However... while Bobby Fischer would side with Wesley So over Magnus Carlsen & Hikaru Nakamura as the real world champion, I'm not sure Bobby Fischer would side with Hans Niemann over Magnus Carlsen. If so, then I'm not sure what to think about this. Relatedly: It's possible FIDE lowered the time controls in the 2022 WFRCC to favour not Magnus Carlsen over Wesley So but Ian Nepomniachtchi over both Magnus Carlsen & Wesley So. Again, I'm not sure what to think about this. Source: ZS4ZPF
This is a legendary game. I can't believe you haven't covered it yet. Crazy! Such a gem! I really love how you explained the concept of the wrong rook so well. Great video!
"Whenever you have to make a rook move, and both rooks are available for said move, you should evaluate which rook to move and, once you have made up your mind, move the other one." -Savielly Tartakower
Verily, one cannot but applaud the fastidiousness with which the commenter scrutinized the original statement for its grammatical accuracy. Methinks, we ought to nominate them for the most prestigious award of 'Grammar Police Officer of the Year', for their unwavering dedication to the proper use of the Queen's English!
Well then he should be stripped for his medals as he was surely cheating in the same way as Hans was cheating. This should serve to stop idiotic judges from their judgmental behaviours when they have no proof and only assumptions. Hans surely appears as a swindler. The only way he can be judged is by catching him. That has not happened. Therefore he shall not be mistreated like he currently has been. So. It is apparently possible to play like our contemporary 2023 machines back in the 1960's. Then why are anyone ln Hans's neck now without evidence? Circumstantial evidence is indeed not enough.
this is something of an exagerration if you study his book my 60 greatest games, he often gives long lines that dont really stand up to analysis. Even here at 6:54 the commentator mentions that Fischer had a prepared line that Averbakh showed actually doesnt work.
@@turnbackthealarm lol of course it’s an exaggeration…. Saying Fischer is a basically an engine is by definition an exaggeration… but thanks for the explanation
@@edenli6421 I think he was referring to the way a machine performs a task without any humanity or sympathy. He's comparing Fischer to the efficiency of a machine but also making a point about how ruthless he was if you gave him an advantage
That performance by Fischer in the US Championship was insane: perfect 11/11, three and a half points above second place. What a monster, nobody could touch him.
@@ayanbandyopadhyay7767 Kasparov was the strongest of the 4 K's by a small margin, the only K that ever played Fischer was Korchnoi, and Fischer was out of his league. Fischer beats any K easily. Magnus would give him trouble.
@@dodekaedius Ha, fair, but Reshevsky and Benko were no slouches. And of course Fischer went on to take the world championship in convincing fashion, so he was plenty monstrous outside the US too. If he'd come up in his career with chess engines the way all today's GMs have, he'd give Carlsen a run for his money, no question.
The ability to play 9LX is the sign of a gentleman or a lady. The ability to play 9LX well is the sign that you're not Magnus Carlsen. Source: ZS4ZPF Edit: Why the 24 likes? I'm saying Magnus Carlsen sucks at 9LX. Edit 2 : Wow 54 likes? Didn't realise so many people agreed with me that Magnus SUCKS at 9LX.
@@depausvandelilithkerk5785 i have an upgrade: The ability to play 9LX is the sign of a gentleman or a lady. The ability to play 9LX well is the sign that you're not Magnus Carlsen. Source: ZS4ZPF
I usually get mad when GMs give up too early but in this case it was kinda impressive how early Byrne realized he was screwed lol. Well playing resignation Robert. Great game Bobby and happy birthday
isn't it almost a sign of respect to know exactly when you lost..where you are simply showing you are a just as good player but got outplayed for this game
What is really amazing about Fisher is that his peak rating 50 years ago was astonishing 2785, which is great today! It took 20 years to catch up with that rating and Kasparov managed to do it. Only a few among the best super GMs have higher rating today. The second stuff is that he did everything by himself, alone. He practically defeated the whole Soviet Olympic team in the world title match vs Spasky and when the Russians were absolutely the best chess team ever. That's why I consider Fisher the GOAT.
Absolutely nuts with the Olympic match vs. Spasky. Fisher was in his hotel room by himself with no way to contact anyone because of Cold War politics. Spasky had the entire Soviet team in his room pouring over the game and coming up with lines. Fisher just shows up the next day and ends the game the way you would hustle someone in the park lmao 😂
It is very likely that Fischer's rating hadn't caught up to his actual playing strength, as well. His rating was still on the upward part of the curve; it hadn't plateaued yet. He would easily have broken 2800 had he kept playing at the same strength he showed in 1970-72.
@@nekrataali I think William Lombardy was his second and they still corresponded. From what I remember from reading about the match, Fischer would do his own analysis, and then ask for Lombardy's (say, when Fischer was to continue an endgame the next day)
When Donald Byrne played 13 year old Bobby Fischer (“the game of the century”), Donald also saw how he was about to be checkmated. However, realizing the extraordinary talent of this youngster who was an unknown at the the time, Donald Byrne made an interesting decision. He played the game out to the end, because he realized that this game would be published throughout the chess world.
Im so glad you don't edit out the part of you looking for the standings, or anytime something like that happens. It really adds to the charm of the video
The Fischer Prize of $64,000 for anyone who could equal Fischer's feat of 11-0 came from this tournament. Needless to say, no one has ever come close to claiming it. Nor will anyone in the future. I began following Bobby when he was thirteen years old and I was twelve. To my mind, his games are the greatest in chess lore from an artistic point of view. One never tires of replaying them. Even his losses have a brilliancy about them. On your birthday cake, Mr. Fischer, there needs to be sixty-four candles with four letters in the middle: G.O.A.T.
One of the greatest resignations in chess history is how I have always viewed this game. It isn't, at least to me, been easy to see that white was completely lost at the end, even though he was, and Byrne recognized it. By the way, most of us American chessplayers remember Robert Byrne better for his chess columns in The New York Times. I followed every single World Championship from 1984 until 2000 by reading his columns covering the games.
Bobby Fischer--The Very Last of the Lone World Beaters in Chess. After that, World Champions were all supported by teams of helpers and analysts, and coaches. Bobby entered History All Alone.
I think they did have a "second" ... i believe Brady was Fischers second .. he wrote an amazing book about Fischer "Portrait of a Prodigy" .. great read ..
Eh, he's a bad sport. Wanting Karpov to lose on a draw total, making draws not count to wear him down, totally insane demands that he was never faced with in his champion run. And decades later he plays Spassky again and calls himself the "undefeated world champion", what an insult to Karpov and subsequent world champions. Fischer was a nasty man and probably the single most interesting part of chess just because of his personality alone.
With the exception of knights, that's where the belong. The bishops and queen are on powerful diagonals and the queen and king-rook are on open files. Of course if Byrne hadn't resigned on that move, the queen would have been advanced to h3.
Those born too late to remember Fischer probably can’t quite appreciate how extraordinary his genius really was. He was so far ahead of the rest of the field that it was ridiculous to even compare him with the others. He was simply in a class by himself. Like the great racehorse, Secretariat, at the Belmont Stakes, no one else was even close.
I don't think everyone at the us chess championship were grandmasters (if you look at the table Donald Byrne is in last and he was an IM), US chess has gotten insanely stronger after Fischer
You do great videos but I've been following you for a few years and it's just awesome to see you doing so well and looking healthy and engaged. Thanks for being such a huge contributor to the community, you've helped a lot.
The combinations were too crazy. The setup was incredible. Might I suggest you cover the game between Fischer and Ulf Andersson in 1971? Thank you. #suggestion
Every time I come back to this game, my reaction is always the same: 'What happened?' Everything looks so good for White. Then everything falls apart...
OMG I've been looking for this game forever! I had an old Kasparov electronic chess board from the 80's or 90's that came with a booklet that had a section about great games of all time. I remember something to the effect of (paraphrased) "all the commentators thought his game was lost, until he found this brilliant queen move up one square idea that blew everyone away". Finally here it is!!! Thank you, agadmator!
@@JimBalter He found the move, there were no engines to prepare for games all these moves were ones he found on his own some before the game but he found them nevertheless.
Thanks for your excellent commentary as well as your very polite demeanor. You help make chess more fun for chess players of various skills. I look forward to all of you posts.
