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Bobby Fischer Gives Dick Cavett A Chess Crash Course | The Dick Cavett Show

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  • Опубликовано: 8 ноя 2020
  • Ralph Nader and Sandy Duncan help Dick Cavett question American Chess Grandmaster Bobby Fischer who gives everyone a quick crash lesson on how to play chess and demonstrates his winning moves in his previous match against grandmaster Tigran Petrosian.
    Date aired - January 4th 1972 - Bobby Fischer, Sandy Duncan and Ralph Nader
    For clip licensing opportunities please visit www.globalimag...
    Subscribe for more Dick Cavett Show: bit.ly/3ao6ZNy
    More from 'Bobby Fischer':
    Bobby Fischer on Gender Equality in The Chess Community: • Bobby Fischer on Gende...
    Dick Cavett has been nominated for eleven Emmy awards (the most recent in 2012 for the HBO special, Mel Brooks and Dick Cavett Together Again), and won three. Spanning five decades, Dick Cavett’s television career has defined excellence in the interview format. He started at ABC in 1968, and also enjoyed success on PBS, USA, and CNBC.

    His most recent television successes were the September 2014 PBS special, Dick Cavett’s Watergate, followed April 2015 by Dick Cavett’s Vietnam. He has appeared in movies, tv specials, tv commercials, and several Broadway plays. He starred in an off-Broadway production ofHellman v. McCarthy in 2014 and reprised the role at Theatre 40 in LA February 2015.

    Cavett has published four books beginning with Cavett (1974) and Eye on Cavett (1983), co-authored with Christopher Porterfield. His two recent books -- Talk Show: Confrontations, Pointed Commentary, and Off-Screen Secrets (2010) and Brief Encounters: Conversations, Magic moments, and Assorted Hijinks(October 2014) are both collections of his online opinion column, written for The New York Times since 2007. Additionally, he has written for The New Yorker, TV Guide, Vanity Fair, and elsewhere.
    #thedickcavettshow #BobbyFischer #chess #RalphNader

Комментарии • 1,7 тыс.

  • @TheDickCavettShow
    @TheDickCavettShow  3 года назад +141

    Where, in your opinion, does Bobby Fischer rank among the greatest Chess Grandmasters of all time?

  • @mccloysong
    @mccloysong 3 года назад +7398

    He handles the pieces like they owe him money.

    • @steve5825
      @steve5825 3 года назад +107

      He does 😂

    • @stalkek
      @stalkek 3 года назад +267

      Kind of weirdly aggressive all right!

    • @NoPrivateProperty
      @NoPrivateProperty 3 года назад +224

      they did owe him money. he was sorely under compensated

    • @modularmuse
      @modularmuse 3 года назад +9

      Lol.

    • @mxbishop
      @mxbishop 3 года назад +18

      Collecting the rents.

  • @chess
    @chess 3 года назад +4329

    The legend.

  • @ar9v
    @ar9v 3 года назад +1646

    Bobby deadass said "I'm built different" lmao

    • @basharshami3403
      @basharshami3403 3 года назад +17

      hahahaha fr tho

    • @toniokettner4821
      @toniokettner4821 3 года назад +62

      he said "i'm different"
      fake news just for internet points

    • @stevenhoang387
      @stevenhoang387 3 года назад +17

      Bill Dipperly

    • @JoeARedHawk275
      @JoeARedHawk275 3 года назад +30

      @@toniokettner4821 Lol the fact you use “internet points”

    • @Mikeystonet
      @Mikeystonet 3 года назад +18

      @@toniokettner4821 you seem like a really fun guy.

  • @ChessNetwork
    @ChessNetwork 3 года назад +2378

    “It’s just you and your opponent at the board and you’re trying to prove something.” -Bobby Fischer

    • @ResponsibleSnowflake
      @ResponsibleSnowflake 3 года назад +27

      Hi Jerry!

    • @jameshinton3855
      @jameshinton3855 3 года назад +6

      What are you trying to prove then, Jerry?

    • @lewis8200
      @lewis8200 3 года назад +3

      Hey, I know you

    • @sladewilson9741
      @sladewilson9741 3 года назад +9

      Too bad he was a crazy anti semite. But I guess genius and crazy go hand in hand.

    • @judahslion5611
      @judahslion5611 3 года назад +16

      @@sladewilson9741
      He was Jewish so he couldn't have been a true anti semite. I chalk that era of his life up to him going cuckoo. If you watch the documentary of him when he went to live in Iceland it's quite clear he wasn't in his right mind. He'd lost his mind around the time he started saying all those crazy things. He never made racist remarks when he was younger.

  • @JammastaJ23
    @JammastaJ23 3 года назад +2089

    Dick Cavett in retrospect had far more interesting interviews than a lot of what was on Carson. Getting Bobby Fischer to open up and be friendly like this is an accomplishment.

    • @RicardoAGuitar
      @RicardoAGuitar 3 года назад +164

      Seeing Bobby apparently enjoying himself is nice. If only this version could have taken control of the rest of him.

    • @MuhammadAtthur_
      @MuhammadAtthur_ 3 года назад +6

      Or maybe bobby is an open man himself

    • @ivandaniel08
      @ivandaniel08 3 года назад +8

      Best non-clown. Orson Welles, Marlon Brando, Groucho...

    • @RevoltingRudi
      @RevoltingRudi 3 года назад +35

      well compared to some late night bums, DC just goes interview 101. especially with intelligent guys this is a good thing to do. ask questions about the interviewers passion/upcoming thing, let him talk until he is, guide the interview so that it don´t slide off (if he monologues to long) and don´t come along with questions that insult or get them in any kind of trouble. for example some dipshits asked mike tyson bluntly about his daughters death. he instantly quitted.
      because the smart guys see through the bullshit and that can turn out in a nightmare of interview.

    • @bcask61
      @bcask61 3 года назад +14

      Fischer actually seems normal here. His weirdness is not yet on display.

  • @giggitygoo5623
    @giggitygoo5623 3 года назад +475

    "I intend to keep playing for a long time." Breaks one's heart

    • @medexamtoolsdotcom
      @medexamtoolsdotcom 3 года назад +51

      Well he did, just in secret. Though he didn't live as long as he should have, because he was on the run from stupid governments that didn't honor their *claimed* policies of freedom of speech, and yes, playing a game of chess is an expression of freedom of speech.

    • @imaginarychip4916
      @imaginarychip4916 3 года назад +5

      @@medexamtoolsdotcom
      What? Are u making stuff up?

    • @LandersWorkshop
      @LandersWorkshop 3 года назад +3

      @@imaginarychip4916 He's not really, kinda a bit stretchy, but basically the truth.

    • @rgsethtrsthsfhtjfdty7134
      @rgsethtrsthsfhtjfdty7134 3 года назад +5

      @@imaginarychip4916 it’s rumoured that he played Nigel short in a secret online match and he won all 8 games even playing openings where he ran his king up the board, you can probably find it on agadmator’s channel somewhere

    • @JohnS-il1dr
      @JohnS-il1dr 2 года назад +3

      @@rgsethtrsthsfhtjfdty7134 Fischer vehemently denied that rumor, and futher analysis with computers showed that someone cheated with a chess playing software.

