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#21
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On May 3, 1:36 pm, " wrote:
Several readers said they understood "selfmate" to mean only that Fischer mated himself by handing the title to Karpov without a fight.. This nonsense about Bobby Fischer handing "his" title off to Anatoly Karpov is wrongheaded. In fact, Mr. Fischer resigned the FIDE title, and it was only later given to the winner of the final playoff match, by FIDE (not BF). Mr. Fischer's battles were with or against the FIDE assembly, not AK. And I wouldn't say that BF did not put up a fight; it is perhaps more accurate to say that he lost by TKO, after winning nearly every round but the last. -- help bot |
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#22
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help bot wrote: On May 3, 1:36 pm, " wrote: Several readers said they understood "selfmate" to mean only that Fischer mated himself by handing the title to Karpov without a fight.. This nonsense about Bobby Fischer handing "his" title off to Anatoly Karpov is wrongheaded. In fact, Mr. Fischer resigned the FIDE title, and it was only later given to the winner of the final playoff match, by FIDE (not BF). Mr. Fischer's battles were with or against the FIDE assembly, not AK. And I wouldn't say that BF did not put up a fight; it is perhaps more accurate to say that he lost by TKO, after winning nearly every round but the last. -- help bot You can argue this one either way. In June of 1974, when FIDE wouldn't agree to his match conditions, Fischer wrote the letter resigning his "FIDE title." In September of 1974, Karpov won the final Candidates Match. In that sense, Kennedy's quibble is correct. However, in May- June 1975, FIDE held another meeting and agreed to _almost_ all of Fischer's conditions. They then sent Fischer a request to play, more or less ignoring the "resignation" letter. When Fischer refused to rely, Karpov was declared the winner by forfeit. Looked at that way, Evans's account is fairly accurate -- by declining to play, Fischer "gave" the title to his (known) opponent. |
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#23
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GREG IS ALWAYS GOOD FOR A LAUGH This nonsense about Bobby Fischer handing "his" title off to Anatoly Karpov is wrongheaded. -- Greg Kennedy Evans's account is fairly accurate -- by declining to play, Fischer "gave" the title to his (known) opponent." -- John Hillery As I recall, Korchnoi said he'd accept all Fischer's conditions if he became the next challenger. Fischer sent him a cable congratulating him on his defection in 1976. In September 1976 (page 506) Chess Life & Review reported: "Viktor Korchnoi, officially the world's second ranked player (having lost to Anatoly Karpov in a match that turned out to have been for the world championship title), became the latest in a growing list of intellectuals and sports figures to have left the Soviet Union permanently. Following his tie for first place (with Anthony Miles) at the 1976 IBM tournament in Amsterdam, Korchnoi failed to show up at the airport for his flight home. Instead he reported to police headquarters in Amsterdam and asked for political asylum. The Dutch government granted him a six-month permit to remain in Holland while his request is being considered.... In a statement to the press shortly after his defection, Korchnoi expressed his pleasure in knowing the predicament Soviet authorities will face when forced to report his results in the Candidates Matches next year. That is the time, he noted, when the millions of Russian chess players will learn of his defection." wrote: help bot wrote: On May 3, 1:36 pm, " wrote: Several readers said they understood "selfmate" to mean only that Fischer mated himself by handing the title to Karpov without a fight.. This nonsense about Bobby Fischer handing "his" title off to Anatoly Karpov is wrongheaded. In fact, Mr. Fischer resigned the FIDE title, and it was only later given to the winner of the final playoff match, by FIDE (not BF). Mr. Fischer's battles were with or against the FIDE assembly, not AK. And I wouldn't say that BF did not put up a fight; it is perhaps more accurate to say that he lost by TKO, after winning nearly every round but the last. -- help bot You can argue this one either way. In June of 1974, when FIDE wouldn't agree to his match conditions, Fischer wrote the letter resigning his "FIDE title." In September of 1974, Karpov won the final Candidates Match. In that sense, Kennedy's quibble is correct. However, in May- June 1975, FIDE held another meeting and agreed to _almost_ all of Fischer's conditions. They then sent Fischer a request to play, more or less ignoring the "resignation" letter. When Fischer refused to rely, Karpov was declared the winner by forfeit. Looked at that way, Evans's account is fairly accurate -- by declining to play, Fischer "gave" the title to his (known) opponent. |
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#25
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On May 4, 4:34 am, wrote:
You can argue this one either way. In June of 1974, when FIDE wouldn't agree to his match conditions, Fischer wrote the letter resigning his "FIDE title." In September of 1974, Karpov won the final Candidates Match. In that sense, Kennedy's quibble is correct. However, in May- June 1975, FIDE held another meeting and agreed to _almost_ all of Fischer's conditions. They then sent Fischer a request to play, more or less ignoring the "resignation" letter. When Fischer refused to rely, Karpov was declared the winner by forfeit. Looked at that way, Evans's account is fairly accurate -- by declining to play, Fischer "gave" the title to his (known) opponent. In 1975, Bobby Fischer was not in possession of the FIDE title, so he was in no position to do any such thing. The FIDE title, you see, is controlled by *FIDE* (go figure), and it is *they* who do the giving (or not). There is a thing called a "world championship cycle", and so you see, the old days wherein a single person gives "his" title or refuses to defend it, are over and done with. The real reason the Larry Evans account tries to involve Anatoly Karpov is self-evident; Mr. Evans has for decades been bashing AK as a supposed villain; he seems to know only the mystery- suspense-thriller genre, and no other. (IMO, this was more of a Dr. Strangelove style tragi-comedy.) -- help bot |
