chess Handbook David McKay p 272 ASIN B009NNTGSM a b Brady 1973 p 20 A writer in Chess Life apparently Editor Fred M Wren expected Fischer to score about 50 The Monday Morning Quarterback Speaks Chess Life January 20 1958 p 4 Also available on DVD p 12 on Chess Life 1958 PDF file Wade amp O Connell 1973 p 51 Di Felice 2010 p 196 Brady 1973 pp 20 21 Edward Winter Chess Note 6428 citing Chess Life February 5 1958 Edward Winter Chess Note 6436 citing FIDE Revue April 1958 p 106 Edmonds amp Eidinow 2004 p 8 Brady 2011 pp 89 90 Teenage Appreciation episode of I ve Got a Secret March 26 1958 Event occurs at 17 40 Archived from the original on October 28 2021 via YouTube Regina Fischer June 1958 none Letter to Bobby Fischer via Marshall Chess Foundation Archive The Soviet Union had agreed to invite Bobby to Moscow and generously pay all expenses for him and his sister Quoted in Brady 2011 p 93 Brady 2011 p 91 a b Brady 2011 p 92 Edmonds amp Eidinow 2004 p 9 Linder V I amp Linder I M 1994 Quoted in Plisetsky amp Voronkov 2005 pp 120 21 Harry Golombek 1977 Golombek s Encyclopedia of Chess Crown Publishers pp 236 37 ISBN 978 0 517 53146 4 Quoted in Brady 2011 p 93 Brady 2011 p 94 Daniel Johnson 2007 White King and Red Queen How the Cold War Was Fought on the Chessboard Houghton Mifflin Harcourt p 128 ISBN 978 0 547 13337 9 Quoted in Brady 2011 p 94 Brady 2011 pp 94 96 Wade amp O Connell 1973 pp 163 64 Brady 2011 pp 98 100 Plisetsky amp Voronkov 2005 p 26 Brady 1973 p 25 Leonard Barden From Portoroz to Petrosian in Wade amp O Connell 1973 p 332 Lombardy 2011 p 87 Wade amp O Connell 1973 pp 332 34 347 Kasparov 2004 pp 225 26 Plisetsky amp Voronkov 2005 pp 20 21 Cathy Forbes 1992 The Polgar Sisters Training or Genius Henry Holt p 171 ISBN 978 0 8050 2426 5 Allen Kaufman April 9 2006 Interview Anything to Win The Mad Genius of Bobby Fischer television documentary Di Felice 2010 p 301 Di Felice 2010 p 340 Wall Bill Bobby Fischer s Tournaments and Matches billwall phpwebhosting com Retrieved December 28 2020 Di Felice 2010 p 356 Brady 1973 p 28 Plisetsky amp Voronkov 2005 p 27 Wade amp O Connell 1973 pp 165 171 176 Paul Keres From the Opposite Side of the Board in Wade amp O Connell 1973 Plisetsky amp Voronkov 2005 p 41 Brady 1965 p 34 Brady 1965 p 35 Hooper amp Whyld 1992 p 136 At 16 he was able to earn his living from chess and soon began to dress well with suits tailored in London and New York Ginzburg 1962 pp 53 54 Di Felice 2010 p 310 Wade amp O Connell 1973 p 356 Brady 2011 pp 105 125 Joseph G Ponterotto 2012 A Psychobiography of Bobby Fischer Charles C Thomas p 29 ISBN 978 0 398 08742 5 Brady 2011 p 25 Attempts by Regina and Joan to engage Bobby in schoolwork were usually fruitless Bobby could concentrate on puzzles or chess for hours but he fidgeted and grew restless when confronted with reading writing and arithmetic he was accepted by Community Woodward with the understanding that he d teach the other students to play and also as a result of his astronomically high IQ test score of 180 Christopher Andersen 2006 Barbra The Way She Is HarperCollins pp 15 41 ISBN 978 0 06 056256 4 Streisand later said that Fischer was always alone and very peculiar But I found him very sexy Id at 41 David Boyer March 11 2001 NEIGHBORHOOD REPORT FLATBUSH Grads Hail Erasmus as It Enters a Fourth Century The New York Times Retrieved August 15 2009 Brady 1965 pp 1 25 Collins 1974 p 52 Arthur Bisguier in Wade amp O Connell 1973 p 47 Brady 1965 p 25 Ginzburg 1962 p 51 Schonberg 1973 p 261 In his junior year Bobby left school for good because the stuff they teach you in school I can t use one way or the other Ginzburg 1962 p 55 Brady 2011 p 131 Probing into the activities of the American Chess Foundation she demonstrated that some players