  • @ImmortalWazir
    @ImmortalWazir 3 года назад +1671

    "I don't believe in psychology, I believe in good moves" - Bobby Fischer 🔥

    • @magicmause7846
      @magicmause7846 3 года назад +19

      But still he got beaten by Tal

    • @ssik9460
      @ssik9460 3 года назад +44

      @@magicmause7846 losing to Tal was a Tal move

    • @zdravkogalesev7715
      @zdravkogalesev7715 3 года назад +2

      Za sve je kriv bobi fiser , to je naslov u intervjuu za novi list koji sam dao misi cvijanovicu za novi list prije tridesetak godina

    • @joshuasolomon1112
      @joshuasolomon1112 3 года назад +6

      Tal's smile

    • @stringmaker77
      @stringmaker77 3 года назад +1

      I love this quote

  • @johnhunter7386
    @johnhunter7386 3 года назад +780

    There will never be another Dick Cavett. He was insightful, extremely intelligent and had a great sense of humor. He didn't take himself to seriously and was often the butt of his own jokes. He was a class act.

    • @AbdallaAmeri
      @AbdallaAmeri 3 года назад +2

      Exactly, class !

    • @octopusmime
      @octopusmime 3 года назад +9

      Cavett is such an important figure in cultural history. I love the show so much and have so much respect for him.

    • @johnhunter7386
      @johnhunter7386 3 года назад +6

      @@octopusmime One of my favorite memories is watching his show with my dad.

    • @josephpeeler5434
      @josephpeeler5434 3 года назад +7

      He actually interviewed his guest. He got passed the superficial. Check out his interview with Janis Joplin.

    • @aztecwarrior9729
      @aztecwarrior9729 3 года назад +3

      What he said about plates word, Scrabble championship nowadays would be his.

  • @WILLIAM1690WALES
    @WILLIAM1690WALES 3 года назад +862

    No one handled Bobby better than Dick, Dick had this ability with eccentric sometimes genius of individuals with his quirky sense of humour and is supreme intelligence

    • @jadezee6316
      @jadezee6316 3 года назад +18

      WHAT DO YOU MEAN HANDLED?
      you people kill me...there is nothing strange or weird about bobby here...99% of people called genius are not...Fischer was part of the 1 % that was.

    • @WILLIAM1690WALES
      @WILLIAM1690WALES 3 года назад +34

      @@jadezee6316 Bobby was a highly stung individual that in later years cause his mental decline, dick later said if Bobby could’ve contacted him he may have helped him with this mental condition unfortunately for people like Bobby paranoia was always the danger?

    • @johnt7630
      @johnt7630 3 года назад +34

      @Stuart Paul, it's almost impossible not to like Dick Cavett.

    • @mgd8867
      @mgd8867 3 года назад +8

      Wouldn't say Dick had supreme intelligence calm down

    • @krisjill5918
      @krisjill5918 3 года назад +24

      He's very humble too, which immediately disarms such types. All this and more makes Cavett the best in the biz... even to this day. Actually I think talk shows have descended into the mire, for the most part. Just mindless pap.

  • @Musicrafter12
    @Musicrafter12 3 года назад +1006

    Bobby: "I intend to be real good for a long time"
    Also Bobby: Wins title, retires immediately

    • @mehdimehdikhani5899
      @mehdimehdikhani5899 3 года назад +83

      i am sure that was his intention at the time. he just changed his mind after winning.

    • @DieFlabbergast
      @DieFlabbergast 3 года назад +88

      He was still "real good," he just didn't have a title recognised by anyone other than himself. In the real world, it's not enough just to be the best: you also have to put yourself to the test in a public arena. It's the same in all competitive activities. He was a genius, and also a madman.

    • @tkokesh
      @tkokesh 3 года назад +69

      He didn’t retire immediately. While he didn’t play another official game until 1992, he intended to defend his title in 1975. However, FIDE (the international chess federation) refused to bend to his demand that the match be to ten wins, with his challenger having to win by two games. Given that the next WC match in 1978 dragged on to 32 games, when Karpov finally broke through for his required sixth win, FIDE definitely made the right decision.

    • @gromaxlewitch704
      @gromaxlewitch704 3 года назад +28

      @@tkokesh and Karpov's snd Kasparov's 1985 match is still being played.

    • @edwardshowden5511
      @edwardshowden5511 3 года назад +5

      @@tkokesh Pretty stupid demands don't you think?

  • @henryseidel5469
    @henryseidel5469 3 года назад +127

    "I am still under the shock of this loss for the world of chess. Bobby Fischer was the most honest person in chess history. He never made any politics. He was a very pure personality. He could be tough from outside, but inside of him he was like a crystal. Very pure !" (Boris Spasski, 2009)

    • @DirectX3
      @DirectX3 2 года назад +1

      Ayrton Senna: Pure racing.

    • @mustuploadtoo7543
      @mustuploadtoo7543 Год назад +7

      no politics? he was antisemitic and denied the holocaust

    • @Nocturne33
      @Nocturne33 Год назад +3

      ​@@mustuploadtoo7543 same

    • @Welderborea
      @Welderborea Год назад +1

      @@Nocturne33 LOL

    • @henryseidel5469
      @henryseidel5469 3 месяца назад

      @@mustuploadtoo7543 Indeed he gave his views but never became active for or against any religion or belief. It was his personal opinion. He just said what he liked and what he didn't like ! Must have been a reason for that.

  • @carlsaischa
    @carlsaischa 3 года назад +1563

    Dick : "Like the onset of schizophrenia"
    A small part of Fischer's brain: "ha..ha... *sweats*"

    • @StephenDoty84
      @StephenDoty84 3 года назад +63

      Imagine if Fischer shot back, "Many a true word is said in jest."

    • @derekfelton8287
      @derekfelton8287 3 года назад +25

      the price of true genius is high. Fischer was a giant. I think he took it all the way

    • @centralprocessingunit2564
      @centralprocessingunit2564 3 года назад +36

      he was not schezephrenic

    • @Ckdude100
      @Ckdude100 3 года назад +5

      @@centralprocessingunit2564 he was

    • @StephenDoty84
      @StephenDoty84 3 года назад +41

      @@centralprocessingunit2564 Fischer had all the signs of paranoia, though, and is considered to have suffered from it, whether formally diagnosed or not... "He had a lifelong history of disputes, conflicts and controversy. He believed he was the victim of conspiracies. Fischer showed symptoms of the mental illness paranoia, similar to Morphy."

  • @jaironunez7196
    @jaironunez7196 3 года назад +195

    4:40 "I intend to keep playing for a long time..." 😭😭😭
    **My heart just broke...

    • @howard5992
      @howard5992 3 года назад +38

      @Axel Ave After the 1972 World Chess Championship, Fischer did not play a competitive game in public for nearly 20 years

    • @wavetech_
      @wavetech_ 3 года назад +1

      @@howard5992 so the same year this interview was aired? That's crazy! And sad...

    • @flacsmada
      @flacsmada 3 года назад

      @Axel Ave you must not know very much about fischer. they have a movie called "searching for bobby fischer". you may want to watch before talking anymore

    • @andreraymond6860
      @andreraymond6860 3 года назад +5

      That's the one that got me too.
      'How old are you now?'
      'I'm 28'.
      (he retired at 29).

    • @TheBeanis8
      @TheBeanis8 3 года назад +1

      @Axel Ave Time to hush now

  • @1AirStreamDriver1
    @1AirStreamDriver1 3 года назад +302

    When he was practicing or doing a demonstration like this, Bobby always slammed down the pieces. In tournaments he was much more graceful.