You just took me back to my 1980s, when I walked into a bookstore in Ventura and bought that paperback Fischer book for 50c...I remember the original notation KR4 etc....what a different world that was. Thanks for posting!
What makes Fischer's performance in this game so impressive is not just his individual moves, but the way he was able to combine them into a cohesive and devastating attack. He demonstrated a remarkable ability to see beyond the immediate position and anticipate the long-term consequences of his moves.
That's true. Even if computer analysis says his moves weren't perfect since technically Byrne could have responded, Fischer seemed to have a sense of where Byrne was going, not just which moves were best. And, as this video showed, Fischer had ideas of what to do even had Byrne more properly responded. Fischer truly was one of the best chess players of all time if not the best depending upon how one defines it and accounts for modern changes in chess.
Hi Agadmator, I just want to say that I love you and your videos, and I have been watching you for over 2 years now. You are a very calm and collected gentleman and your videos make me enjoy chess the way it should be. Wish you the best health and best wishes.
This channel is so good and yet also popular; it restores my faith in humanity a little. Any community would be very fortunate to have you as a part of it.
Bobby Fischer is MTOAT if not GOAT. But I heard GOAT is just Magnus, Garry or Bobby. Well Magnus & Garry are cheaters, so Bobby is GOAT & MTOAT. Yay! Source: ZS4ZPF
Fischer was hugely dominating over the field in his prime playing days. Fischer random chess is just genius insight on what is best for the game. I for the longest time used to think Fischer was the GOAT, until about 2018. RIP Bobby, the chess world has much gratitude for your play and contributions.
⠀ Who do you think is the GOAT now? Bobby Fischer managed to make chess more of a big deal than anyone else before or since. Despite the new found popularity of chess with Internet streamers that began during the pandemic, it still isn't quite mainstream. 99 out of 100 people on the street that you ask will say they've never watched a Magnus Carlsen chess game, for example. Actually it's probably more like 999 out of 1000, who've never watched one or his games. Internet streaming is big but it's still quite a niche thing in the context of the whole world. Most people still just watch TV. But Fischer made it so all his big chess matches were watched and followed like Superbowls and World Series etc. Everybody was hooked, watching the matches. Especially the ones against soviet chess players. Fischer became a symbol of the west during the cold war because of that. Of course it's a shame Fischer became severely mentally ill and refused to take meds and get mental healthcare for it, and left the US to go into permanent self-exile, while he spouted off racist anti-semitic nonsense to anyone who would listen. But I'm ignoring that part, I'm only talking about his chess ability and how he made chess popular than it's ever been before or since, he's the cause of that peak. We've never seen anything like it. The only other times chess and similar games have become a popular widespre thing again in more recent decades is when chess grandmasters have played computers, because so many chess players and computer scientists said that computers were unable to beat a human, just because of the way they are. But that was disproven when Deep Blue beat Kasparov. And then much more recently, a computer finally beat the world champion at the game Go, decades after the first computer to beat the world champion of chess. Go is apparently much harder to program a computer for, because I guess there's significantly more possibilities. It's why no computer has been able to beat grandmasters at Shogi (Japanese chess) yet. Because in Shogi you capture pieces like normal but then you can actually use those pieces, place them on the board again to join your army (the pieces are all flat 2 sided tiles so you flip them over so that it'll be the colour of your team, so you won't get confused as to who owns which pieces all the time, but you do have to learn what the Japanese kanji written on each of them means, it's their name, and all the tiles are identical pieces of wood. It's a bit confusing for the first handful of games but yeah it's worth learning). But yeah, because you can choose to add pieces you've capture to your army to grow it (or choose NOT to do that) it means there's millions of times more possibilities that open up for each move you make, compared to chess, and no current computer or even supercomputer can tackle this problem yet. Once quantum computers become a thing though, it'll be enough to beat a Shogi grandma stir By the way you absolutely _MUST_ try shogi. It's my favourite form of chess, for sure. It's really so fresh and unique compared to chess and other variants of chess like Fischer Random Chess (aka Chess960). But it also is still mostly chess and you dna still apply what you know from chess to it. Though don't expect it to be easy to start beating people at it. Whenever chess grandma stirs have faced even low level Shogi grandmasters, the Shogi ones always win. Always. It's the same vice versa, Shogi grandma stirs that have never played or learned chess try to play even a low level chess grandmaster, the chess player always wins. Because only by playing a game do you learn every tiny little thing about it that's not written down anywhere in a book that teaches you to advance your chess playing or in a video guide for how to get better at chess or anything like that. And it's always those very fine margins that win chess matches at the top level. Everything the best grandmasters do is really subtle. It comes with playing chess for over 10,000 hours. Eventually you stop being able to see the board like normal, and instead just see all the lines each piece can travel in, and the dozens of different possibilities for the next 5, 8, even 10 moves ahead. How did I get onto this topic? I do apologise, I tend to ramble after I've had my morning coffee, which is what I've just drank. But you _DEFINITELY_ definitely definitely definitely definitely definitely definitely definitely definitely definitely definitely definitely definitely _DEFINITELY_ must try Shogi. You must. That's an order. A command. Because I mean, I'm pretty terrible at chess. I used to be in the chess club for years when I was a schoolkid, but that's decades ago now, and I couldn't beat a goldfish these days. Yet I enjoyed Shogi so much that it quickly became my favourite form of chess that I've played, even though I'm even worse at it then I am at chess. So someone who's actually good at chess, like you probably are, will get way more enjoyment out of it than I did. The more you know about chess, the more you'll be able to enjoy the differences. Again it's mostly the same as chess, like 70% is the same. But it's different enough that it feels like a whole new experience, something even chess variants like Bobby Fischer Chess, or Double Chess don't give you (though Double Chess is awesome in its own way just cos of how ridiculous it is lol, I wish some chess grandmasters would play it; essentially you have a 16x12 rectangular chess board, for 128 squares, double the 64 squares on a regular 8x8 chess board, you have 16 pawns instead of 8, 4 rooks/castles, 4 bishops, 4 knights, 2 Queens, and 2 Kings. Give it a go, on a smartphone app. I'm sure one already exists, for double chess) But yeah, play Shogi. Definitely play Shogi. There's already multiple Shogi phone/tablet/chromebook apps for Shogi, in English. I actually first found out about it and played it because of the Nintendo game 51 Clubhouse Games, or whatever it's called. It's got every kind of traditional game on there, chess is there obviously. But it also has Shogi, and I discovered early on that Shogi is more fun than chess. This Nintendo collection of games has easy modes for many of them. Which on chess is that when you click on a piece it'll show you the lines of where the piece can travel to, which is great for beginners. Well Shogi has the same thing, which is useful because yeah not everything is exactly the same, rhee are differences. And so a shogi phone app might he great once you've already learned how to play it, it doesn't teach you how to play and so you'd have to brute force it. If you have a Nintendo switch, definitely get the 51 clubhouse games game collection (it's called 51 worldwide games in my country, the UK, and it seems to have different names in every country it's released in, but the number 51 is always in the name, so that'll tell you what it is, plus looking at the description of it on a website or on the Nintendo e-shop, or on the back of the box if you buy it physically in a shop) But you absolutely must try Shogi!!!!!!!!!!!!!!! Damn it I'm sorry I do apologise for this long rambling comment that has nothing to do with anything let alone the thing you originally commented. I just get stuck in a zone sometimes and have to keep writing until I finish my thought. ⠀
@@duffman18 Lol, Hi duffman, I'm the same except I usually pace around the room for 3 hours thinking, rather than writing it down. But you sound like me. I'm not trying shogi though, sorry. 🙂
@@blucat4"Magnus" is undoubtedly the answer to that question. Tal, Fischer, Morphy, Kasparov... Sorry you guys never even had a chance against him (My opinion obviously).
In the 1980s, my chess trainer SM Gary Sanders (2450) defeated Robert Byrne as black in a Poisoned Pawn Najdorf. It was Gary's greatest game (RIP Gary!).
You know what would be great: Do a whole series on games where one player gets the advantage of just one pawn and because of that, they win. I find it so hard to understand why after so many moves, "and he is up a pawn, so he would win" is a thing like in the variation of this game. That would be great. Up A Pawn Video Series, please.