such as Reshevsky received support while others such as Bobby did not she sent out indignant press releases and letters to the government demanding a public accounting a b Bisguier amp Soltis 1974 pp 282 84 Hooper amp Whyld 1992 pp 136 37 Wade amp O Connell 1973 pp 51 1 point margin in 1957 58 57 1 point margin in 1958 59 62 1 point margin in 1959 60 67 2 point margin in 1960 61 71 1 point margin in 1962 63 77 2 point margin in 1963 64 82 1 point margin in 1965 87 2 point margin in 1966 67 a b Muller 2009 pp 399 400 Wade amp O Connell 1973 pp 51 57 62 67 71 76 82 87 Muller 2009 p 85 Muller 2009 p 104 Muller 2009 p 148 Muller 2009 p 181 Muller 2009 p 231 a b Muller 2009 p 243 Muller 2009 p 262 Muller 2009 p 263 Muller 2009 p 285 Bisguier amp Soltis 1974 p 283 Mednis 1997 pp x xi 179 83 202 11 Larry Evans in Muller 2009 p 7 Robert Wade 1972 Olympiads In Robert G Wade amp Kevin J O Connell eds The Games of Robert J Fischer Batsford ISBN 978 0 713 40370 1 Fischer Robert James Men s Chess Olympiads Olimpbase 2015 Retrieved September 23 2015 United States USA Men s Chess Olympiads Olimpbase 2015 Retrieved September 23 2015 Di Felice 2010 p 485 Di Felice 2013a p 251 Di Felice 2013b p 326 a b Di Felice 2013c p 366 Kazic 1974 pp 75 81 94 108 Fischer Robert James Olimpbase August 2003 Retrieved February 17 2014 Muller 2009 pp 276 77 Brady 1973 p 120 Later Gheorghiu stated that when he offered Fischer the draw he was convinced he actually had a won game but that he wanted Fischer to be awarded the gold medal It was obvious that Fischer was trying too hard and had tired and overextended himself He lost the game decisively Nevertheless all of the players and spectators considered Bobby to be the real hero of the most magnificent chess event in history Brady 1973 p 65 Muller 2009 pp 224 25 Wade amp O Connell 1973 pp 286 87 Kasparov 2004 p 335 It is important to draw a distinction between the myth of the extravagant capricious uncontrollable Fischer and those actions that he undertook quite consciously Many of his demands in Lugano were absolutely justified It was not only Fischer who did not like the conditions writes Petrosian This also applied to me and my colleagues Imagine a hall in which three thousand players trainers and spectators are gathered a hall without any ventilation and in addition with poor lighting I have never complained about my eyesight but I only needed once or twice in a game to think intensively over a move and my eyes began to hurt Lombardy 2011 p 184 Fischer was clearly the best and highest rated U S player and also the U S Champion But in consideration of his lifelong prestige Reshevsky would not yield first board OlimpBase 21st Chess Olympiad Nice 1974 information Olimpbase org Retrieved December 7 2021 Muller 2009 p 156 Wade amp O Connell 1973 p 183 Edmonds amp Eidinow 2004 p 12 Bronstein amp Furstenberg 1995 p 121 They became friends instantly and have remained so until this day a b c Donner 2006 p 228 Wade amp O Connell 1973 p 189 Benko amp Silman 2003 p 422 interview with Evans Donner 2006 p 228 One of his rivals in that tournament was American GM Larry Evans and the story goes that he found a Bovaryan lady prepared for a small sum to surround Fischer with her charms This approach proved successful for Evans as Fischer finished thirteenth in the tournament Benko amp Silman 2003 pp 426 27 interview with Benko Wade amp O Connell 1973 pp 196 97 Wade amp O Connell 1973 p 198 Brady 2011 p 135 The officers of the American Chess Foundation maintained that Reshevsky was the better player and they arranged to have him prove it Brady 1973 pp 42 46 Di Felice 2013a p 17 Plisetsky amp Voronkov 2005 p 68 Wade amp O Connell 1973 p 199 Di Felice 2013a p 223 Plisetsky amp Voronkov 2005 p 75 Wade amp O