    • @OtesOtesOtes
      @OtesOtesOtes 3 года назад +14

      I reckon he could contain himself and save the intimidation for winning moves.

    • @carlo_cali
      @carlo_cali 3 года назад +3

      I noticed that too in all the clips I've watched online. It's peculiar. I wonder why he always did that. On 60 minutes they showed him practicing and he did it. On Bobby Fischer Against the World he did it too.

    • @vibovitold
      @vibovitold 2 года назад

      ​@RaniaIsAwesome Kasparov didn't refrain from some ungentlemanly behavior at the board as well though, like slamming the clock full force when frustrated (or denying having touched a piece, for that matter).
      Fischer could have been a very difficult person throwing tantrums when it was about negotiating conditions etc. BUT once he was sitting at the table, he was 100% sportsmanlike and exemplary.

  • @BinaryRex18
    @BinaryRex18 2 года назад +17

    He hit 2780 Elo in 1972, which is insane. True, there have been 20 players since then who have surpassed him. But his relative peak is beaten only by morphy.

    • @vibovitold
      @vibovitold 2 года назад +4

      back in Morphy's times chess was a hobby activity though. they didn't even use time control / clocks. it's really hard to compare.

    • @BinaryRex18
      @BinaryRex18 2 года назад

      @@vibovitold that's where relativity to the time comes in. You could argue that chess in fischer's time was also way more amateur than now as there were no strong chess computers and elite chess resources were less accessible to the common man.

  • @aunch3
    @aunch3 3 года назад +65

    What’s interesting is the audience thinks he trying to be funny a lot of the time, but he’s dead serious about everything he’s saying. The Fischer biography is fascinating

    • @atthesunrise
      @atthesunrise 2 года назад +3

      Which biography are you referring to?

    • @EGarrett01
      @EGarrett01 Год назад

      Yeah, it's good though because he didn't mind the audience's laughing.

  • @robertx1603
    @robertx1603 3 года назад +239

    "Will a chess match ever be on network television?"
    Even at this point they underestimated the chess mania that Fischer playing Spassky would cause....

    • @ojsojs6004
      @ojsojs6004 3 года назад +2

      Many chess tournaments have been on network television.

    • @mastermind8047
      @mastermind8047 3 года назад +2

      @@ojsojs6004 not until that point tho..

    • @zapkvr
      @zapkvr 3 года назад +3

      I'd rather watch paint dry

    • @divinesleeper
      @divinesleeper 3 года назад +4

      and Fischer suggests if they change the time limit
      which they did, blitz games are more popular now to audiences

    • @playitsafe20
      @playitsafe20 3 года назад +3

      When Fisher spoke about chess, he was correct 100.0% of the time. His contributions never did get the respect warranted, and I'm sure that bothered him somewhat. He was clearly the most dominant player ever. What he did between 1968 and 1972, crushing the Soviet machine basically on his own will never be equaled. And if his same self at 28 were to be around today he would dominate today's game as well.
      If FIDE had found the 2 votes necessary to approve his proposal, he most certainly would win again in 1975 and who knows what would have happened next.

  • @ronak212
    @ronak212 3 года назад +57

    I absolutely love Bobby Fischer. "I won't let him draw". This is the kind of confidence I need

    • @ronak212
      @ronak212 3 года назад +1

      @Nitish Kumar chess.com and lichess.org both. Though I like lichess more.

  • @Joshualbm
    @Joshualbm 3 года назад +190

    He seemed friendly and pretty down to earth and goofy in his way.

    • @ELVIS1975T
      @ELVIS1975T 3 года назад +14

      Friendly yes but down to earth?

    • @Joshualbm
      @Joshualbm 3 года назад +28

      @@ELVIS1975T Well, he seems like a normal guy in his manner, speech and ability to respond pretty straightforwardly to questions. More like a street smart kid than intellectual. By down-to-earth I mean he's unpretentious. Of course he knows he's great but he's also doesn't seem to be full of himself. At least as far as this interview is concerned.

    • @orionp.9476
      @orionp.9476 3 года назад +2

      @@ELVIS1975T No. No, he was not friendly at all. HAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHA

    • @Joshualbm
      @Joshualbm 3 года назад +1

      @Axel Ave I didn't know him personally, therefor I can only use presumptive language. Sad;y, the ones who possess this kind of tactical mind are pursued by the warlords and kings to do their bloody bidding and pernicious mischief.

    • @sirmixalot7372
      @sirmixalot7372 3 года назад

      @@Joshualbm He seems pretty full of himself to me

  • @adriannngp2012
    @adriannngp2012 3 года назад +214

    its funny how he seems like a person from the current generation talking to really old people about questions with logical answers

    • @RainOnline
      @RainOnline 3 года назад +2

      riiiiight? strange

    • @howard5992
      @howard5992 3 года назад +7

      Fischer was mostly self-taught in chess and dropped out of High School at age 16. He did bot seem that interested in academic subjects. He was obviously fiercely competitive and focused on chess. So he comes across as sort of brazen and rough. He has an honesty and a directness but he's also not very adept in terms of interpersonal skills.

    • @jasperhalsey8574
      @jasperhalsey8574 3 года назад +2

      @@vincentbahro9055 yeah but even the other 2 guests seem like old people

    • @jasperhalsey8574
      @jasperhalsey8574 3 года назад +2

      the Beatles have the same vibe in old interviews

    • @adrian72300
      @adrian72300 3 года назад +3

      @@howard5992 Most people with the ability to think "outside the box" don't focus on mundane things, their mind moves very fast, and talk only when necessary, and mainly on things that will stimulate and enlighten their outlook on everything.

  • @prozmystery
    @prozmystery 3 года назад +290

    Bobby was much ahead of his time.

    • @mrm4xim4m
      @mrm4xim4m 3 года назад +9

      Absolutely agree.. quite sad to see his decline he was so charismatic and had the xfactor along with his game playing genius similar to Magnus and other sport genius’ like Ronnie O’Sullivan imo.

    • @barracuda7018
      @barracuda7018 3 года назад +4

      Far ahead of anyone....

    • @TheErasec
      @TheErasec 3 года назад +1

      And underestimated

    • @solderbuff
      @solderbuff 3 года назад +1

      Ahead in what?

    • @barracuda7018
      @barracuda7018 3 года назад +4

      @@solderbuff What did he play.?
      Who crashed the strongest players of the world one after the other effortlessly .
      Taimanov, Larsen,Petrossian and Spasski
      Nobody has ever came close to that kind performance level in the whole history.

  • @leadnitrate2194
    @leadnitrate2194 3 года назад +152

    2:00 everyone laughed, but Fischer was dead serious. That confidence, that was Bobby at his best.

    • @jaswerner419
      @jaswerner419 2 года назад

      @ Lead Nitrate
      Agree 👍💯 percent %%%

  • @Noelito40
    @Noelito40 3 года назад +60

    Wow he has huge hands! and the way he slaps down those pieces with dominance.

  • @somethingyousaid5059
    @somethingyousaid5059 3 года назад +325

    Imagine the contempt that he must have had for checkers.

    • @mccloysong
      @mccloysong 3 года назад +9

      spit-take!

    • @kentclark6420
      @kentclark6420 3 года назад +18

      He was probably an expert at that, too.

    • @garylizard
      @garylizard 3 года назад +10

      The more I try to get better at chess the more I love checkers

    • @Liwet.
      @Liwet. 3 года назад +7

      @Dan D Fischer random was renamed to Chess960 (the amount of possible starting positions).

