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A galaxy of great champions
THERE is only a month left before the new World chess champion is
crowned, and the battles for the crown begin in New Delhi
tomorrow. Though the last 14 months produced two new champions,
there have still been only 15 World chess champions, since the
first World title match was held in the United States in 1886.
Some of the past champions (Top Row from left): Emanuel Lasker
(1894-1921), Jose Raul Capablanca (1921-27), Max Euwe (1935-37),
Mikhail Botvinnik (1948-57, 1958-60, 1961-63) Second Row: Vassily
Smyslov (1957-58), Mikhail Tal (1960-61), Tigran Petroslan (1963-
69) and Boris Spassky (1969-72).
Wilhelm Steinitz (1836-1900) defeated Johannes Zukerkot in that
20-game match held in the cities of New York, St. Louis and New
Orleans to become the first official World champion. The Austrian
won ten games, after trailing 1-4, and lost five. He was the
World champion from 1886 to 1894.
After failing to make a living as a journalist he became a
professional chess player and made London his home. He
successfully defended his World title in 1889 and 1892 against
Mikhail Tchigorin and against Isidor Gunsburg in 1890. A
brilliant match player, he remained undefeated in matches for 30
years.
Steinitz, who died a pauper, was the first great systematic
thinker of chess, and is called the `father of modern chess'.
Swimming against the romantic tides of the time he matured into a
positional player. He had a deep understanding of defensive play,
and accumulation of small advantages was one of his key
principles.
Emanuel Lasker (1868-1941), the second World champion, was
accused of hypnotising his opponents. He did nothing of the sort,
but he was the first to apply psychology to the chess board. It
worked well for him, for he became the champion at 26, defeating
an ageing Steinitz in 1894 with ten wins, five losses and four
draws, and held the title for 27 years, a record that is surely
not going to be broken.
As a child, he showed talent both in chess and mathematics. He
was awarded a doctorate for his abstract algebraic system. On the
board, he was a great fighter and did not hesitate to take risks.
He thrived in creating brilliant complications in the middle game
and was strong in the end game too. He enjoyed working on the
weakness of his rivals. Jose Raul Capablanca (1888-1942) was the
first modern superstar in chess. He was handsome, charming and
famous. He was also almost unbeatable. Many consider him to be
the greatest natural talent chess has ever seen.
Capablanca became the third World champion without losing even a
single game in the title match of 1921 against Lasker in his home
city, Havana. He won four games and drew 10 before the champion,
citing poor health, conceded. He is the only man in history to
win the World title without losing a single game. He was the
champion till 1927.
Debonair, intelligent and courteous, the Cuban was known even to
people who did not play chess. In 1913 he was appointed by the
Cuban government in its foreign office, which enabled him to
travel widely and play chess. Called `the chess machine' because
of his clear, logical style, Capablanca had a great influence of
the game. He was an excellent writer on the game, and made his
own contributions to opening theory.
Alexander Alekhine (1892-1946) had only two passions in life,
chess and himself. He was a selfish and ambitious man, but he was
also a brilliant chess player, said to be the most stylish of all
World champions.
Alekhine was born in a rich and aristocratic family of Moscow but
the 1917 Revolution ruined his family fortune and he was forced
to work as a magistrate and chess player. He became a member of
the Communist party, but later he emigrated to Switzerland,
because his wife was a Swiss nurse. Once he was safe, he
abandoned her.
Then he became a French citizen, and from France he attacked the
Soviet regime. During the second World War he was a French
patriot when France was doing well, but when Germany triumphed,
he shifted allegiance to the Nazis.
But, for all his weaknesses in character, Alekhine played
wonderful chess. In 1927, he defeated Capablanca 18.5-15.5 to
become the champion. After losing the title in 1935 to Euwe, he
regained it in 1937, destroying his tormentor 15.5-9.5. He is the
only man to die with a World title. He was a truly extraordinary
player, and could play both tactical and positional chess at a
very high level.
Machgielis (Max) Euwe (1901-1981) authored one of the biggest
upsets in the history of World championship, but he was an
amateur throughout his life. The Dutchman was called the
schoolmaster who also played chess.