Connell 1973 p 369 Brady 1973 p 51 Plisetsky amp Voronkov 2005 p 81 Brady 1973 pp 53 54 Leonard Barden January 18 2008 Obituary Bobby Fischer The Guardian Retrieved January 28 2014 Plisetsky amp Voronkov 2005 p 82 Kazic 1974 pp 188 89 Benko amp Silman 2003 p 155 Lombardy 2011 p 122 As a second Grandmaster Arthur Bisguier had to divide his talents between Bobby and Pal Benko Bobby was hopping mad over the miserable arrangement made by the American Chess Foundation which was responsible for the funding for the American participants at Curacao Bobby Fischer August 20 1962 The Russians Have Fixed World Chess Sports Illustrated Vol 17 no 8 pp 18 19 64 65 Retrieved January 14 2020 Bohm amp Jongkind 2003 pp 29 30 37 40 83 a b c Victim of His Own Success The Tragedy of Bobby Fischer The Wall Street Journal January 22 2008 p D8 a b Wade amp O Connell 1973 pp 331 46 Wade amp O Connell 1973 pp 207 08 a b c Arthur Bisguier in Wade amp O Connell 1973 p 49 Muller 2009 p 237 At the time he was also writing for Chess Life a column called Fischer Talks Chess and he made some very favorable comments about the overall quality of the opposition he faced as well as the organization of the tournaments Wade amp O Connell 1973 pp 49 149 51 Wade amp O Connell 1973 pp 49 152 53 Brady 1973 p 70 a b David Levy 1975 How Fischer Plays Chess R H M Press p 91 ISBN 978 0 89058 011 0 The Amazing Victory Streak of Bobby Fischer Sports Illustrated January 13 1964 Retrieved May 12 2007 Arthur Bisguier in Wade amp Connell 1973 pp 49 50 a b Hooper amp Whyld 1992 p 81 a b Andy Soltis 2002 Chess Lists 2nd ed McFarland and Company pp 81 83 ISBN 978 0 7864 1296 9 Anne Sunnucks 1976 1970 The Encyclopaedia of Chess 2nd ed St Martin s Press p 76 ISBN 978 0 7091 4697 1 Fischer 1969 p 305 Quoted in Brady 1973 p 74 a b Muller 2009 p 248 Chess Life August 1964 p 202 Quoted in Brady 2011 p 155 Brady 1973 pp 80 81 a b John Donaldson 2005 A Legend on the Road Bobby Fischer s 1964 Simul Tour International Chess Enterprises pp 7 11 ISBN 978 1 888690 25 5 Wade amp O Connell 1973 p 285 Plisetsky amp Voronkov 2005 pp 127 28 a b Wade amp O Connell 1973 p 209 Bisguier amp Soltis 1974 p 213 Brady 1973 pp 86 89 Plisetsky amp Voronkov 2005 pp 127 31 Wade amp O Connell 1973 pp 160 209 a b Ludek Pachman 1975 Pachman s Decisive Games Pitman p 215 ISBN 978 0 273 31812 5 Brady 1973 pp 88 89 Plisetsky amp Voronkov 2005 p 127 Brady 1973 pp 86 88 a b Di Felice 2013b p 167 Brady 1973 pp 92 94 Wade amp O Connell 1973 pp 82 86 Plisetsky amp Voronkov 2005 p 134 Isaac Kashdan 1977 1968 Second Piatigorsky Cup International Grandmaster Tournament held in Santa Monica California August 1966 Dover p v ISBN 978 0 486 23572 1 Kasparov 2004 p 322 Muller 2009 pp 284 85 Wade amp O Connell 1973 pp 87 91 Di Felice 2013b p 396 Di Felice 2013b pp 423 24 Wade amp O Connell 1973 pp 236 47 Wade amp O Connell 1973 pp 450 53 Schonberg 1973 pp 256 57 At the Sousse Internzonal Fischer quit at the halfway mark faced with four games in four consecutive days for religious reasons Bobby will not play between sundowns on Friday and Saturday He objected to the consecutive playoffs claiming that the judges were taking advantage of him subjecting him to cruel and inhuman punishment He also pointed out correctly that he had entered the tournament with the assurance that such conditions would not prevail But the judges would not change their ruling Plisetsky amp Voronkov 2005 pp 161 66 Al Horowitz 1973 The World Chess Championship A History Macmillan New York Di Felice 2013c pp 56 57 Di Felice 2013c p 91 Wade amp O Connell 1973 pp 248 59 Muller 2009 pp 320 21 Wade amp O Connell 1973 pp 154 55 Donaldson amp Tangborn 1999 p 170 Brady 2011 pp 162 63 In this new book his first and ultimately only serious work as