    • @lawrenceehrbar8667
      @lawrenceehrbar8667 3 года назад +9

      I have read that chess is more a game of intellect and checkers a game of skill.

  • @cordellsenior9935
    @cordellsenior9935 3 года назад +604

    I didn't know Bobby was such a big guy.

    • @frankiegee6135
      @frankiegee6135 3 года назад +133

      Bobby was a tall commanding individual and not even remotely close to Toby’s portrayal of him. That movie was a total smear campaign! Bobby was a very laid back man.

    • @varishnakov
      @varishnakov 3 года назад +86

      for you

    • @PaulieStamets
      @PaulieStamets 3 года назад +2

      @@frankiegee6135 Just saw that movie a few weeks ago, and I would have said the same thing as Cordell's.
      makes you think huh

    • @RossMoore777
      @RossMoore777 3 года назад +52

      He was over 6 foot. One of the reasons he was difficult to play against was his size made him physically intimidating

    • @raoulhery
      @raoulhery 3 года назад +74

      That's why casting Tobey McGuire was total blunder

  • @kingscrusher
    @kingscrusher 3 года назад +58

    "It just takes just this much ... to miscalculate one little thing in your mind you know" - Bobby Fischer

    • @meriemmariana7722
      @meriemmariana7722 3 года назад

      Bobby fischer is unique, and kingscrusher is the best chess channel for all times.

  • @bhgtree
    @bhgtree 3 года назад +43

    If time travel is ever possible, I'd go back to see Bobby play his greatest games and matches. RIP Bobby Fischer The Legend.

  • @juannunez5767
    @juannunez5767 3 года назад +69

    There are urban legends about Bobby Fischer playing chess online in the late 90s and 2000s. Allegedly he would play some very high level blitz games. For all we know, he did stay sharp for the next 30 years after this interview.

    • @jadezee6316
      @jadezee6316 3 года назад

      bobby fischer NEVER played chess online....you all can stop that nonsense.....

    • @pauldavies5611
      @pauldavies5611 3 года назад +18

      @@jadezee6316 How do you know?

    • @grantmiller4775
      @grantmiller4775 3 года назад +21

      @@jadezee6316 Bobby Fischer against Nigel Short in 2000.
      ruclips.net/video/7B9p2PrsKWY/видео.html
      0:56-1:14
      Nigel Short says that he didn't know if it was Bobby Fischer, but he said that whoever it was was better than Garry Kasparov, the current World Champion. So these stories are not really nonsense.
      Actually, watch up to 2:09. There's more. And Short said he was 99% sure it was Fischer.

    • @kasparov9
      @kasparov9 3 года назад +5

      @@grantmiller4775 It wasn't Fischer, it was a guy using an engine, pretending to be. All Nigel Short did was mention a name, and the player Replied Siegen 1970, that was enough to convince Short it was Fischer?? :)
      Any Fischer fantical fan could pull that off, or is he had chessbase next to him and it told him the event where Fischer played that guy Short mentioned. Chessbase debunked this a long time ago.

    • @grantmiller4775
      @grantmiller4775 3 года назад +1

      @@kasparov9 No, that wasn't enough. As I said, Short also said that whoever it was was better than Kasparov, who was the current World Champion. That's a pretty interesting comment. If you have some evidence, let's hear it.

  • @Tore5Chess
    @Tore5Chess 3 года назад +145

    0:52 WOW! FISCHER PLAYED THE BONGCLOUD!

    • @Hybridman7
      @Hybridman7 3 года назад +4

      XD

    • @donkbonktj5773
      @donkbonktj5773 3 года назад

      @Tore5 Chess nice catch! hahahaha

    • @its_muu3493
      @its_muu3493 3 года назад

      He played it in an online match against Nigel short

  • @HazeAero
    @HazeAero 3 года назад +21

    I had never really seen video of Bobby Fischer, but his demenour is nothing like I imagined.
    He caries himself so well, just oozes confidence, very cool.

  • @ianbauer4703
    @ianbauer4703 3 года назад +74

    Never seen this vid before, might be the best I've seen all year -- terribly interesting.

    • @wespaul9345
      @wespaul9345 3 года назад +2

      It really is. He's fascinating.

    • @kierancoughlan1378
      @kierancoughlan1378 3 года назад +3

      The full video is here ruclips.net/video/zIE3CFNpZ5Y/видео.html would love to see the interview in 1972 after he became world champion, can anyone help us out?

    • @denisdooley1540
      @denisdooley1540 3 года назад

      It is interesting to see some interviews when he wasn't sporting a ratty beard and ranting paranoid conspiracies.

    • @josephyearwood1179
      @josephyearwood1179 2 года назад

      @@denisdooley1540 psychopaths hate the truth

  • @BillyLapTop
    @BillyLapTop 3 года назад +129

    I recall that window in time when Bobby Fischer was constantly in the news with his win over Boris Spasky. All the networks featured him and there was an incredible new interest in chess. In fact, there was a chess fever that lasted a few years afterwards. Also, there was incredible American pride evident when he won the championship, as the Russians (Soviets) were seen as the best of the best at chess in the world. A later equivalent would be the U.S. beating the Soviets in ice hockey at the 1980 Winter Olympics.

    • @stephenreeds3672
      @stephenreeds3672 3 года назад +15

      Like everything else, the Americans have to prove that they're the best. Deeply insecure.

    • @joewagner4593
      @joewagner4593 3 года назад +12

      @@stephenreeds3672 We don't have to prove it, we just do.

    • @Qhsjahajw
      @Qhsjahajw 3 года назад +3

      @@joewagner4593 temporarily

    • @mwong987
      @mwong987 3 года назад +5

      @@Qhsjahajw Yes, these are good examples of cold war victories over the Soviets. Another one was Van Cliburn, an American pianist who was voted best by Russian judges in 1958 during the international tchkaivsky competition.

    • @RE4LW4LL4CE
      @RE4LW4LL4CE 3 года назад +1

      And now theyre the most hated country im the world.
      Whats your point again?

  • @robjohnson8214
    @robjohnson8214 3 года назад +18

    Fascinating interview. Love how Fisher just slams down pieces as he's demonstrating...as though he is communicating his complete dominance and ownership over the game itself.

  • @solidaritytime3650
    @solidaritytime3650 3 года назад +21

    Cavett is my all time favorite interviewer. The speed and grace with which he executes his wry sense of humor tickles me every time.

  • @carloeduardodelacruz9237
    @carloeduardodelacruz9237 3 года назад +795

    I didn’t know Dirk Nowitzki was a chess player as well.

    • @someperson9052
      @someperson9052 3 года назад +11

      Oh my god the resemblance... I had never heard of him until now

    • @sloaner404
      @sloaner404 3 года назад +28

      Knows standard theory and has a killer fadeaway

    • @sensei0184
      @sensei0184 3 года назад +8

      German jesus out here teaching them the blitzkrieg manouver

    • @eyeofhorus1301
      @eyeofhorus1301 3 года назад +3

      How dare you compare him to derp nowitzski

    • @TransparentEclipse
      @TransparentEclipse 3 года назад +10

      @@eyeofhorus1301 derp? Carried the mavs to a championship. Imagine if the mavs didn’t have dirk. Maybe the worst franchise all time. Now luka might do the same thing again

  • @ezioauditoreste
    @ezioauditoreste 3 года назад +138

    "I want to play for another 30 years" he said, but actually the one with Spassky would have been his last match...