Dr. Euwe, who had a doctorate in mathematics, became the World
champion by shocking Alexander Alekhine 15.5-14.5, in the title
match held over 15 cities across the Netherlands in 1935, though
the odds were heavily against him. A cultured gentleman, Euwe
gave Alekhine a revenge match on his own will and graciously
accepted his 1937 defeat. He became the FIDE president in 1970
and held the post till 1978. A master technician on the board, he
was a prolific writer on the game.
Mikhail Botvinnik (1911-1995) started the great Russian
revolution in chess. He became the next World champion in 1948
when FIDE staged a five-way World title tournament following the
death of Alekhine. He finished a clear winner, three points ahead
of his nearest rival Vassily Smyslov. Paul Keres, Samuel
Reshevsky and Euwe were the others in the fray.
He was the World champion during three separate periods - 1948-
57, 1958-60 and 1961-63. He also lost the final on three
occasions: in 1957 to Smyslov, but he regained it from him the
following year, in 1960 to Mikhail Tal, but again he had his
revenge a year later, and in 1963 to Tigran Petrosian, though
this time there was no comeback.
Botvinnik, the patriarch of the Soviet School of Chess, was a
qualified electrical engineer, in which he had a doctorate. He
used his scientific mind to analyse chess and was the first to
give importance to study and preparations for tournaments and
matches. He founded a special programme for talented youngsters
and his pupils include Anatoly Karpov, Garry Kasparov and
Vladimir Kramnik, all future World champions.
Vassily Smyslov (1921) tried hard to become an opera singer, but
failed after nearly realising his dream. His attempts at winning
the World chess championship were far more successful. The
Russian defeated Botvinnik 12.5-8.5 to become the champion in
1958, after holding him to a draw in the 1954 title clash. But he
was the World champion only for one year, though he continued to
play highly competitive chess well into old age.
Smyslov was an excellent positional player who displayed
considerable originality in openings, used strategies well in the
middle- game and handled the end-game masterfully. His love of
music never deserted him. Once during the interval of a match he
entertained the audience singing in his rich baritone voice.
Mikhail Tal (1936-92) was the best loved of all World champions.
Probably there are more chess clubs named after him than any
other champion. It was his stunning sacrifices on the board that
endeared him to chess enthusiasts throughout the world. The
eighth World champion was arguably the greatest attacking genius
of modern chess.
But like his fellow-countryman Smyslov, he was the champion only
for a year after beating Botvinnik 12.5-8.5 in 1960. But at 23,
he was the youngest World champion until Kasparov broke his
record in 1985. Tal, who was called the `Magician of Riga',
lacked the stability that is normally associated with great
champions.
The Soviet domination of world chess continued with Tigran
Petrosian (1929-84), who became champion in 1963 beating Mikhail
Botvinnik 12.5-9.5. He was the champion till 1969. His style was
prophylactic, preventing whatever plans his opponents came up
with. `The Python' demolished his opponents without allowing them
any counterplay.
His cautious game also earned him the nickname `the goalkeeper
from Armenia'. He had an outstanding record at the chess
Olympiad, losing only one game in ten Olympiads between 1958 and
1978, as he won 79 games and drew 51. It is said that Petrosian,
one of the greatest players ever, was not ambitious or determined
enough to fulfill his true potential.
Boris Spassky (1937), the tenth champion, would also be
remembered as the man who lost that epic 1972 battle to Bobby
Fischer in Iceland. He won the World title in 1969, beating
Petrosian 12.5-10.5, after narrowly losing to him three years
before. An all-time great, he was one of the most popular
champions.
The most handsome World champion since Capablanca, Spassky was
polite, cultured and elegant. He was a universal player and had
great insight and a fine grasp of technique. He could handle any
type of position. He now lives in France.
Chess owes its world wide popularity to Robert James (Bobby)
Fischer (1943), the maverick American who revolutionised the
game. He became the 11th World champion, winning the historic
match against Spassky in 1972 12.5-8.5, despite conceding the
second game. He was voted the greatest player of the last
century, but he sadly quit the game after winning the World
championship.