I always appreciate a good game! Thanks agadmator for keeping the history of these players alive!! I’ve grown to love chess and these type of vids always keep the love high!
It's the combination of artistic flair and ruthless killing machine that does it for me. I'm about 1800 at my best, I don't study or take the game too seriously.. I'm not an expert in chess games or history at all. But, when I watch the analysis of Fischer's great games they always seem to have this artistic beauty because of the moment it dawns on me what he's doing I feel like I'm suddenly in the shoes of his victims and sitting opposite a genius. It's like getting murdered by Hannibal Lecter 😂 I respect other great players and enjoy the analysis of their games but nobody quite does it for me in the same way.
Haha, yes, Fischer aka the Moriarty or Jack the Ripper of chess. That's grim but likely accurate way of putting it. He seemed to combine the artistry of a master composer or story teller with the brutal coldness of a machine is his games. I watched a dramatization of him as a kid once, not real but based on him in real life. It showed him playing with the pieces as if they were real characters in a story and the game of chess was just simulating real battles. I'm sure that wasn't really what happened but I like to think Fischer still was sort of like that. Like he had an understanding of chess on a totally different level than most other players. Sure he sounded like kind of an ass in interviews and strange, even rude, and very simplistic in chess approach but that was just his public presentation. His actual thought process during games (with more difficult opponents at least) was likely very deep and like he was composing a masterpiece.
I dare say Bobby could give our engines trouble. I'm not a master, but I can appreciate the subtlety and the strength of his defenses even while attacking.
My favourite Fischer game ever, his "brilliancy prize" game, demolishing another top player in 21 moves in a classical game from a seemingly equal position out of the opening....
"Feel free to pause the video and win the game for Fischer." Right, uh, about that... I'm just not in that class of genius, Antonio. Youre giving me way, *way* too much credit, brother. Another great video, though. Job well done, sir, as always. 👏✌️
Whenever I watch a Bobby Fischer game, the moves always appear 'lucky'. The mystery behind Fischer though is they aren't lucky, they are planned. His opponents fall into a trap, making them 'unlucky', so I guess that is why. Happy Birthday.
Guys who hate Fischer says he got lucky. The guy he was playing made a mistake. They seem to say it after every game Fischer won. Fischer is either a genius or the luckiest player ever born. He got lucky to win 11 games here and the 20 in a row later on:)
@@larrylindgren9484 Hi, can I ask a question? I don't play chess, (I used to just a bit in school decades ago), but why is it so hard? I mean can't you just look at lines, horizontal and diagonal, and after awhile you would get to know all the sorts of combinations there are? Is that what Fischer did? Or it it a matter of him being able to visualise every combination for more moves into the future? Does anyone know how he did it? Did he explain it at all? Are there people who are so good at it they just don't play? Cheers.
Your ability to share and guide your most humble students, like me, is deeply appreciated. You dis-cover great beauty and riches to those of us of limited perception.
The thing I remember about Fischer is that he was always playing for the win. Around that time, the world champion was someone like Tigran Petrosian, who didn't win that much but almost never lost. Fischer thought that was disgraceful. You will find lots of games where Fischer came up with a surprise combination in a dull-looking position. His opponent had kind of lost interest, but Fischer never did. That's why he gets results like 11/11; he didn't want to give anyone a draw.
I believe he got money for games won not draws. So, Fischer played to win because he got paid more when he won. Fischer much took a draw. It lost him money.
Been a little behind on your videos and for good reason. My son was born a few days ago on March 9th. So happy he can share a birthday with such a legend.
Not to be forgotten : Robert Byrne was chess columnist at New York Times during 34 years ! :-) and the current internet era provides an archive of some of its columns
I've tried chess and improved my Elo from 800 to 1400, I've stopped playing as much as it's probably the most difficult competitive game I've played, even sports. This game is truly in its own level because it also one of the most beautiful games there is.
For me, the star move was that last scoot forward for the black queen. Not just because it was winning and induced resignation, but because its a hard move to find at the end of a long calculation. Most players would be looking for more checks, or captures, or trippling down pressure on another piece. That you could somehow play a calm move like that at the end of a sacrifice sequence and hold everything together while giving the opponent zero counterplay....is, as they say, a brilliancy!
Knowing that most of chest host RUclips video"find the win" moves usually involves sacrificing material I saw the night taking the Pawn on f2; and I saw that it was just losing for the Jing not to recapture the night on f2; then I saw the f6 night flying in for a check to the King; and then I saw the king moves what I thought was a safe square until the video showed me otherwise and that's all I could find.
Bobby Fischer was a pure chess genius who lived and breathed chess. He was once asked about what he liked to do in his leisure time and he replied that he would play over recent tournament games whilst listening to rock n' roll. When asked "Wouldn't listening to rock n' roll be a distraction?" he said, "No, it's only a distraction if I am playing seriously. Besides, the games aren't all that good anyway."
Excellent analysis. I had to watch it again these months later. I am amazed for the same reasons commenters offer below. I was a very young teenager when Fischer was winning the world championship. The whole USA was following the match and interest in playing chess skyrocketed. It was exciting!
At 7:44 Fischer's suggestion to keep the pressure was NOT Qd7 but actually Qc8. Qd7 looks also nice and your analysis shows that black keeps the tension, but in was never suggested by Fischer.
its always super weird watching chess games be commentated after the fact because people always take time to show moves that could have happened but didn't, then they just jump back like 4-5 moves as if nothing happened. id love to be able to find a channel that goes over the whole game and then afterwards does that kind of stuff without the interruption. if anyone knows a channel like that id love to check them out
There can be no doubt that Bobby was the greatest ever. Great as this 11-0 performance was, it was dwarfed by his 20 consecutive victories in the 70-72 interzonals against far stronger opponents. Also I recall that a Fischer loss at that time was international news! Finally, the culminating combination of the Acevedo game in the '70 chess Olympiad has to be the most subtlety brilliant ever played. You should do that one if not already done.
Totally agree. That 20-game streak will never be approached again. I doubt seriously if anyone will be able to get a 10-game streak at the highest level.
The way Spassky demolished, in Candidates matches, Keres, Geller two times), Tal, Larsen and Korchnoi between 1964 and 1968, when all those tremendous players were at their prime, is even more impresive than Fischer victories against Taimanov, Larsen and Petrosian. Fischer was a genious, but not the only one in the history of chess. The best ever??? Its a very debatable question with no effective answer
@@carlossimancas9867 Wellwhy anyone couldn’t till now get a perfect score the way Fischer did against top and champions, question your debatable mind… he has done it without engines and by no one has on his side and he buried Spassky too… yeah your intelligence is not even close to debatable
JR Capablanca was born Nov 19, 1888 in Havana, Cuba. Perhaps you were referring to the day he died, March 8, 1942 in New York City. Fischer was, however, born March 9, 1943, in Chicago.
There may have been better players in the history of chess but Fischer helped the popularity of the game more than anyone. Without him this channel may have never existed.
I got into chess very recently and Bobby Fischer is hands down the most famous chess player of all time. I knew who he was even before I got into chess, I had no idea about Magnus Carlsen, Paul Morphy, Spassky, Karpov, Kasparov, etc. But Bobby Fischer is known by many non chess enthusiasts.
Great game, thanks for bring it to us. By the way, you pronounce the surname "Byrne," exactly the same as the word "Burn." You don't try and mush "By" and "Urn," together.
Antonio says Robert Byrne, is "mostly remembered for losing this game to Bobby Fischer." That reminded me of a documentary titled "Facing Ali" in which former opponents of Muhammad Ali were interviewed. Ron Lyle fought Ali in 1975 in Ali's second title defense of his second reign as champ,. The fight was stopped by the referee in the 11th round. In the documentary, Lyle said ""If there don't be no Ali, you think you'd be sitting here talking to Ron Lyle? About what?"
oh! and what do you think about Magnus dissing Fischer? Fischer didn't have high tech computers teaching him all the great moves, Bobby had to come up with strategies all on his own, and seems unfair that Magnus ranks Bobby so low..