an adult Fischer was anything but sparse what he produced was one of the most painstakingly precise and delightful chess books ever written rivaling the works of Tarrasch Alekhine and Reti If Fischer had never played another game of chess his reputation certainly as an analyst would have been preserved through its publication Benko amp Silman 2003 p 426 Edmonds amp Eidinow 2004 pp 84 86 Muller 2009 p 343 Leonard Barden in Wade amp O Connell 1973 p 342 Brady 1973 p 174 Chess Life amp Review July 1975 Vol XXX No 7 The only condition I asked for stepping down was for Fischer to agree not to withdraw from the Interzonal or the ensuing matches should he qualify for them and he fulfilled this condition Jeff Sonas May 25 2005 The Greatest Chess Player of All Time Part IV chessbase com Retrieved February 23 2014 Edmonds amp Eidinow 2004 p 82 Larry Melvyn Evans April 20 1970 The Rest Of The World Sort Of Strikes Back Sports Illustrated Retrieved September 19 2015 via chessgames com I was acting as Fischer s second Brady 2011 p 164 a b c Muller 2009 p 321 USSR vs Rest of the World Belgrade 1970 Olimpbase August 2003 Retrieved September 19 2015 Brady 1973 p 161 Edmonds amp Eidinow 2004 pp 82 83 Brady 2011 p 165 a b Schonberg 1973 p 267 a b c Bobby Fischer His Games and His Openings 1969 through 1971 Chess Digest 1971 pp 83 92 a b Denker amp Parr 1995 p 105 Plisetsky amp Voronkov 2005 pp 188 89 a b Kasparov 2004 p 343 Plisetsky amp Voronkov 2005 p 183 Lombardy 2011 p 90 I was among the best blitz players around due to the fact that I trained regularly with Bobby since he was 11 years old Lombardy 2011 pp 90 91 As for Bobby s ability at speed chess it came as no shock that Bobby would win the world blitz championship in 1970 in Belgrade I expected Bobby to win by a wide margin but his winning by a margin of 4 points ahead of Tal did come as a pleasant surprise Kasparov 2004 p 342 Wade amp O Connell 1973 pp 263 70 Wade amp O Connell 1973 pp 271 78 Plisetsky amp Voronkov 2005 pp 201 02 Wade amp O Connell 1973 p 279 Kasparov 2004 pp 342 44 Di Felice 2013c pp 320 21 Mark Weeks 1997 2008 World Chess Championship 1970 Palma de Mallorca Interzonal Tournament Printer Retrieved October 4 2008 Kazic 1974 pp 171 72 Fischer s 3 point margin set a new record for an Interzonal beating Alexander Kotov s 3 point margin at Saltsjobaden 1952 Brady 1973 p 179 Panno refused to play in protest of the organizers rescheduling of the game to accommodate Fischer s desire not to play on his religion s Sabbath Panno was not present when the game was to begin Fischer waited ten minutes before playing his first move 1 c4 and went to get Panno to convince him to play Forty five minutes later Panno came to the board and resigned Wade amp O Connell 1973 pp 344 410 Hooper amp Whyld 1992 p 137 Plisetsky amp Voronkov 2005 p 214 Edmonds amp Eidinow 2004 p 86 a b Brady 2011 p 167 Edmonds amp Eidinow 2004 p 88 Plisetsky amp Voronkov 2005 pp 220 22 Plisetsky amp Voronkov 2005 pp 225 26 Plisetsky amp Voronkov 2005 p 226 Plisetsky amp Voronkov 2005 p 232 What happened next during the resumption of the 5th game Tal wrote later had to be seen to be believed It is simply incredible that three grandmasters could have left a rook en prise a mere three moves after the resumption of the game Wade amp O Connell 1973 pp 412 16 Leonard Barden From Portoroz to Petrosian in Wade amp O Connell 1973 p 345 The record books showed that the only comparable achievement to the 6 0 score against Taimanov was Wilhelm Steinitz s 7 0 win against Joseph Henry Blackburne in 1876 in an era of more primitive defensive technique Brady 1973 p 188 Quoted in Brady 2011 p 168 Edmonds amp Eidinow 2004 pp 91 92 Brady 2011 p 168 Edmonds amp Eidinow 2004 p 92 Bernard Cafferty 1972 Candidates