    • @matteopriotto5131
      @matteopriotto5131 3 года назад +24

      He actually played another match with Spassky 20 years after their World Championship match but yeah, that's true.

    • @leadnitrate2194
      @leadnitrate2194 3 года назад +28

      Still a pity that he didn't face Karpov. Or Kasparov.

    • @Diffusion8
      @Diffusion8 3 года назад +4

      The one in 1992

    • @isaacjacob3590
      @isaacjacob3590 3 года назад +3

      yeah that part was so saddening for me...

    • @its_muu3493
      @its_muu3493 3 года назад

      @@leadnitrate2194 he once played against Kasparov but Kasparov was only 20/21

  • @harrywilde2178
    @harrywilde2178 3 года назад +59

    Dick Cavett was a master at his game!, his interview with Fischer was masterful!

    • @ucctgg
      @ucctgg 3 года назад

      He just read the notes written down by his staff.

    • @TomHuston43
      @TomHuston43 3 года назад

      @@ucctgg The adlibbing made the show and the staff couldn't prepare for that. Anyway, Cavett's problem was that he was always too hip for the room.

    • @ucctgg
      @ucctgg 3 года назад +1

      @@TomHuston43 No, Cavett's problem, was that he always Thought he was too hip for the room.

    • @paulevans6403
      @paulevans6403 3 года назад

      @@TomHuston43 That bit with the anagrams obviously wasn't an ad lib and came off as very smarmy. This was the kind of crap that people didn't like about Cavett. Fischer played along but eventually had had enough and just off-handedly put him down with the I don't really care about that kind of stuff remark.

    • @noelyking400
      @noelyking400 2 года назад

      Dick cavett rated him as a decent human being. Most people hated bobby

  • @samirv3716
    @samirv3716 3 года назад +9

    I love his casual approach to conversation, almost as if you were not speaking with the biggest chess giant that ever lived, yet some everyday person.

  • @seansingh8862
    @seansingh8862 3 года назад +53

    Arguably chess's GOAT. He overcame fatherlessness, severe mental illness, and a huge lack of chess resources to single-handedly destroy an institution that had utterly and completely dominated chess since WWII and would continue to dominate world chess for decades after his abdication.
    No other chess player and arguably no other competitor in any field has done anything of this magnitude against such huge headwinds.

    • @seansingh8862
      @seansingh8862 3 года назад

      @Greg Goulet I have never read the Wikipedia page. I'm a 2100 rated chess player.

    • @GH-oi2jf
      @GH-oi2jf 3 года назад

      hyperbole

    • @vibovitold
      @vibovitold 2 года назад +1

      he was never diagnosed with a mental illness, much less a severe one. he clearly had a disturbed mind, but it could have been some sort of a personality disorder. i don't see a reason to assume he had severe mental illness, not to mention that whatever troubled him, he didn't really overcome it (sadly).
      you are entirely correct regarding the rest in my view. Fischer's accomplishment was unprecedented. and something like this can't really happen again, because in the era of internet, chess engines, databases etc. chess has globalized and the playing field is levelled.
      that's why now we can have top players from countries that haven't really cultivated strong chess culture, like Norway or China, and noone is surprised about it.
      for this reason it may be hard to imagine the advantage that the Soviets had, if someone is from a generation young enough to kind of take modern technology for granted.
      USSR was the only country in the world where chess was a fully professional discipline (since the end of WW2).
      the rest of the world played it like scrabble: yes, there were tournaments and everything, but the organization level was amateur.

  • @musical_lolu4811
    @musical_lolu4811 3 года назад +76

    Gosh he's like a virtuoso pianist the way he handles those pieces.

    • @KF1
      @KF1 3 года назад +1

      Dramatic but uncontrolled.

    • @DrQuizzler
      @DrQuizzler 3 года назад +6

      I was thinking the same thing. With the combination of quirkyness and bravado, the name Glenn Gould comes to mind.

  • @astropgn
    @astropgn 3 года назад +5

    For the comments saying you cannot find an interviewer like Dick Cavett anymore, or that Jimmy Fallow is very bad... Realize that it is not that you don't have people like Dick Cavett interested in doing interviews with this level of quality. At any giving time, there are always interesting and intelligent people in the world. What you don't have anymore is an audience that would sit and watch it like there was back then.

    • @KRAFTWERK2K6
      @KRAFTWERK2K6 3 года назад

      Seeing how popular Dick's videos are, you are proven wrong, my friend. People WANT to see it.

    • @astropgn
      @astropgn 3 года назад

      @@KRAFTWERK2K6 how does this prove anything? There are tons of views, for example, for Jimmy Kimmel as well. Does it mean he is better than Dick Cavett?

    • @KRAFTWERK2K6
      @KRAFTWERK2K6 3 года назад

      @@astropgn well of course because he's a corporate-pushed channel that is being fed to most people on YT. Especially those who aren't logged in with a channel. Have you ever seen the RUclips frontpage without being logged in with your account? It's FILLED with crap like Kimmel & Co. Doesn't mean people actually WANT to see it. Especially compared to other content that doesn't have the benefit of getting pushed by youtube this aggressively. I still stand correct.

    • @astropgn
      @astropgn 3 года назад

      @@KRAFTWERK2K6 So, this means that youtube views aren't a good measurement of what is really good, right? Also, I didn't saw Dick was bad (I do enjoy to watch him, for example), just that there are good people nowadays as well and we cannot think that what is most popular is representative.

  • @dealerovski82
    @dealerovski82 3 года назад +6

    wow, its really amazing to see this old chess player sitting in the same room as the guy who can rearrange letters of words in his head whit little to no effort. Amazing. What a lucky guy he and the audience was to live through such a show and time.

    • @rokanza2293
      @rokanza2293 3 года назад

      Lol i agree that was cringy and stupid of him to talk about that

    • @kencur9690
      @kencur9690 3 года назад

      No it wasn’t. He’s talking about anagrams, and just because you guys are too stupid to know what they are, doesn’t mean it was silly for him to mention it. It’s not something that everybody can do, and it’s definitely not something that everybody can do in the same amount of time. We’re not talking about words like “now” either. Solving anagrams can be a spectacular talent indeed.

  • @bk1147
    @bk1147 3 года назад +111

    Dick Cavett is massively underrated

    • @bcask61
      @bcask61 3 года назад +20

      I have noticed a recurring theme in comments sections where a commenter claims that somebody is “underrated.” I actually read a comment recently that claimed John Bonham was an “underrated” drummer. I have concluded that those who claim that someone who is justly thought of as very accomplished in his field is “underrated” probably does not know enough to be taken seriously. It’s a device that the commenter uses to imply that his opinion is more informed or more valid than others. I reject it.

    • @doctoreggman21
      @doctoreggman21 3 года назад +5

      bcask61 Reddit moment

    • @user-vs3lw6xs7n
      @user-vs3lw6xs7n 3 года назад +6

      @@bcask61 solid comment

    • @dukeofhaas
      @dukeofhaas 3 года назад +3

      @@bcask61 Good observation.

    • @rons5319
      @rons5319 3 года назад +1

      I think he was rated at just the right level.