This is one of the things that RUclips is great for. I have always been interested in chess analysis, but this video format makes it so much easier to understand. Very well explained and visualized. I was able to follow the entire thing, and I'm just floored at this man's genius. (I almost guessed it: I picked Ne1, not really knowing exactly why, just something about the fork that created felt enticing). Has anyone in chess history ever been better at making moves that seem absurd until some hidden trick about them is revealed? What a mind this man had. No wonder he hard such a hard time keeping it centered when he wasn't playing chess.
This game is a perfect reflection of all the gas lighting people did about him in his personal life. No, he wasn't lost, crazy or mistaken...he was just on a completely different level than everyone else. Most won't even realize it until the game is over.
@@vertexblue1007 According to the people who he criticized and their apologists. I should start using that as an excuse whenever someone criticizes me. "What? No, I didn't do that. You're just a schizo!"
@@MrFreeGman it's well know the Russians were organizing draws but using facts to make up conspiracies doesn't make them true. He was schizophrenic and paranoid and very anti semetic. This isn't making things up, this is based on his own words and opinions of medical professionals
@@vertexblue1007 He was never diagnosed with a mental illness, nor medicated for one, and lived independently until the end. He is very clearly lucid, logiclal and aware in every interview with him that I've ever seen. These "medical experts" didn't even know him personally and were merely abusing their positions of authority because he said some naughty things about some protected groups; it's easier to just call someone schizo than to debate someone much smarter than you. Your slander says more about who you are as a person than anything else. As far as "anti-semitism" goes, you're just operating on a lower level and choose to ignore your inherent ability to recognize patterns. You choose ignorance. That's your choice.
A significant one. You'd definitely have to be under 1500 to throw the game from that advantage, though I'd play it through just to make sure he don't mix some position up and hangs a queen. It happens
Hi agadmator, at 9:51 , Stockfish 16.0 shows that 15. Qc2 was the blunder that made it easier for Fischer to win. Yes, 14. …,Rad1 was the correct rook move that resulted in only a slight advantage for black (-0.6,depth 35), and Byrnes move 14. …,Rfd4 was bad (-1.5,depth 35), but the ensuing 15. Qc2 resulted in (-7.3,depth 35) and was the big blunder, with Fischer playing “computeresque” for the final crushing moves. If Byrne had played 15. …,Nf4 instead of 15. …,Qc2, Fischer would only had a small advantage (-1.4,depth 35), so I don’t know why you are saying that Byrne couldn’t see that he was in a huge hole after 15. Qc2, Nxf2. You would think a GM would see the mistake after Fischer made 15. …,Nxf2.
Just to clarify, Capablanca’s birthday is November 19. Bobby Fischer was born on March 9. The date Capa shares with International Women’s Day is March 8, which was the date Capa died. It only caught my attention because I share a birthday with Capablanca, which , unfortunately, is the only thing I share with my favorite chess player. Great video, as always.
Bobby Fischer is MTOAT if not GOAT. But I heard GOAT is just Magnus, Garry or Bobby. Well Magnus & Garry are cheaters, so Bobby is GOAT & MTOAT. Yay! Source: ZS4ZPF
@@nicbentulan If you meant cheaters by their accessibility to theories and engines, thats a based reason. Every1 has access. Chess now is the most competitive it has ever been. High level games are solved up to 20 to 30 moves and often brought to endgames. And we know magnus can squeeze a win out of even the most drawish endgames. Can bobby fight hours maintaining an equal game against magnus? + endgame?
@@trapmango4110 of course not. i'm talking about when 1 - garry cheated judit in 1994 2 - magnus cheated alireza in 2019 3 - magnus cheated danya in 2021 4 - magnus cheated danya in 2022 5 - magnus cheated nepo in 2021
Maybe only the last three months I’ve watched these Grandmaster Games for the longest did not understand chess notations I’ve picked my game up Substantially since which is why I enjoy listening to Antonio breakdown the games it is at this point Whole new game
Happy Birthday, Bobby!
Byrne is pronounced "burn".
It is probably an old spelling, but I don't know.
However... while Bobby Fischer would side with Wesley So over Magnus Carlsen & Hikaru Nakamura as the real world champion, I'm not sure Bobby Fischer would side with Hans Niemann over Magnus Carlsen. If so, then I'm not sure what to think about this.
Relatedly: It's possible FIDE lowered the time controls in the 2022 WFRCC to favour not Magnus Carlsen over Wesley So but Ian Nepomniachtchi over both Magnus Carlsen & Wesley So. Again, I'm not sure what to think about this.
Source:
ZS4ZPF
@@hansolowe19 Byrne is an Irish name and the spelling is correct
This is a legendary game. I can't believe you haven't covered it yet. Crazy! Such a gem!
I really love how you explained the concept of the wrong rook so well. Great video!
Small correction though, on March 8 Capablanca died. He was born on November 19.
"Whenever you have to make a rook move, and both rooks are available for said move, you should evaluate which rook to move and, once you have made up your mind, move the other one." -Savielly Tartakower
ROFL.
Great line.
It works though
The good doctor, Dr. Tartakower was right!
this is truth
In an era when engines were inconsequential, the depth that Fisher was able to calculate was nothing less than extraordinary
A perfect statement, marred only by the inaccuracy of missing a period at the end.
@@johngrey5806 lol do you think you're smart by phrasing your sentence that way?
@@mounirzouhari6453 your lack of punctuation and capitalization is shocking!
Verily, one cannot but applaud the fastidiousness with which the commenter scrutinized the original statement for its grammatical accuracy. Methinks, we ought to nominate them for the most prestigious award of 'Grammar Police Officer of the Year', for their unwavering dedication to the proper use of the Queen's English!
@@johngrey5806bro think he the thinker
The fact that Fischer is able to consistently top engine moves that long ago is absolutely absurd. Dude was basically an engine
Well then he should be stripped for his medals as he was surely cheating in the same way as Hans was cheating.
This should serve to stop idiotic judges from their judgmental behaviours when they have no proof and only assumptions.
Hans surely appears as a swindler. The only way he can be judged is by catching him. That has not happened. Therefore he shall not be mistreated like he currently has been.
So. It is apparently possible to play like our contemporary 2023 machines back in the 1960's.
Then why are anyone ln Hans's neck now without evidence?
Circumstantial evidence is indeed not enough.
Look at how long ago the evergreen game was
this is something of an exagerration if you study his book my 60 greatest games, he often gives long lines that dont really stand up to analysis. Even here at 6:54 the commentator mentions that Fischer had a prepared line that Averbakh showed actually doesnt work.
@@turnbackthealarm lol of course it’s an exaggeration…. Saying Fischer is a basically an engine is by definition an exaggeration… but thanks for the explanation
And a racist.
"As soon as Fischer gains even the slightest advantage, he begins playing like a machine"- Tigran Petrosian
Liers will be kicked off!!!!!
Is this a metaphor or does he mean he played like a chess computer?
@@duffman18 they did not have engines, or good ones anyways at the time. Playing like a machine probably means like an unstoppable force.
@@edenli6421 I think he was referring to the way a machine performs a task without any humanity or sympathy. He's comparing Fischer to the efficiency of a machine but also making a point about how ruthless he was if you gave him an advantage
@@wiebenijenhuis1825 God bless the true!
That performance by Fischer in the US Championship was insane: perfect 11/11, three and a half points above second place. What a monster, nobody could touch him.
This game solved my dilemma of title of chess goat between Fischer and Magnus
@@chessvibes3182 yeah, the answer is Garry Kasparov
@@ayanbandyopadhyay7767 Kasparov was the strongest of the 4 K's by a small margin, the only K that ever played Fischer was Korchnoi, and Fischer was out of his league. Fischer beats any K easily. Magnus would give him trouble.
Tbf, he just had to beat US players..
@@dodekaedius Ha, fair, but Reshevsky and Benko were no slouches. And of course Fischer went on to take the world championship in convincing fashion, so he was plenty monstrous outside the US too. If he'd come up in his career with chess engines the way all today's GMs have, he'd give Carlsen a run for his money, no question.
"The ability to play chess is the sign of a gentleman. The ability to play chess well is the sign of a wasted life" Paul Morphy
The best quotes are simultaneously painfull, funny and true.......yours (Paul Morphy's) is a good example
The ability to play 9LX is the sign of a gentleman or a lady. The ability to play 9LX well is the sign that you're not Magnus Carlsen.