Matches 1971 The Chess Player p 102 ASIN B0007APXZK Muller 2009 p 360 the chess world was positively sent reeling by Bobby s crushing 6 0 defeat of Larsen Byrne amp Nei 1974 p 19 Kasparov 2004 pp 405 06 Jeff Sonas April 28 2005 The Greatest Chess Player of All Time Part II chessbase com Retrieved November 1 2009 Gino Di Felice 2014 Chess Results 1971 1974 A Comprehensive Record with 966 Tournament Crosstables and 148 Match Scores with Sources McFarland pp 48 49 ISBN 978 1 4766 1891 3 Steiner 1974 p 21 Petrosian s opponents have declared him to be the hardest player in history to defeat Karpov 1991 p 114 Plisetsky amp Voronkov 2005 p 273 Karpov It was already clear that the winner of the Petrosian Korchnoi Semi Final Candidates Match would have to play Fischer who on the other staircase was rapidly ascending to the chess throne There was practically no doubt that Spassky would be able to deal with him but in the Sports Committee they decided that it was better if it didn t come to this And so the officials summoned Petrosian and Korchnoi and asked them directly which of them had the better chances against Fischer Korchnoi said that the generation beaten by Fischer had practically no chances But Petrosian said that he believed in himself After this it was suggested to Korchnoi that he should allow Petrosian to win and in compensation they promised to send him to three major tournaments which for a Soviet player in those times was a princely reward Brady 2011 p 169 Brady 1973 p 195 Kasparov 2004 pp 408 17 Jan Timman 1980 The Art of Chess Analysis R H M Press pp 36 42 ISBN 0 89058 048 0 Soltis 2003 pp 259 62 Edmonds amp Eidinow 2004 pp 311 12 Mednis 1997 pp 266 70 Quinteros Miguel July 23 2020 Bobby Fischer el Vincent van Gogh de nuestro tiempo Infobae com Retrieved December 7 2021 Reuben Fine 1971 The Final Candidates Match Buenos Aires 1971 Fischer vs Petrosian Hostel Chess Association pp 13 32 Robert Cantwell November 8 1971 Bobby Clears The Board For The Title Sports Illustrated Retrieved March 12 2016 Edmonds amp Eidinow 2004 p 96 Plisetsky amp Voronkov 2005 p 289 Schonberg 1973 p 269 a b Plisetsky amp Voronkov 2005 p 293 Alexander 1972 p 74 Chess Informant Volume 14 Sahovski Informator 1973 pp 302 07 FIDE Rating List July 1972 Retrieved January 5 2021 Arpad Elo 1978 The Rating of Chess Players Past and Present Batsford p 43 ISBN 978 0 668 04721 0 Albert Silver The name of the game is domination ChessBase March 1 2013 Brad Darrach November 12 1971 Bobby Fischer is a ferocious winner Life Vol 71 no 20 pp 50A 53 Retrieved January 16 2020 Kasparov 2004 p 429 Plisetsky amp Voronkov 2005 p 336 Petrosian I must warn Spassky that Fischer is armed with all the new ideas in chess As soon as Fischer gains even the slightest advantage he begins playing like a machine You cannot hope for some mistake Fischer is a quite extraordinary player His match with Spassky will be tough Gligoric 1972 pp 10 11 Gligoric 1972 pp 11 12 Gligoric 1972 p 13 Gligoric 1972 p 47 Plisetsky amp Voronkov 2005 p 308 Brady 1973 pp 225 253 Brady 1973 p 248 a b Alexander 1972 p 141 Stephen Moss January 19 2008 Death of a madman driven sane by chess The Guardian Retrieved January 4 2016 Alexander 1972 pp 84 87 Gligoric 1972 p 37 Alexander 1972 p 87 Edmonds amp Eidinow 2004 pp 271 73 Byrne amp Nei 1974 p vii Donner 2006 p 136 originally published in De Tijd June 28 1972 Even before a move has been made this breathtaking blood curdling and heartrending encounter is justly being labelled as the Match of the Century a b Richard Roberts Harold C Schonberg I A Horowitz amp Samuel Reshevsky 1972 Fischer Spassky The New York Times Report on the Chess Match of the Century Bantam Books pp 195 96 ISBN 978 0 553 07667 7 Muller 2009 p 370 The match made the