`The Brooklyn kid' was a child prodigy who was so confident of
his abilities that he said ``There is no one alive I can't beat''
when he was 18. He had a phenomenal success rate. From 1962 till
the premature end of his career in 1972 he won every tournament
in which he played except the Capablanca memorial in 1965 (he was
second, half-a-point behind the champion) and the Piatigorsky Cup
in 1966 (second, by half-a-point). In the 1964 U.S. championship
he scored a sensational triumph, with a perfect score in a strong
Grandmaster field, beating everyone.
Fischer wanted to win every game he played and did exhaustive
analysis in opening theories. He also brought money to the game.
He demanded huge sums and got them.Anatoly Karpov (1951) became
the 12th World champion without making a single move, when
Fischer refused to play the 1975 title match. Ironically, he lost
his title by default too, when he boycotted the FIDE knock-out
World championship in Las Vegas in 1999. The Russian defended his
title in 1978 and 1981, beating Victor Korchnoi, and was the
champion till 1985, when he lost to Kasparov.
He has the finest tournament record in history and at his best
was a player hard to beat. His style is solid rather than flashy,
and gives his rival little room for a fightback. He possesses one
of the world's biggest collections of stamps on chess.
Garry Kasparov (1963) is the strongest player the game has seen.
The youngest World champion ever, he was beaten by Vladimir
Kramnik in London earlier this month. He looked simply invincible
in matches.
No man had to work hard in the chess history to become a champion
as Kasparov did in 1984-85, when it took him 280 days, and 72
games to defeat Karpov. He staged the greatest comeback in
sporting history to become the 13th World champion, at the age of
22. He was 0-5 behind, and Karpov needed just one more win to
retain the title. After the first match was controversially
stopped with the score at 5-5, Kasparov won the game for a 13-11
victory.
He defended his title against Karpov in 1986, 1987 and 1990
before breaking away from FIDE. Since then he contested
unofficial World title matches against Nigel Short in 1993 and
Viswanathan Anand in 1995. He won on both occasions. But for that
New York match, he took Kramnik as a member of his team, a
decision he has lived to regret. Though his purpose - beating
Anand - was served, the young Russian benefited a lot from that
stint.
For 15 long years, Kasparov never lost to a human being in a
match (upto Nov.2000). He is still the World No. 1, the highest
rated player ever. His strength lies in his unparalleled opening
preparations, determination, fighting spirit, hard work and a
rare feel for the initiative and attack.
Alexander Khalifman (1966) surprised everyone when he won the
FIDE knock-out championship in 1999. The Russian became the 14th
World champion when he defeated Vladimir Akopian in the final,
after beginning his campaign with a loss to India's Dibyendu
Barua in the first game of the opening round.
He did not have to play top players like Kramnik, Alexei Shirov,
Michael Adams or Nigel Short. Kasparov, Karpov and Anand had
stayed away from the event.
Khalifman, who does not count among the elite players in World
chess, is referred to as FIDE World champion, but he showed great
mental strength to come out successful in the knock-out system.
After his triumph (``A dream coming true,'' he said), he has had
mixed results in some of the major tournaments.
Vladimir Kramnik (1975) will always be remembered not just as the
15th World chess champion, but as the man who defeated a legend
who simply did not know how to lose. The Russian did the
impossible with an 8.5-6.5 win in the Braingames World chess
championship in London.
Though it was an unofficial match, Kramnik's claim to be the 15th
World champion is unlikely to be contested by many, because he
beat Kasparov and is the World No. 2.
Kramnik, the only top player with an even personal score against
Kasparov, does not lead an ascetic life, contrary to the popular
image of a chess champion. He is a player most difficult to beat,
can attack powerfully and is remarkably strong positionally. He
has nerves of steel. And we have a fourth successive World
champion whose name begins with the letter `K', after Karpov,
Kasparov and Khalifman. The letter seems to denote more than
`king' in the chess jargon.
But India will be hoping for the 16th World champion with a name
beginning with another letter, preferably the first alphabet.
P. K. AJITH KUMAR
Kozhikode
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