Source:
ZS4ZPF
Edit: Why the 24 likes? I'm saying Magnus Carlsen sucks at 9LX.
Edit 2 : Wow 54 likes? Didn't realise so many people agreed with me that Magnus SUCKS at 9LX.
@@depausvandelilithkerk5785 i have an upgrade: The ability to play 9LX is the sign of a gentleman or a lady. The ability to play 9LX well is the sign that you're not Magnus Carlsen.
Source:
ZS4ZPF
@@nicbentulan Can you post again the previous lengthy comment you've written on why Magnus hates Americans?
@@길광재-k9y chess is a waste of life. 9LX isn't.
I usually get mad when GMs give up too early but in this case it was kinda impressive how early Byrne realized he was screwed lol. Well playing resignation Robert. Great game Bobby and happy birthday
Fischer definitely got mad that Byrne resigned. He was bitterly disappointed that he was unable to get all of his brilliancy into the record.
@@yume-e yah I woulda been mad too.
isn't it almost a sign of respect to know exactly when you lost..where you are simply showing you are a just as good player but got outplayed for this game
@@yume-e I'd like to see a reference for that. I mean Fischer could be angry for any reason but I dont recall anyone every saying that.
I don’t understand why Masters resign too early.. like Robert Byrne still had so much material.. kinda pathetic
What is really amazing about Fisher is that his peak rating 50 years ago was astonishing 2785, which is great today! It took 20 years to catch up with that rating and Kasparov managed to do it. Only a few among the best super GMs have higher rating today. The second stuff is that he did everything by himself, alone. He practically defeated the whole Soviet Olympic team in the world title match vs Spasky and when the Russians were absolutely the best chess team ever. That's why I consider Fisher the GOAT.
Absolutely nuts with the Olympic match vs. Spasky. Fisher was in his hotel room by himself with no way to contact anyone because of Cold War politics. Spasky had the entire Soviet team in his room pouring over the game and coming up with lines.
Fisher just shows up the next day and ends the game the way you would hustle someone in the park lmao 😂
It is very likely that Fischer's rating hadn't caught up to his actual playing strength, as well. His rating was still on the upward part of the curve; it hadn't plateaued yet. He would easily have broken 2800 had he kept playing at the same strength he showed in 1970-72.
No computers to help him he was a pure genius
@@nekrataali I think William Lombardy was his second and they still corresponded. From what I remember from reading about the match, Fischer would do his own analysis, and then ask for Lombardy's (say, when Fischer was to continue an endgame the next day)
A 1972 rating of 2785 = a 2023 rating of 2850. Inflation.
Both of the Byrne brothers got immortalised by Fischer in legendary games that will never be forgotten.
When Donald Byrne played 13 year old Bobby Fischer (“the game of the century”), Donald also saw how he was about to be checkmated. However, realizing the extraordinary talent of this youngster who was an unknown at the the time, Donald Byrne made an interesting decision. He played the game out to the end, because he realized that this game would be published throughout the chess world.
Im so glad you don't edit out the part of you looking for the standings, or anytime something like that happens. It really adds to the charm of the video
The Fischer Prize of $64,000 for anyone who could equal Fischer's feat of 11-0 came from this tournament. Needless to say, no one has ever come close to claiming it. Nor will anyone in the future. I began following Bobby when he was thirteen years old and I was twelve. To my mind, his games are the greatest in chess lore from an artistic point of view. One never tires of replaying them. Even his losses have a brilliancy about them. On your birthday cake, Mr. Fischer, there needs to be sixty-four candles with four letters in the middle: G.O.A.T.
Bobby Fischer is dead
Why do you worship a traitor and racist anti semite?
He died so no birthday cake
@@vertexblue1007 Fischer died by his games live on.
well said.
One of the greatest resignations in chess history is how I have always viewed this game. It isn't, at least to me, been easy to see that white was completely lost at the end, even though he was, and Byrne recognized it.
By the way, most of us American chessplayers remember Robert Byrne better for his chess columns in The New York Times. I followed every single World Championship from 1984 until 2000 by reading his columns covering the games.
I never knew he had such a column, but Robert Byrne was strong so that would've been a cool column to read
Respect to the seniority 💯
Byrne was undoubtedly the best chess columnist ever.
I use to buy The NY Times just to catch his column.
I confess I really don't see why resignation Was The only answer, which is why I don't win awards for brilliance.
I love protitutes😊
Fischer was ahead of his time. Phenomenal over-board analysis.
Bobby Fischer--The Very Last of the Lone World Beaters in Chess. After that, World Champions were all supported by teams of helpers and analysts, and coaches. Bobby entered History All Alone.
I think they did have a "second" ... i believe Brady was Fischers second .. he wrote an amazing book about Fischer "Portrait of a Prodigy" .. great read ..
Now games are boring because it's all engine Learned moves and nothing surprising ever happens end it all goes to the end game every time
Eh, he's a bad sport. Wanting Karpov to lose on a draw total, making draws not count to wear him down, totally insane demands that he was never faced with in his champion run. And decades later he plays Spassky again and calls himself the "undefeated world champion", what an insult to Karpov and subsequent world champions. Fischer was a nasty man and probably the single most interesting part of chess just because of his personality alone.
"What would the continuation be for Rd1?"
Fisher: proceeds to explain with 15 moves deep a winning position
Niemann: "Chess speaks for itself"
Carlson: "what's different about Hikaru and I? Well...were simply..better at chess.."
Niemann: "Chess vibrates for itself"
@@johnsmoak8237Hikaru is to Carlsen as Bisguier was to Fischer
@@dantedelodenFor itself 🗣🗣
@@CubeSage1 xD
I have never seen such a final position, where all the winner's pieces are still on the 2 back rows. Plus the winner has one peace less. Magic.
With the exception of knights, that's where the belong. The bishops and queen are on powerful diagonals and the queen and king-rook are on open files. Of course if Byrne hadn't resigned on that move, the queen would have been advanced to h3.
@@JimBalter
Thanks for pointing that out. I hadn't really considered that before, but now that you mention it it does seem to make sense.
Those born too late to remember Fischer probably can’t quite appreciate how extraordinary his genius really was. He was so far ahead of the rest of the field that it was ridiculous to even compare him with the others. He was simply in a class by himself. Like the great racehorse, Secretariat, at the Belmont Stakes, no one else was even close.
Two great forces known for their depth of calculation and sharp tactics, Fischer and Secretariat.
thanks, learnt something new, didnt know about the horse
@@nirmalyamisra Secretatiat was like a modern day Pegasus. That horse could fly!! 🏇
So Bobby Fischer was basically Messi, but for chess.
Bobby was a flying horse.
11 out of 11 against grandmasters is insane!!
Fischer, might always be the GOAT.
I don't think everyone at the us chess championship were grandmasters (if you look at the table Donald Byrne is in last and he was an IM), US chess has gotten insanely stronger after Fischer
Not after Fischer, because of Fischer. @@Me-uv6kc
@@Me-uv6kc For a strong GM to win against even "only" an IM is no joke. It is not guaranteed. Even Carlsen doesn't always win against an IM.
You do great videos but I've been following you for a few years and it's just awesome to see you doing so well and looking healthy and engaged. Thanks for being such a huge contributor to the community, you've helped a lot.
Thanks man! Appreciate it
@@agadmator no worries! Your love for the game is an inspiration and has taught me a lot
Bobby knows how to improve the slightest advantage and push for a win, so beautiful
The combinations were too crazy. The setup was incredible. Might I suggest you cover the game between Fischer and Ulf Andersson in 1971? Thank you.
#suggestion
+1
#suggestion
#suggestion
#suggestion
#suggestion
Every time I come back to this game, my reaction is always the same: 'What happened?' Everything looks so good for White. Then everything falls apart...
OMG I've been looking for this game forever! I had an old Kasparov electronic chess board from the 80's or 90's that came with a booklet that had a section about great games of all time. I remember something to the effect of (paraphrased) "all the commentators thought his game was lost, until he found this brilliant queen move up one square idea that blew everyone away". Finally here it is!!!
Thank you, agadmator!
Very satisfying, right?
Ha! I had the same board 😎
It's not like he "found" the move; he had it planned.