covers of Time and Newsweek Id at 19 Kasparov 2004 p 206 Muller 2009 p 15 Bohm amp Jongkind 2003 p 89 Muller 2009 p 13 Soltis 2003 pp 10 11 Anthony Saidy amp Norman Lessing 1974 The World of Chess Random House pp 224 226 ISBN 978 0 394 48777 9 Wearing city s gold medal and accompanied by Mayor John Lindsay Bobby shakes hands with some 3 000 fans attending Larry Evans in Muller 2009 p 13 Bobby s Chessboard Mastery Sports Illustrated August 14 1972 Archived from the original on March 13 2016 Retrieved May 12 2007 Dick Cavett February 8 2008 Was It Only a Game The New York Times Retrieved January 4 2014 2016 US Chess Yearbook PDF uschess org 2016 Retrieved August 30 2018 Edmonds amp Eidinow 2004 pp 2 3 The 1972 championship will become immortalized in film on the stage in song It will remain incontrovertibly the most notorious chess duel in history There will never be another like it A lone American star was challenging the long Soviet grip on the world title His success would dispose of the Soviet s claim that their chess hegemony reflected the superiority of their political system Robert Byrne 1976 Anatoly Karpov The Road to the World Chess Championship Bantam Books ISBN 978 0 553 02876 8 Kasparov 2004 p 471 Plisetsky amp Voronkov 2005 pp 412 13 Brady 2011 pp 218 19 Kasparov 2004 p 472 Plisetsky amp Voronkov 2005 pp 413 14 Plisetsky amp Voronkov 2005 p 414 Bohm amp Jongkind 2003 p 46 Grandmaster Hans Ree remarked of Fischer s demand that the champion keep his title in the event of a 9 9 tie They FIDE thought that this demand was too severe It was rejected understandably Plisetsky amp Voronkov 2005 pp 417 18 Plisetsky amp Voronkov 2005 pp 418 19 Donaldson amp Tangborn 1999 p 159 In a letter to Larry Evans published in Chess Life in November 1974 Fischer claimed the usual system 24 games with the first player to get 12 points winning and the champion retaining his title in the event of a 12 12 tie encouraged the player in the lead to draw games which he regarded as bad for chess Not counting draws would be an accurate test of who is the world s best player Denker amp Parr 1995 pp 110 11 Former US Champion Arnold Denker who was in contact with Fischer during the negotiations with FIDE claimed that Fischer wanted a long match to be able to play himself into shape after a three year layoff Plisetsky amp Voronkov 2005 p 418 Mednis 1997 p 282 Bozidar Kazic 1975 Anatoly Karpov New World Champion Chess Informant 19 Plisetsky amp Voronkov 2005 pp 414 16 Kasparov 2004 p 473 Karpov 1991 pp 159 65 Plisetsky amp Voronkov 2005 pp 419 20 Brady 2011 p 247 Roger Cohen Why after turning down so many offers to make a comeback did you accept this one Bobby Fischer That s not quite true As I recall for example Karpov in 1975 was the one who refused to play me under my conditions Plisetsky amp Voronkov 2005 p 419 a b From all of the people I spoke to the opinions split right down the middle with a small edge for Bobby Q amp A about Fischer Kasparov Karpov and more Susan Polgar Chesscafe 2004 Kasparov My Great Predecessors part IV Fischer p 474 Karpov on Fischer Korchnoi Kasparov and the chess world today Chessbase February 5 2020 Retrieved February 6 2020 Seirawan amp Stefanovic 1992 p 22 Bisguier Arthur June 22 1988 When Bobby Fischer took on a computer The Christian Science Monitor Retrieved January 27 2014 Brady 2011 p 210 His connection to the Church was always somewhat ambiguous He was not a registered member since he hadn t agreed to be baptized by full immersion in water by Armstrong or one of his ministers And since he wasn t considered a duly recognized convert he was sometimes referred to as a co worker or less politely as a fringer someone on the fringes or edges of the Church but not totally committed to its mission