if you like chess documentaries here's the first part of one of my favourites...
I'll have to find some time to watch this. Thanks Britbox.
Anyone else getting excited about the Candidates? Should be starting in about a week. Please please let someone else win this time instead of Anand!
Who's regarded as the Chess GOAT @Twisted? Kasparov?
Yes I would second this, although I might possibly consider both Botvinnik and Alekhine in place of Lasker. I'm not convinced his longevity is all that it's made up to be. There were are lot of champions prerogatives that allowed him to survive that long. That said though the quality of his games is special. I think Carlsen will end up being the number 1. The guy is simply phenomenal. I can't understand why people say his games are boring. There's a game he played against Kramnik, I think at Shamkir last year which is a great example of the seeming simplicity of his play. A GM recently described his style as nettlesome. A perfect description. He doesn't necessarily go for the best move. He makes the moves he thinks will cause the most problem to a specific player. To me that makes his games exciting because you're sitting there wondering if the other guy will have the mentality to get through the torture. This is why I don't want to see him play Anand again. There is total ownage there nowKasparov by most including myself. He was champion for 15 years and even when he lost the title he was still the #1 rated player for another 5 years after that. Resume wise I'd say Lasker comes close or even exceeds it but he played in the early 20th century and didn't have to defend his title for many years due to World War I and other things. I'd have the top 4 as Kasparov, Lasker, Karpov and Capablanca. You could interchange the last 2. Capablanca was a monster and he'd be up higher if he didn't get upset by Alekhine after holding the title for just 6 years. If I had to guess I'd say Carlsen will end up either #2 or #1. It's still early but he is extremely dominant and just 25 years old and he has already been #1 for the better part of 6 years.
Some wackos think it was Fischer based on his run to the championship in 1972. He never defended the title so I don't think he can even be in the discussion.
I can't see Giri winning either. He won't lose much, but I can't see him going on a streaky winning run. Anand, Caruana and Aronian are all capable of that. And Nakamura can be very strong as well. Not sure I want to watch Hikaru play Magnus though. That might be painful. Especially as the title will be fought for in New York!Yes I am definitely excited for it. It starts in about a week as you mentioned. Double round robin (14 games total)
Anand
Nakamura
Caruana
Giri
Aronian
Karjakin
Topalov
Svidler
Pretty wide open I'd say. I can't picture Topalov, Svidler or Karjakin winning but any of the others would be no surprise to me. I like Karjakin but I don't think he can score well enough to take the whole thing, but he could definitely be near the top. The favorites figure to be Nakamura, Caruana and Anand in some order.
Yes I would second this, although I might possibly consider both Botvinnik and Alekhine in place of Lasker. I'm not convinced his longevity is all that it's made up to be. There were are lot of champions prerogatives that allowed him to survive that long. That said though the quality of his games is special. I think Carlsen will end up being the number 1. The guy is simply phenomenal. I can't understand why people say his games are boring. There's a game he played against Kramnik, I think at Shamkir last year which is a great example of the seeming simplicity of his play. A GM recently described his style as nettlesome. A perfect description. He doesn't necessarily go for the best move. He makes the moves he thinks will cause the most problem to a specific player. To me that makes his games exciting because you're sitting there wondering if the other guy will have the mentality to get through the torture. This is why I don't want to see him play Anand again. There is total ownage there now
Lol! I swear Hikaru could be one move from mating Magnus and he would find a way to choke it away. I stiYeah you're right about Giri. It'd be a long shot for him too, just give him slightly better chances than the other 3. Nakamura has improved some and it would be an entertaining match from a trash talk perspective. But I don't think he'd threaten Carlsen at all, total ownage there as well.
yes agreed. I have the same concerns with Alekhine as I do with Lasker. Both extremely strong players though. My point was less about replacing Lasker and more suggesting that it's hard for me to place anyone of Lasker, Alekhine and Botvinnik above the other. Definitely no argument about Kasparov, Karpov, Capablanca and Carlsen. They belong at the top table for sure. Some would say that Anand does as well, but certainly when you put Vishy up against either Kaspy or Magnus it's hard to say he's of the same calibreI always thought Alekhine was slightly overrated. Taking down Capablanca was an incredible feat but he made it a point to dodge him after that and set up WC matches with people he knew he could easily beat, though he did manage to underestimate Euwe and lose his title briefly in a shocking upset. Alekhine died as WC but I don't think he was the best player at that point, it was probably Botvinnik. And Botvinnik is also a tough one to place when ranking the best players.
Guys, is chess really a sport?
They sit on their butts the whole time and I think that sport should be an activity where people at least walk.![]()
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