You're looking for this: Chessnetwork - Bobby Fischer's 21-move brilliancy
@@JimBalter He found the move, there were no engines to prepare for games all these moves were ones he found on his own some before the game but he found them nevertheless.
Congratulations to Larry Evans for winning the tournament.
And a superb performance from Bobby Fischer in his exhibition. Happy birthday Bobby!
Thanks for your excellent commentary as well as your very polite demeanor.
You help make chess more fun for chess players of various skills. I look forward to all of you posts.
Excellent birthday recap... totally enjoyed it. The "who won 2nd" reference is such an apt summary!
You just took me back to my 1980s, when I walked into a bookstore in Ventura and bought that paperback Fischer book for 50c...I remember the original notation KR4 etc....what a different world that was. Thanks for posting!
What makes Fischer's performance in this game so impressive is not just his individual moves, but the way he was able to combine them into a cohesive and devastating attack. He demonstrated a remarkable ability to see beyond the immediate position and anticipate the long-term consequences of his moves.
That's true. Even if computer analysis says his moves weren't perfect since technically Byrne could have responded, Fischer seemed to have a sense of where Byrne was going, not just which moves were best. And, as this video showed, Fischer had ideas of what to do even had Byrne more properly responded. Fischer truly was one of the best chess players of all time if not the best depending upon how one defines it and accounts for modern changes in chess.
Hi Agadmator, I just want to say that I love you and your videos, and I have been watching you for over 2 years now. You are a very calm and collected gentleman and your videos make me enjoy chess the way it should be. Wish you the best health and best wishes.
I’m so happy you finally covered this game, my favorite Fischer game, and some of the best commentary from his book.
This channel is so good and yet also popular; it restores my faith in humanity a little. Any community would be very fortunate to have you as a part of it.
Byrne Brothers be like: "Did we snatch this kid's candy someday? Why's he hunting us so ruthlessly!" HBD, GOAT!
Bobby Fischer is MTOAT if not GOAT. But I heard GOAT is just Magnus, Garry or Bobby. Well Magnus & Garry are cheaters, so Bobby is GOAT & MTOAT. Yay! Source: ZS4ZPF
Beautiful game and analysis Agad! As for Capablanca, unfortunately he died on 8 March, his birthday is in 19 November
Yes, that is what I meant :)
@@agadmator but ok, sorry about that.
Happy birthday Bobby Fischer. And thank you for analyzing this game, maybe my favorite Fischer game and I love hearing your take on it!
Although the commentators believed the game was winning for Robert, it was really winning for Robert
Fischer was hugely dominating over the field in his prime playing days. Fischer random chess is just genius insight on what is best for the game. I for the longest time used to think Fischer was the GOAT, until about 2018. RIP Bobby, the chess world has much gratitude for your play and contributions.
⠀
Who do you think is the GOAT now?
Bobby Fischer managed to make chess more of a big deal than anyone else before or since. Despite the new found popularity of chess with Internet streamers that began during the pandemic, it still isn't quite mainstream. 99 out of 100 people on the street that you ask will say they've never watched a Magnus Carlsen chess game, for example. Actually it's probably more like 999 out of 1000, who've never watched one or his games. Internet streaming is big but it's still quite a niche thing in the context of the whole world. Most people still just watch TV.
But Fischer made it so all his big chess matches were watched and followed like Superbowls and World Series etc. Everybody was hooked, watching the matches. Especially the ones against soviet chess players. Fischer became a symbol of the west during the cold war because of that.
Of course it's a shame Fischer became severely mentally ill and refused to take meds and get mental healthcare for it, and left the US to go into permanent self-exile, while he spouted off racist anti-semitic nonsense to anyone who would listen.
But I'm ignoring that part, I'm only talking about his chess ability and how he made chess popular than it's ever been before or since, he's the cause of that peak. We've never seen anything like it.
The only other times chess and similar games have become a popular widespre thing again in more recent decades is when chess grandmasters have played computers, because so many chess players and computer scientists said that computers were unable to beat a human, just because of the way they are. But that was disproven when Deep Blue beat Kasparov.
And then much more recently, a computer finally beat the world champion at the game Go, decades after the first computer to beat the world champion of chess. Go is apparently much harder to program a computer for, because I guess there's significantly more possibilities.
It's why no computer has been able to beat grandmasters at Shogi (Japanese chess) yet. Because in Shogi you capture pieces like normal but then you can actually use those pieces, place them on the board again to join your army (the pieces are all flat 2 sided tiles so you flip them over so that it'll be the colour of your team, so you won't get confused as to who owns which pieces all the time, but you do have to learn what the Japanese kanji written on each of them means, it's their name, and all the tiles are identical pieces of wood. It's a bit confusing for the first handful of games but yeah it's worth learning).
But yeah, because you can choose to add pieces you've capture to your army to grow it (or choose NOT to do that) it means there's millions of times more possibilities that open up for each move you make, compared to chess, and no current computer or even supercomputer can tackle this problem yet. Once quantum computers become a thing though, it'll be enough to beat a Shogi grandma stir
By the way you absolutely _MUST_ try shogi. It's my favourite form of chess, for sure. It's really so fresh and unique compared to chess and other variants of chess like Fischer Random Chess (aka Chess960). But it also is still mostly chess and you dna still apply what you know from chess to it. Though don't expect it to be easy to start beating people at it. Whenever chess grandma stirs have faced even low level Shogi grandmasters, the Shogi ones always win. Always. It's the same vice versa, Shogi grandma stirs that have never played or learned chess try to play even a low level chess grandmaster, the chess player always wins. Because only by playing a game do you learn every tiny little thing about it that's not written down anywhere in a book that teaches you to advance your chess playing or in a video guide for how to get better at chess or anything like that. And it's always those very fine margins that win chess matches at the top level. Everything the best grandmasters do is really subtle. It comes with playing chess for over 10,000 hours. Eventually you stop being able to see the board like normal, and instead just see all the lines each piece can travel in, and the dozens of different possibilities for the next 5, 8, even 10 moves ahead.
How did I get onto this topic? I do apologise, I tend to ramble after I've had my morning coffee, which is what I've just drank.
But you _DEFINITELY_ definitely definitely definitely definitely definitely definitely definitely definitely definitely definitely definitely definitely _DEFINITELY_ must try Shogi. You must. That's an order. A command.
Because I mean, I'm pretty terrible at chess. I used to be in the chess club for years when I was a schoolkid, but that's decades ago now, and I couldn't beat a goldfish these days. Yet I enjoyed Shogi so much that it quickly became my favourite form of chess that I've played, even though I'm even worse at it then I am at chess. So someone who's actually good at chess, like you probably are, will get way more enjoyment out of it than I did. The more you know about chess, the more you'll be able to enjoy the differences. Again it's mostly the same as chess, like 70% is the same. But it's different enough that it feels like a whole new experience, something even chess variants like Bobby Fischer Chess, or Double Chess don't give you (though Double Chess is awesome in its own way just cos of how ridiculous it is lol, I wish some chess grandmasters would play it; essentially you have a 16x12 rectangular chess board, for 128 squares, double the 64 squares on a regular 8x8 chess board, you have 16 pawns instead of 8, 4 rooks/castles, 4 bishops, 4 knights, 2 Queens, and 2 Kings. Give it a go, on a smartphone app. I'm sure one already exists, for double chess)
But yeah, play Shogi. Definitely play Shogi. There's already multiple Shogi phone/tablet/chromebook apps for Shogi, in English. I actually first found out about it and played it because of the Nintendo game 51 Clubhouse Games, or whatever it's called. It's got every kind of traditional game on there, chess is there obviously. But it also has Shogi, and I discovered early on that Shogi is more fun than chess. This Nintendo collection of games has easy modes for many of them. Which on chess is that when you click on a piece it'll show you the lines of where the piece can travel to, which is great for beginners. Well Shogi has the same thing, which is useful because yeah not everything is exactly the same, rhee are differences. And so a shogi phone app might he great once you've already learned how to play it, it doesn't teach you how to play and so you'd have to brute force it. If you have a Nintendo switch, definitely get the 51 clubhouse games game collection (it's called 51 worldwide games in my country, the UK, and it seems to have different names in every country it's released in, but the number 51 is always in the name, so that'll tell you what it is, plus looking at the description of it on a website or on the Nintendo e-shop, or on the back of the box if you buy it physically in a shop)
But you absolutely must try Shogi!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!