The Church imposed a number of rules that Bobby thought were ridiculous and refused to adhere to Fischer 1982 p 1 Fischer 1982 p 2 Fischer 1982 pp 3 14 Fischer 1982 pp 10 12 Fischer 1982 p 14 a b Fischer Bobby 1982 I Was Tortured in the Pasadena Jailhouse PDF Retrieved March 30 2022 a b c Chun Rene December 2002 Bobby Fischer s pathetic endgame The Atlantic Retrieved January 28 2014 a b Edmonds amp Eidinow 2004 p 302 Brady 2011 p 224 Nack William July 29 1985 Bobby Fischer Sports Illustrated Retrieved March 12 2016 Dautov Petra 1995 Bobby Fischer wie er wirklich ist Ein Jahr mit dem Schachgenie Bobby Fischer how he really is A year with the chess genius in German Darmstadt California Verlag ISBN 9783980428132 Brady 2011 p 225 Mark Weeks 1997 2008 1992 Fischer Spassky Rematch Highlights Printer Retrieved January 28 2014 Seirawan amp Stefanovic 1992 p 8 Bobby Fischer arrives in Iceland BBC News March 25 2005 Retrieved January 28 2014 Soltis 2003 p 280 a b Muller 2009 p 382 Waitzkin 1993 p 298 Seirawan amp Stefanovic 1992 p 283 Seirawan amp Stefanovic 1992 The content of the first nine press conferences in full at pp 13 15 21 53 57 86 90 114 18 149 54 170 75 208 14 227 31 256 60 The tenth press conference was not transcribed p 272 Seirawan amp Stefanovic 1992 p 291 Seirawan amp Stefanovic 1992 pp 85 96 303 Brady 2011 pp 243 44 Roger Cohen September 2 1992 Bobby Fischer Ends Silence With Rancor The New York Times Retrieved January 28 2014 Stephen Labaton December 16 1992 FISCHER IS INDICTED OVER CHESS MATCH The New York Times Retrieved January 28 2014 Indictment PDF U S District Court for the District of Columbia Federal Circuit December 15 1992 Retrieved January 28 2014 via chessbase com Brady 2011 p 255 On December 15 1992 a single count indictment in federal court in Washington D C was handed down by a grand jury against Bobby Fischer for violating economic sanctions through an executive order issued by President George Bush A letter to that effect was sent to Bobby in Belgrade and upon announcement of the indictment federal officials issued a warrant for his arrest Edward Winter Fischer v Gligoric Training Match 1992 Chess Notes Daniszewski John September 4 1992 Fischer s 19 year old companion shares chess limelight The Seattle Times Retrieved November 12 2011 Bohm amp Jongkind 2003 pp 65 106 09 Brady 2011 pp 255 62 Sofia Polgar discussing Bobby Fischer video Archived from the original on July 27 2013 Retrieved November 12 2011 via YouTube Peter Leko talks about Bobby Fischer staying at his home April 8 2018 Archived from the original on October 28 2021 Retrieved April 18 2018 via YouTube a b Cabreza Vincent January 19 2008 Fischer has a Pinoy heir born in Baguio friends Philippine Daily Inquirer Archived from the original on February 22 2008 Retrieved January 20 2008 a b Fischer s daughter Jinky files claim to his estate chessbase com November 11 2009 Archived from the original on December 7 2013 Retrieved January 3 2010 a b c Ochoa Francis February 7 2008 Fischer s Filipino heirs going after estate Philippine Daily Inquirer Archived from the original on June 25 2010 Retrieved January 3 2010 Bobby Fischer s Pinay heir may get settlement GMANews tv February 26 2008 Retrieved January 3 2010 a b DNA tests on chess champion s corpse exclude paternity Reuters August 17 2010 Archived from the original on September 24 2015 Retrieved January 29 2014 a b DNA results settle Bobby Fischer paternity case CNN August 18 2010 Retrieved November 12 2011 a b David Bamber amp Chris Hastings December 2 2001 Bobby Fischer speaks out to applaud Trade Centre attacks The Sunday Telegraph p 17 Archived from the original on January 10 2022 a b The Bin Laden defense Diatribe Bobby Fischer speaks out in favor of 9 11 attacks Brief