  • @Primitarian
    @Primitarian 3 года назад +23

    What an amazing interview! Cavett asked just the sort of questions I have always wondered about. And here I think you see the nature of a true prodigy: It is largely a gift. Work your hardest, practice all you want, but if you lack the in-born talent, you cannot become Bobby Fischer.

    • @FS4SS
      @FS4SS 3 года назад +1

      Yeah but then you hear Hikaru Nakamura or Magnus Carlsen talking about it (who are unquestionably stronger players *now* than Fischer was *then* ), and they downplay the idea of chess players as geniuses.
      I was never super fantastic or anything back when I was a teen (USCF of 1700, Lichess and Chess.com at around 2000), but looking back on it ... it was a lot like getting good at a competitive online video game. Learning chess took a lot of the same skills, logic, and creativity. Not everyone can be the best in the world at something like Fischer or Magnus, that's for sure. There's something genetic. But I'm not sure they're mental geniuses/freaks of nature (like how my dad always talked about Chess GMs when I was growing up).

    • @Primitarian
      @Primitarian 3 года назад +2

      @@FS4SS Not everyone can be like Fischer or Magnus even if one worked as hard. But Fischer did say in another interview that someone without talent can nevetheless make himself very good, and that many people he played in competition did not strike him as talented, just hard working. As for me, I am not talented at chess, but that doesn't prevent me from enjoying it, much as one might enjoy a great work of art. In a position that would leave me filled with disinterest, Fischer sees a possibility for an amazing victory. I don't need to be Fischer, it is enough for me that he shines the light.

    • @orionp.9476
      @orionp.9476 3 года назад +5

      Except Bobby was not THAT much of a chess prodigy, or gifted, he wasn't particularly amazing at blindfolds, but he was EXTREMELY obsessed with chess, to this date nobody has ever been so obsessed with chess than him, he literally was 24/7, 365 days talking, thinking about chess, other GMs who told anecdotes about how creeped out they were because they've never met a guy so absolutely ill-obsessed with the game as Bobby, people really need to watch his documentaries and quotes to understand how insane the guy really was, he was a bit NPD + OCD + Psychotic idk pull up the DSM-5 criteria book. Guy was very delusional and actually didn't have a life outside chess, nor did he have friends. And this wasnt "nerdy type of I don' have friends" this was a "I will lock myself up in a room and only read chess positions all day every day away from human beings" type of not having friends.

  • @user-ho9hw1td4y
    @user-ho9hw1td4y 3 года назад +19

    Bobby is one of a generation. A different animal, the boss himself

    • @vibovitold
      @vibovitold 2 года назад

      more than that. "one in a generation" should produce roughly 4 Fischers per century. hasn't happened in the 20th. haven't seen one in the 21st yet. such meteoric rise and dominance hasn't been seen before, and hasn't been seen since. Fischer was one of a kind.

  • @MrRonfrank
    @MrRonfrank 3 года назад +46

    I never thought of Bobby Fisher quite this way. Weird.....but kind of normal.

    • @maskcollector6949
      @maskcollector6949 3 года назад +1

      Strange how his tournament changed him into a recluse after this. Don't meet your heroes, lol. The more I study the less I like the person.

    • @iforth64
      @iforth64 3 года назад

      I wouldn't say weird. Maybe his social manner was far ahead of the time, or he would have fitted better in, say, Europe. At least in this interview, the other two guests were far more awkward and self-conscious than Bobby.

  • @NxDoyle
    @NxDoyle 3 года назад +375

    This is Bobby Fischer at his best. Sadly, the difference between Bobby at his best and his worst was considerable.

    • @Wtahc
      @Wtahc 3 года назад +84

      @Literally Hitler cringe

    • @errorsofmodernism9715
      @errorsofmodernism9715 3 года назад +23

      @Literally Hitler Oy Vey!

    • @Lytton333
      @Lytton333 3 года назад +7

      @Rip Torn All these conspiracy theorists at large these days. I reckon it's a conspiracy.

    • @davitsurguladze6643
      @davitsurguladze6643 3 года назад +4

      That's what makes Magnus the greatest. He is the best, even in his woray

    • @mossad_agent946
      @mossad_agent946 3 года назад +34

      How weird, that the greatest minds of the last centuries were „antisemites“. I wonder what that means for us?

  • @E.Johansson
    @E.Johansson 3 года назад +7

    Not only was he a world class player but he also was a great thinker. He knew what and who was responsible for the societal decay, even back then.

    • @GH-oi2jf
      @GH-oi2jf 3 года назад

      No, he was not. He knew nothing, really, except chess. He was not othwise influential at all.

  • @honkyxadonis
    @honkyxadonis 3 года назад +684

    Can’t see Jimmie Fallon doing this somehow..........

    • @DCPete27
      @DCPete27 3 года назад +94

      He doesn’t have the attention span.

    • @Niznuts123
      @Niznuts123 3 года назад +262

      Jimmy: so...haha...you seem to like chess hahaha
      Crowd: roars in laughter.

    • @leadnitrate2194
      @leadnitrate2194 3 года назад +119

      @@Niznuts123 slaps desk

    • @tecnochitlan4388
      @tecnochitlan4388 3 года назад +33

      I can’t watch jimmy Fallon cause he fakes so much I know his job to do that so I don’t hate the guy but I hate the show cause the guy host it

    • @DaveLH
      @DaveLH 3 года назад +22

      Dick Cavett was always about who he was interviewing, and listening and learning from them. He wasn't the kind of interviewer like so many nowadays who always have to put in their own self-aggrandizing oar.

  • @michaeljames4904
    @michaeljames4904 3 года назад +21

    These uploads are absolutely gems getting widely shared round our way!

  • @raygordonteacheschess5501
    @raygordonteacheschess5501 3 года назад +8

    My parents paid three grand to bring Fischer to dinner at my home when I was seven. He said I was the "next champion" if I wanted to be and give me some very well-typed manuscripts containing some crazy chess ideas (like the Jaenish Gambit 1 c4 b5). I'm thinking there must be a few dozen other "chosen ones" who grew up in NYC whose parents also sponsored Fischer. Mom ran the largest typing service in NYC so he may have been there to pick up the typing but if he wasn't they paid $3,000 for him. Nothing at all like people say, very nice, extremely polite (when paid), said he wasn't going back to chess because no one could beat him and there was no point, plus he was making more money visiting homes like mine for an hour or two. When I finally tried to become world chess champion it was because a woman I loved was sapiosexual and into chessplayers.

    • @JaVi-mq3xn
      @JaVi-mq3xn 3 года назад

      Very interesting insight . Thanks for sharing. Bobby is a fascinating personality, it's rare to see a "cool genius" that doesn't fear public scrutiny.

    • @raygordonteacheschess5501
      @raygordonteacheschess5501 3 года назад

      @@JaVi-mq3xn What made him fascinating to the world made him very boring to those who met him, as he was very singleminded about chess. If you liked chess, he liked you.

  • @BijanIzadi
    @BijanIzadi 2 года назад +1

    Wow, was this level of intellectualism truly on tv back then?! That’s amazing

  • @Alchemistic88
    @Alchemistic88 3 года назад +7

    High level chess is not easy to understand for most people. That's why it's never going regularly be in mainstream media. Shows like Queens Gambit on Netflix made a big impact because of the show itself, the chess was most likely understood by only the chess community. In that way, it's very different from every other sport or game. The barrier for enjoyment of it requires quite a deep knowledge and, at least, an intermediate to advanced proficiency of the game.