Damn it I'm sorry I do apologise for this long rambling comment that has nothing to do with anything let alone the thing you originally commented. I just get stuck in a zone sometimes and have to keep writing until I finish my thought.
⠀
@@duffman18 Lol, Hi duffman, I'm the same except I usually pace around the room for 3 hours thinking, rather than writing it down. But you sound like me. I'm not trying shogi though, sorry. 🙂
@@duffman18I never ever ever usually say this but...TL;DR
@@christophercarlone9945 Fischer the goat, made chess a global sensation even bigger than it is rn, play Shogi because it's cool.
@@blucat4"Magnus" is undoubtedly the answer to that question. Tal, Fischer, Morphy, Kasparov... Sorry you guys never even had a chance against him (My opinion obviously).
In the 1980s, my chess trainer SM Gary Sanders (2450) defeated Robert Byrne as black in a Poisoned Pawn Najdorf. It was Gary's greatest game (RIP Gary!).
Love the video! Byrne is an Irish surname pronounced “Burn”
I friggin love this channel and this guy. I legit look forward to watching every single game and re-watch most
You know what would be great: Do a whole series on games where one player gets the advantage of just one pawn and because of that, they win. I find it so hard to understand why after so many moves, "and he is up a pawn, so he would win" is a thing like in the variation of this game. That would be great. Up A Pawn Video Series, please.
I always appreciate a good game! Thanks agadmator for keeping the history of these players alive!! I’ve grown to love chess and these type of vids always keep the love high!
It's the combination of artistic flair and ruthless killing machine that does it for me. I'm about 1800 at my best, I don't study or take the game too seriously.. I'm not an expert in chess games or history at all. But, when I watch the analysis of Fischer's great games they always seem to have this artistic beauty because of the moment it dawns on me what he's doing I feel like I'm suddenly in the shoes of his victims and sitting opposite a genius. It's like getting murdered by Hannibal Lecter 😂 I respect other great players and enjoy the analysis of their games but nobody quite does it for me in the same way.
Haha, yes, Fischer aka the Moriarty or Jack the Ripper of chess. That's grim but likely accurate way of putting it. He seemed to combine the artistry of a master composer or story teller with the brutal coldness of a machine is his games. I watched a dramatization of him as a kid once, not real but based on him in real life. It showed him playing with the pieces as if they were real characters in a story and the game of chess was just simulating real battles. I'm sure that wasn't really what happened but I like to think Fischer still was sort of like that. Like he had an understanding of chess on a totally different level than most other players. Sure he sounded like kind of an ass in interviews and strange, even rude, and very simplistic in chess approach but that was just his public presentation. His actual thought process during games (with more difficult opponents at least) was likely very deep and like he was composing a masterpiece.
Very impressed by you going through all of the home prep and other lines relevant to the game, it made watching this video much more interesting!
I've been waiting for Agad to review this game since I first saw it some years ago, I'm so glad he finally did
Robert: Why is Fischer playing such moves
Commentators: Now Robert Byrne is winning
Narrator: He was not winning
I dare say Bobby could give our engines trouble. I'm not a master, but I can appreciate the subtlety and the strength of his defenses even while attacking.
Yesterday only we watched "Pawn Sacrifice" and today this amazing game. Thank you Bobby! for these wonderful games.
My favourite Fischer game ever, his "brilliancy prize" game, demolishing another top player in 21 moves in a classical game from a seemingly equal position out of the opening....
"Feel free to pause the video and win the game for Fischer."
Right, uh, about that... I'm just not in that class of genius, Antonio. Youre giving me way, *way* too much credit, brother.
Another great video, though. Job well done, sir, as always. 👏✌️
Whenever I watch a Bobby Fischer game, the moves always appear 'lucky'. The mystery behind Fischer though is they aren't lucky, they are planned. His opponents fall into a trap, making them 'unlucky', so I guess that is why. Happy Birthday.
Guys who hate Fischer says he got lucky. The guy he was playing made a mistake. They seem to say it after every game Fischer won. Fischer is either a genius or the luckiest player ever born. He got lucky to win 11 games here and the 20 in a row later on:)
@@larrylindgren9484 Hi, can I ask a question? I don't play chess, (I used to just a bit in school decades ago), but why is it so hard? I mean can't you just look at lines, horizontal and diagonal, and after awhile you would get to know all the sorts of combinations there are? Is that what Fischer did? Or it it a matter of him being able to visualise every combination for more moves into the future? Does anyone know how he did it? Did he explain it at all? Are there people who are so good at it they just don't play? Cheers.
Your ability to share and guide your most humble students, like me, is deeply appreciated. You dis-cover great beauty and riches to those of us of limited perception.
How cool was it to show Magnus standings while talking about Bobby! Epic agad
Fischer is immortal - the world will never see anything like him again.
The thing I remember about Fischer is that he was always playing for the win. Around that time, the world champion was someone like Tigran Petrosian, who didn't win that much but almost never lost. Fischer thought that was disgraceful. You will find lots of games where Fischer came up with a surprise combination in a dull-looking position. His opponent had kind of lost interest, but Fischer never did. That's why he gets results like 11/11; he didn't want to give anyone a draw.
I believe he got money for games won not draws. So, Fischer played to win because he got paid more when he won. Fischer much took a draw. It lost him money.
Been a little behind on your videos and for good reason.
My son was born a few days ago on March 9th. So happy he can share a birthday with such a legend.
A wonderful remembrance of a great champion. R.I.P.
love your commentary and the thorough analysis and the historical perspective. terrific chess instruction and entertainment. as always. thanks. hello!
Not to be forgotten : Robert Byrne was chess columnist at New York Times during 34 years ! :-) and the current internet era provides an archive of some of its columns
Actually capablancas birthday is November 19. He passed away on March 8
I've tried chess and improved my Elo from 800 to 1400, I've stopped playing as much as it's probably the most difficult competitive game I've played, even sports. This game is truly in its own level because it also one of the most beautiful games there is.
I love your content and you show how Bobby was in a league of his own
For me, the star move was that last scoot forward for the black queen. Not just because it was winning and induced resignation, but because its a hard move to find at the end of a long calculation. Most players would be looking for more checks, or captures, or trippling down pressure on another piece. That you could somehow play a calm move like that at the end of a sacrifice sequence and hold everything together while giving the opponent zero counterplay....is, as they say, a brilliancy!
It's not *that* hard to see that white is vulnerable on the h3-f1 diagonal.
It felt like cocking a gun of a move.
Knowing that most of chest host RUclips video"find the win" moves usually involves sacrificing material
I saw the night taking the Pawn on f2; and I saw that it was just losing for the Jing not to recapture the night on f2; then I saw the f6 night flying in for a check to the King; and then I saw the king moves what I thought was a safe square until the video showed me otherwise and that's all I could find.
Bobby Fischer was a pure chess genius who lived and breathed chess. He was once asked about what he liked to do in his leisure time and he replied that he would play over recent tournament games whilst listening to rock n' roll. When asked "Wouldn't listening to rock n' roll be a distraction?" he said, "No, it's only a distraction if I am playing seriously. Besides, the games aren't all that good anyway."
Excellent analysis. I had to watch it again these months later. I am amazed for the same reasons commenters offer below. I was a very young teenager when Fischer was winning the world championship. The whole USA was following the match and interest in playing chess skyrocketed. It was exciting!
Fischer was indeed a magician on the board.
Better than tal?
@@avg_user-dd2yb he defeated Tal a lot of times...
At 7:44 Fischer's suggestion to keep the pressure was NOT Qd7 but actually Qc8. Qd7 looks also nice and your analysis shows that black keeps the tension, but in was never suggested by Fischer.
Mind blowing game look so simple but so complex. Could not see all the possibilities. Fisher was so brilliant.
its always super weird watching chess games be commentated after the fact because people always take time to show moves that could have happened but didn't, then they just jump back like 4-5 moves as if nothing happened. id love to be able to find a channel that goes over the whole game and then afterwards does that kind of stuff without the interruption. if anyone knows a channel like that id love to check them out
There can be no doubt that Bobby was the greatest ever. Great as this 11-0 performance was, it was dwarfed by his 20 consecutive victories in the 70-72 interzonals against far stronger opponents. Also I recall that a Fischer loss at that time was international news! Finally, the culminating combination of the Acevedo game in the '70 chess Olympiad has to be the most subtlety brilliant ever played. You should do that one if not already done.