Article Transcript Harper s Magazine Vol 304 no 1822 March 1 2002 p 27 0017 789X Finding Bobby Fischer The baffling moves of a chess genius New York Daily News January 18 2008 Retrieved March 30 2022 Bohm amp Jongkind 2003 p 122 Bruce Weber January 19 2008 Bobby Fischer Troubled Genius of Chess Dies at 64 The New York Times Retrieved January 11 2013 Fischer s radio broadcasts show that he was out of his mind a victim of his own mental illness Bohm amp Jongkind 2003 pp 66 67 Executive Board Actions EB 02 40 PDF USCF 2002 Archived from the original PDF on February 25 2014 Unofficial summary of the February 2007 meeting of the USCF Executive Board PDF Retrieved March 17 2016 a b c Jim Frederick August 23 2004 King s Gambit TIME Archived from the original on July 8 2010 Retrieved July 5 2010 Will Fischer be extradited chessbase com July 19 2004 Retrieved January 28 2014 Brady 2011 p 2 Fischer s worry was that the U S government might finally have caught up with him He d violated State Department economic sanctions against Yugoslavia by playing a 5 million chess match against Boris Spassky in Sveti Stefan Montenegro in 1992 and an arrest warrant had been issued at that time If he went back to the United States he d have to stand trial and the penalty if he was convicted would be anywhere from ten years in prison to 250 000 in fines or both plus possible forfeiture of his 3 5 million winnings a b Fischer er jakvaedur og skyr i hugsun in Icelandic Brady 2011 pp 281 82 There were problems with the revocation of the passport however Fischer never received the notice and therefore couldn t appeal it which according to law he had the right to do The Justice Department claimed that the letter had been sent to the hotel in Bern the location Bobby had given to the embassy and was returned to them with no forwarding address appended It was dated December 11 2003 and when a faxed copy of the letter was ultimately examined it didn t have an address for Fischer on it the implication being that the embassy had never sent the letter to Bern Brady 2011 p 282 Not knowing that his arrest was imminent and believing that his passport was legal on July 13 2004 Fischer went to Narita Airport in Tokyo to board a plane bound for Manila He was arrested and shackled in chains Brady 2011 pp 282 293 on July 13 2004 Fischer was arrested on March 23 2005 Fischer was released from his cell Hiroshi Suzuki August 6 2004 Bobby Fischer Renounces U S Citizenship Seeks Refugee Status Bloomberg Retrieved August 2 2010 Spassky to Bush Arrest me chessbase com August 10 2004 Archived from the original on September 28 2015 Retrieved October 7 2015 I would not like to defend or justify Bobby Fischer He is what he is I am asking only for one thing For mercy charity If for some reason it is impossible I would like to ask you the following Please correct the mistake of President Francois Mitterrand in 1992 Bobby and myself committed the same crime Put sanctions against me also Arrest me And put me in the same cell with Bobby Fischer And give us a chess set Profile Bobby Fischer Endgame on the darker side of genius The Sunday Times Archived from the original on October 13 2008 Retrieved July 18 2009 Fischer s next moves renounce U S citizenship and marry a Japanese The Japan Times Online August 17 2004 Retrieved January 4 2014 Fischer renounces US citizenship chessbase com August 15 2004 Retrieved January 27 2014 Bobby Fischer s Deportation Appeal Rejected Fox News Associated Press July 28 2004 Archived from the original on April 14 2008 Retrieved February 19 2014 Iceland grants Fischer passport BBC News March 21 2005 Retrieved January 28 2014 span, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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