    • @ktoth29
      @ktoth29 3 года назад

      I don't know, soccer is popular and to most people its just a bunch of dribbling the ball back and forth; but soccer aficionados will pretend its very intense and psychological. Same thing goes for baseball or cricket; boring as heck to people from cultures that didn't grow up with them.

  • @NYisconstipated
    @NYisconstipated 3 года назад +9

    Love the way he throws the pieces around

  • @mikelombard21
    @mikelombard21 Год назад +2

    I love how hard he places the pieces. Such conviction and force its fun to watch.

  • @axelbaker8737
    @axelbaker8737 3 года назад +8

    I didn’t realize Fischer was such a big guy.

  • @pnutbutrncrackers
    @pnutbutrncrackers 2 года назад +2

    I've never been a Dick Cavett fan at all, but must say that this is actually one of the best interview pieces with the enigmatic Bobby Fischer on film.

  • @derekmcdaniel6029
    @derekmcdaniel6029 3 года назад +16

    6:25 Bobby fisher: "We'll change the time limit. I'm reasonable." Lol

  • @haeleth7218
    @haeleth7218 3 года назад +2

    Fischer himself liked a quote from a Grand Master from the 1920's called Capablanca which was, "I see only one move ahead but it's always the correct one" 🙂

  • @edwissing7212
    @edwissing7212 3 года назад +14

    Never would have thought I'd see Nader sneak interview questions in on Fischer on the Dick Cavett Show.

    • @flumpyhumpy
      @flumpyhumpy 3 года назад

      When you're as egocentric as Nader it's hard not to drag the focus back to you every five minutes

  • @carlo_cali
    @carlo_cali 3 года назад +15

    "I don't really care about those things." He was great.

  • @krumzakon633
    @krumzakon633 3 года назад +5

    This guy... "Look, I am different, not like the rest..." Much respect!

  • @medexamtoolsdotcom
    @medexamtoolsdotcom 3 года назад +3

    I like how he does everything efficiently and doesn't waste time. Very useful characteristic for being on television where they're trying to fit it into a timeslot. When his hands are moving the pieces around to show you how they move, you better keep your hands out of his way or you might lose them.

  • @MrEdwardCollins
    @MrEdwardCollins 3 года назад +3

    The basketball player Fischer mentioned near the end of the clip, with ability to effortlessly anagram, was Jerry Lucas. Jerry's ability is well documented in the wonderful book, "The Memory Book" written by Harry Lorayne and Jerry Lucas.

  • @StephJ0seph
    @StephJ0seph 3 года назад +12

    _Bobby at 7 yrs with his preschool teacher teaching him the alphabet_
    *The teacher singing the alphabet song:* " A -B-C-D-E-F-G..."
    *Bobby:* "I'm really special I don't care about these things"
    lmao

  • @borrioboy6272
    @borrioboy6272 3 года назад +18

    4:40 “I’m just built different”

  • @worphjordan
    @worphjordan 3 года назад +2

    That's Ralph Nader asking the question lol

  • @schizoframia4874
    @schizoframia4874 3 года назад +1

    I love the way this guy moves the peices

  • @aayanansari700
    @aayanansari700 3 года назад +37

    I wanna hold and moves pieces around like Bobby does...

    • @cristianmicu
      @cristianmicu 3 года назад +5

      learn and practice 8 hours a day for years and you will. when i was into chess i was moving pieces like him , without seeing him in this video(you tube wasnt around back then

  • @magikarp653
    @magikarp653 3 года назад +6

    What a genius. The true pride and sorrow of chess.

  • @scottwesley5018
    @scottwesley5018 3 года назад +2

    Man why is he so normal and graceful and charming and funny in this video, then so batshit nuts crazy just a couple decades later

    • @user-cc5wu3lh1n
      @user-cc5wu3lh1n 4 месяца назад

      Maybe because he wasn’t, but the media was coerced to report on him being whacky for political reasons

  • @onelostalien
    @onelostalien 3 года назад +1

    "i'm different" you were... Legend.

  • @tww2002
    @tww2002 3 года назад +5

    So much intellect and wit.

  • @johnmarvel8729
    @johnmarvel8729 3 года назад +17

    I love the way Fischer teaches how the chess pieces move. Even though it's really quick, but it's straight to the point and the way he moves the pieces is very cool. He is the best chess player of all time. I'm so sorry for Magnus's fans, no offense. Although he's being diagnozed delusional psychosis but still he's awesome.

    • @nippy1234
      @nippy1234 3 года назад +2

      He was the best of his generation. The game has evolved. No one can deny his accomplishments but in the modern day he would be destroyed. No offense but magnus will go down in history as the greatest to touch a chess board

    • @chasemerritt1944
      @chasemerritt1944 3 года назад +11

      @@nippy1234 there's absolutely no argument that Magnus is the best player in history so far, but that doesn't make him the greatest. Bobby did more to promote the game, Kasparov was world champion for much longer. I highly doubt Magnus will go down as the greatest, because once someone becomes a stronger player than him, there's nothing unique about his time as world champion.

    • @nippy1234
      @nippy1234 3 года назад +2

      @@chasemerritt1944 OK fair point

    • @rickrick5041
      @rickrick5041 3 года назад +4

      @@nippy1234 He would be great in the modern day. Look at Kasparov. He's very old for chess, way way past his prime and he's from the old generation. He doesn't even prepare much but is still competitive against the very best in the world. He probably would still be the best but because of being rusty and old, he makes one blunder after getting a winning position and loses the game.

    • @johnmarvel8729
      @johnmarvel8729 3 года назад

      @@nippy1234 I think the important thing to assess and compare one's skill at chess is that both have to play without such opening theories. It's gonna be fair. Maybe we can compare Magnus and Fischer on Fischer Random match.
      Or i think if Fischer is still alive and play the tournaments he will utilise computer to help him to improve his game as Magnus and any other GM do.
      So the point is that Fischer has a unbreakable record as the US champion with no lose, 11 point of 11 games in 1957 maybe? Thus i prefer to look at one's achievement rather than how strong one's play is.

  • @noonecares514
    @noonecares514 Год назад +2

    The way he moves pieces is just so flawless.

  • @DanMatt-kt4yg
    @DanMatt-kt4yg Год назад +1

    I've always felt allured by Bobby Fischer's honesty and authenticity, particularly when, such as in this video he speaks about the traditions and etiquette of chess. Despite being a man of few words of whom's true genius has never properly been shown besides on the chess board, his straightforward approach to communication was admirable and refreshing

  • @chrisjames4297
    @chrisjames4297 3 года назад +4

    The fact that he could recall the state of the board from a single past match says something about why he was so good. Like Lebron James in the last year or two when he recalled a bunch of sequential plays against the Celtics, post game, except in Fischers case it is way after the match he is describing

    • @Meverynoob
      @Meverynoob 3 года назад

      Many avid chess players remember whole games or at least key moments in whole games.

  • @asdfghjkllkjhgfdsa8725
    @asdfghjkllkjhgfdsa8725 3 года назад +12

    3:22. “Do you think you know before he did”
    No dude he knew he was lost but he played on until he was completely sure there was no possible draw.

  • @walkingin6375
    @walkingin6375 3 года назад +1

    RIP Bobby, I learned to play when I was 5 years old, as I was growing up, I came to know about you and your games and accolades, I always found it fascinating how even people t hat never played chess knew the name, "Bobby Fischer". When people that know nothing about a field or talent, know exactly who you are, it speaks volumes about the significance with your contribution to the game.
    The year 2200 and on, I'm sure people will be analyzing his games with computers we can't comprehend, even now.