"against far stronger opponents"
Um, perhaps you mean higher rated.
Totally agree. That 20-game streak will never be approached again. I doubt seriously if anyone will be able to get a 10-game streak at the highest level.
@@judhudon6235 didn't Fabiano Caruana get a 7 game streak?
The way Spassky demolished, in Candidates matches, Keres, Geller two times), Tal, Larsen and Korchnoi between 1964 and 1968, when all those tremendous players were at their prime, is even more impresive than Fischer victories against Taimanov, Larsen and Petrosian. Fischer was a genious, but not the only one in the history of chess. The best ever??? Its a very debatable question with no effective answer
@@carlossimancas9867 Wellwhy anyone couldn’t till now get a perfect score the way Fischer did against top and champions, question your debatable mind… he has done it without engines and by no one has on his side and he buried Spassky too… yeah your intelligence is not even close to debatable
Always enjoy your analyses.
Fischer's birthday being just one day off Women's day is the most poetic thing ever lol.
Brillante combinación!.gracias agadmator's.Saludos.
One of Fischer's greatest games! A note on pronunciation: Byrne sounds like "burn" in American English.
(Or in any form of English.)
Definitely my favorite game, one of the few games I learned when I start kearning chess. I suggested this a few months ago. Nice one!
Byrne is pronounced as 'burn' as in 'burn the cakes'. Just to increase your wonderful knowledge. ;-)
JR Capablanca was born Nov 19, 1888 in Havana, Cuba. Perhaps you were referring to the day he died, March 8, 1942 in New York City. Fischer was, however, born March 9, 1943, in Chicago.
For the record, Byrne is pronounced like the word "burn".
You are great agadmaster, keep up the good work 👍!
There may have been better players in the history of chess but Fischer helped the popularity of the game more than anyone. Without him this channel may have never existed.
first video of yours i had to watch back a few times, unbelievable
I got into chess very recently and Bobby Fischer is hands down the most famous chess player of all time. I knew who he was even before I got into chess, I had no idea about Magnus Carlsen, Paul Morphy, Spassky, Karpov, Kasparov, etc. But Bobby Fischer is known by many non chess enthusiasts.
Great game, thanks for bring it to us. By the way, you pronounce the surname "Byrne," exactly the same as the word "Burn." You don't try and mush "By" and "Urn," together.
King of the Kings.👑
A spectacular victory for Bobby Fischer.🏆
Antonio says Robert Byrne, is "mostly remembered for losing this game to Bobby Fischer."
That reminded me of a documentary titled "Facing Ali" in which former opponents of Muhammad Ali were interviewed. Ron Lyle fought Ali in 1975 in Ali's second title defense of his second reign as champ,. The fight was stopped by the referee in the 11th round. In the documentary, Lyle said ""If there don't be no Ali, you think you'd be sitting here talking to Ron Lyle? About what?"
FINALLY a Game from bobby
Everyone game from Wesley So is like a game from Bobby Fischer since Wesley So is Bobby Fischer's one and only successor in classical time controls.
Thanks for your videos! you really explain what happens very well!
oh! and what do you think about Magnus dissing Fischer? Fischer didn't have high tech computers teaching him all the great moves, Bobby had to come up with strategies all on his own, and seems unfair that Magnus ranks Bobby so low..
if bobby didn't born Chess wouldn't be the same, what a genius..
This is one of the things that RUclips is great for. I have always been interested in chess analysis, but this video format makes it so much easier to understand. Very well explained and visualized. I was able to follow the entire thing, and I'm just floored at this man's genius. (I almost guessed it: I picked Ne1, not really knowing exactly why, just something about the fork that created felt enticing). Has anyone in chess history ever been better at making moves that seem absurd until some hidden trick about them is revealed? What a mind this man had. No wonder he hard such a hard time keeping it centered when he wasn't playing chess.
Fischer was ahead of his time. Phenomenal over-board analysis.. Happy Birthday, Bobby!.
This game is a perfect reflection of all the gas lighting people did about him in his personal life. No, he wasn't lost, crazy or mistaken...he was just on a completely different level than everyone else. Most won't even realize it until the game is over.
No he was literally schizophrenic and paranoid
@@vertexblue1007 According to the people who he criticized and their apologists. I should start using that as an excuse whenever someone criticizes me. "What? No, I didn't do that. You're just a schizo!"
@@MrFreeGman it's well know the Russians were organizing draws but using facts to make up conspiracies doesn't make them true. He was schizophrenic and paranoid and very anti semetic. This isn't making things up, this is based on his own words and opinions of medical professionals
@@vertexblue1007 He was never diagnosed with a mental illness, nor medicated for one, and lived independently until the end. He is very clearly lucid, logiclal and aware in every interview with him that I've ever seen. These "medical experts" didn't even know him personally and were merely abusing their positions of authority because he said some naughty things about some protected groups; it's easier to just call someone schizo than to debate someone much smarter than you. Your slander says more about who you are as a person than anything else.
As far as "anti-semitism" goes, you're just operating on a lower level and choose to ignore your inherent ability to recognize patterns. You choose ignorance. That's your choice.
@@MrFreeGman so you're a troll or you're just crazy
Great vid thank you. Love your knowledge re Fischer! ..
I love how grandmasters are like "this move is impossible you see because after nine moves black is at a slight positional disadvantage"
A significant one. You'd definitely have to be under 1500 to throw the game from that advantage, though I'd play it through just to make sure he don't mix some position up and hangs a queen. It happens
Hi agadmator, at 9:51 , Stockfish 16.0 shows that 15. Qc2 was the blunder that made it easier for Fischer to win. Yes, 14. …,Rad1 was the correct rook move that resulted in only a slight advantage for black (-0.6,depth 35), and Byrnes move 14. …,Rfd4 was bad (-1.5,depth 35), but the ensuing 15. Qc2 resulted in (-7.3,depth 35) and was the big blunder, with Fischer playing “computeresque” for the final crushing moves. If Byrne had played
15. …,Nf4 instead of
15. …,Qc2, Fischer would only had a small advantage (-1.4,depth 35), so I don’t know why you are saying that Byrne couldn’t see that he was in a huge hole after 15. Qc2, Nxf2.
You would think a GM would see the mistake after Fischer made 15. …,Nxf2.
i don't know how this guy Robert said his name, but Byrne would usually be pronounced like "burn"
Just to clarify, Capablanca’s birthday is November 19. Bobby Fischer was born on March 9. The date Capa shares with International Women’s Day is March 8, which was the date Capa died. It only caught my attention because I share a birthday with Capablanca, which , unfortunately, is the only thing I share with my favorite chess player. Great video, as always.
Bobby Fischer is surely one of the greatest players in chess.
Bobby Fischer is MTOAT if not GOAT. But I heard GOAT is just Magnus, Garry or Bobby. Well Magnus & Garry are cheaters, so Bobby is GOAT & MTOAT. Yay! Source: ZS4ZPF
@@nicbentulan you're a sad obsessed man
@@nicbentulan If you meant cheaters by their accessibility to theories and engines, thats a based reason. Every1 has access. Chess now is the most competitive it has ever been. High level games are solved up to 20 to 30 moves and often brought to endgames. And we know magnus can squeeze a win out of even the most drawish endgames. Can bobby fight hours maintaining an equal game against magnus? + endgame?
It's obvious that you don't have enough brain cells for chess,so quit it
@@trapmango4110 of course not. i'm talking about when
1 - garry cheated judit in 1994
2 - magnus cheated alireza in 2019
3 - magnus cheated danya in 2021
4 - magnus cheated danya in 2022
5 - magnus cheated nepo in 2021
Maybe only the last three months I’ve watched these Grandmaster Games for the longest did not understand chess notations I’ve picked my game up
Substantially since which is why I enjoy listening to Antonio breakdown the games it is at this point Whole new game
"Chess is about truth" - Bob
It used to be. Now 9LX is about truth. Chess is about mainly memory and prearrangement and then about truth. Source:
ZS4ZPF