  • @michaellupu2080
    @michaellupu2080 3 года назад +2

    Beautiful Dubrovnik Chess set! Legendary!

  • @oliversitt
    @oliversitt 3 года назад +5

    Bobby was quite a charming guy in interviews

  • @vinnyvincent2862
    @vinnyvincent2862 3 года назад +12

    R.I.P. Bobby Fischer. 🙏

    • @arvidprutina48
      @arvidprutina48 Год назад +2

      I didn't know he passed away..........great guy........RIP...
      master..............

  • @DavidUKesb
    @DavidUKesb 3 года назад +1

    The Spassky v Fischer match in 1972 is the biggest sporting event in history. This match was quite literally front pages news for weeks in almost every country in the world.

    • @linusyootasteisking
      @linusyootasteisking 3 года назад

      i think you're both wrong... it's not an athletic sport, but still a sport. even if you require physicality for a sport they talked, in this video, about the physical requirements needed of chess players and why most retire after 40. people have checked pulse and blood pressure during matches. i think it is comparable to running, for up to 7 hours. that's also a leading hypothesis about why there are so many more males than female in top chess.

  • @FoMiAl
    @FoMiAl 3 года назад +2

    Bobby Fischer was really big. His body, arms, legs, even his hands look so much bigger than the interviewers.

  • @777jones
    @777jones 3 года назад +22

    Is that Ralph Nader in the other seat?!

    • @MP-tf7cc
      @MP-tf7cc 3 года назад +1

      Yes

    • @Pretermit_Sound
      @Pretermit_Sound 3 года назад +5

      I miss seeing Ralph. He was so dedicated. He definitely got a raw deal. Not too many people left who do things for a strictly ethical reason, and not just for the money.

    • @Pretermit_Sound
      @Pretermit_Sound 3 года назад +1

      @JediNxf7 we’ll have to agree to disagree on that, but I do understand your point believe it or not. Our first-past-the-post winner-take-all system is seriously flawed.

    • @Pretermit_Sound
      @Pretermit_Sound 3 года назад

      @JediNxf7I hear ya. I hear ya, and I agree. Hindsight is always 20/20 and whatnot. I’m sure Nader didn’t anticipate a 9/11 or an illegal war happening as a result of Bush getting elected. None of us did. There’s nothing we can do about it now. All we can do is try to learn from our mistakes. Stay safe ✌🏻🇺🇸

    • @grusilag
      @grusilag 3 года назад

      @JediNxf7 Nearly every democrat in Congress expressly voted to authorize the use of force in Iraq including Biden who I’m guessing you just voted for. Bush and the entire U.S. intelligence agencies lied outright to justify the war. Half of Florida voted for Bush and nearly half of the rest of the county did. But you’re blaming Ralph Nader for causing the war? One of the few who had the courage to actually be against the war? Out of all the people that were directly the cause of the war like Biden and Clinton and Bush?
      I mean if you’re ready to blame Nader for Iraq I can’t imagine what sort of anger you must feel for Biden who not only voted for the war but lobbied other Democrats to do so as well.

  • @mdaddy775
    @mdaddy775 3 года назад +3

    I'd never heard him talk before. I was missing out, he's awesome.

  • @SylveonSimp
    @SylveonSimp 3 года назад +4

    this show is so much better than todays stuff where interviewers prefer to hear themselves talking and deliver their prewritten jokes.

    • @anonymusum
      @anonymusum 3 года назад

      Stephen Colbert keeps it up.

  • @kabir0229
    @kabir0229 3 года назад +1

    Look how his hands moving on the board!
    Majestic!

  • @9Ballr
    @9Ballr 3 года назад +5

    "I intend to keep playing for a long time." The best laid plans of mice, and chess men.

  • @norm1286
    @norm1286 3 года назад +4

    "You handle them beautifully"
    "Thank you"

  • @DWilliam1
    @DWilliam1 3 года назад +7

    I remember when he played Spassky. It was huge.

  • @rafaelcabralwilliams
    @rafaelcabralwilliams 3 года назад +2

    So sad he didn't continue for 30 years more.

  • @averagejohnson3985
    @averagejohnson3985 3 года назад +33

    On the next episode: Bobby Fischer reads Mein Kampf to the audience.

    • @musicalneptunian
      @musicalneptunian 3 года назад +5

      Bobby Fischer would be wearing a MAGA hat .

    • @Pretermit_Sound
      @Pretermit_Sound 3 года назад +4

      Yep. He was a brilliant chess player. That’s for sure. But that’s it. He was a terrible human being otherwise.

    • @therenewedpoet4292
      @therenewedpoet4292 3 года назад +1

      @@musicalneptunian because he hated George Bush?

    • @floramaesarona1865
      @floramaesarona1865 3 года назад +2

      Bobby was not as you describe him until taught.

    • @dunkel-zombi_fiziert-heit
      @dunkel-zombi_fiziert-heit 3 года назад

      you, sir, are a big asshole!! this man is a legend, unreached, exc. maybe carlsen, kasparov..

  • @miguelsebastianorcconburgo3258
    @miguelsebastianorcconburgo3258 3 года назад +28

    Best chess player of all time

    • @DdotRay86
      @DdotRay86 3 года назад +3

      I'm not sure if that's true, I'll have to check

    • @mickeytete9036
      @mickeytete9036 3 года назад

      Magnus is great as well

    • @MobinKiadeh
      @MobinKiadeh 3 года назад +1

      Garry Kasparov is the best in my opinion, but the best of all time would have to be Magnus Carlsen, he's beaten everyone's records and is still going today.

    • @johnt7630
      @johnt7630 3 года назад +3

      Bobby Fischer didn't play long enough to be considered the best of all time. He could have been, but it's like a boxer who only fought once for the World title. Best of his era - yes, but he never defended his title, so reign was too brief to be GOAT.

    • @MobinKiadeh
      @MobinKiadeh 3 года назад

      @@johnt7630 well I meant to say he's on his way to becoming the best of all time, but Garry Kasparov still holds that distinction in my opinion.

  • @on2play736
    @on2play736 3 года назад

    Does anyone notice how calm and reserved he is but once he starts talking you can tell there's a lot coming out but the human body can't handle the physics applied of what his mind wants to say. He's going a million miles a minute and you can tell he thinks a lot. He's not stumbling nor is he stuttering but you can tell he wants to say more but he can't. In my personal opinion, he's the most recognizable genius in my library of geniuses. The very best!

  • @LucidEyes17
    @LucidEyes17 3 года назад +2

    Bobby Fischer was a good guy.

  • @DSmith264
    @DSmith264 3 года назад +8

    Cavett's reference to the onset of schizophrenia, proved to be disturbingly prophetic.

    • @naranjamunicipal8047
      @naranjamunicipal8047 3 года назад +2

      Where`s the medical diagnosis? You are a doctor or something?

  • @Screeach
    @Screeach 3 года назад +6

    One night at a rock bar me and a friend were playing a game. A man came up and told me to play and if he wins he gets a beer and if I win I'll get 50$. The dude was a chess teacher and I gave him about 6-7 beers ...

  • @thechesssavage6400
    @thechesssavage6400 3 года назад +2

    bringing back the classics. RIP GOAT Bobby Fisher