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#26
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help bot wrote: On May 4, 4:34 am, wrote: You can argue this one either way. In June of 1974, when FIDE wouldn't agree to his match conditions, Fischer wrote the letter resigning his "FIDE title." In September of 1974, Karpov won the final Candidates Match. In that sense, Kennedy's quibble is correct. However, in May- June 1975, FIDE held another meeting and agreed to _almost_ all of Fischer's conditions. They then sent Fischer a request to play, more or less ignoring the "resignation" letter. When Fischer refused to rely, Karpov was declared the winner by forfeit. Looked at that way, Evans's account is fairly accurate -- by declining to play, Fischer "gave" the title to his (known) opponent. In 1975, Bobby Fischer was not in possession of the FIDE title, so he was in no position to do any such thing. The FIDE title, you see, is controlled by *FIDE* (go figure), and it is *they* who do the giving (or not). There is a thing called a "world championship cycle", and so you see, the old days wherein a single person gives "his" title or refuses to defend it, are over and done with. The real reason the Larry Evans account tries to involve Anatoly Karpov is self-evident; Mr. Evans has for decades been bashing AK as a supposed villain; he seems to know only the mystery- suspense-thriller genre, and no other. (IMO, this was more of a Dr. Strangelove style tragi-comedy.) -- help bot FIDE apparently didn't think so. In June of 1975, they asked Fischer to play Karpov _as World Champion_. Fischer's refusal to play that match -- as he and everyone else knew -- had the _effect_ of making Karpov World Champion. There are plenty of reasons for criticizing Evans, but harping on this semantic quibble is just making you look silly. Well, sillier. |
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#27
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On May 5, 1:06 am, wrote:
FIDE apparently didn't think so. In June of 1975, they asked Fischer to play Karpov _as World Champion_. Losing the thread; we all agree that the winner of the previous FIDE world championship cycle was Bobby Fischer, and that if he had played, he would have been given pretty nearly anything he wanted, just as in 1972. Fischer's refusal to play that match -- as he and everyone else knew -- had the _effect_ of making Karpov World Champion. Indeed. So, what is your point? There are plenty of reasons for criticizing Evans, but harping on this semantic quibble is just making you look silly. Well, sillier. In my view, you look rather daft in that you can't get past this freaky ratpacker bias thing. It's 2008 AD, and yet some folks are akin to frozen cadavers from the Cold War era; hence the observation by Jurgen that their biases are "antiquated"; the fact is, we have moved well beyond the old biases and are now bashing Russia's Mr. Putin, Venezuela's Mr. Chavez and *China*. Life goes on, with or without the frozen cadaver mindset. Calling me "silly" is well, just plain silly; it's name-calling, and most folks will conclude -- rightly or wrongly -- that you abandoned reason in favor of /ad hominem/ because you must have not had any other choice. The organization known as FIDE controlled the FIDE title-- whether the Evans ratpackers like it or not. Nothing can change that-- not even stubbornness and denial (regardless of quantity). In much the same way, the USCF controlled Chess Lies magazine; it may be unpalatable, but it remains a fact of life. As for criticizing Larry Evans, it appears that others have beaten me to it; when the old man "had a cow" over some pedantic corrections to a couple of his gaffes, he poured gasoline on the flames, spurring Mr. Winter to do a write-up in which numerous such errors were laid out, side by side. I can not even hope to compete with such work as that, since it would require too much time and effort. Besides, I only have a few of all the issues of Chess Lies magazine, so it would be a piecemeal job. Saying that Larry Evans' account is accurate, is akin to saying that Sanny's program plays according to the rules. You can't put lipstick on a pig. -- help bot |
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#28
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[...]
Fischer sent him a cable congratulating him on his defection in 1976. And Korchnoi sent Fischer a cable congratulating him on his defection in 1992. In a statement to the press shortly after his defection, Korchnoi expressed his pleasure in knowing the predicament Soviet authorities will face when forced to report his results in the Candidates Matches next year. That is the time, he noted, when the millions of Russian chess players will learn of his defection." Nonsense. Korchnoi's defection occurred while the Interzonal in Biel was going on. I was there, playing in a side tournament, and remember hearing the news, which spread like wild fire before it ever hit the newspapers. The Russian players Smyslov, Petrosian, Tal, Geller and Gulko and the Russian crowd of seconds and functionaries heard of the defection on the day it happened. Considering how efficiently information spread by word of mouth in those days in the USSR, every Russian chess player will have known about it the day after all these people returned from Biel. |
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#29
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THE WORLD ACCORDING TO GREG Harping on this semantic quibble is just making you look silly. Well, sillier. -- John Hillery Calling me "silly" is well, just plain silly; it's name-calling... Saying that Larry Evans' account is accurate, is akin to saying that Sanny's program plays according to the rules. You can't put lipstick on a pig. -- Greg Kennedy. Greg can dish it out but he can't take it. The Indiana Kid frequently calls other people names. He called Kasparov a "cheater" (which Guy Macon refuted by quoting the pertinent rule) and falsely attributed to "Evans ratpackers" an eyewitness account by Seirawan (who played at Tilburg 1983) that Karpov induced Polugaievsky to throw an easily drawn ending to him AFTER adjournment. It was just "an ordinary mistake" claims Greg who, like Jurgen, seems to think Karpov can do no wrong. Greg's enemies list is headed by Evans, Kasparov and Keene who, according to him, can do no right. John Hillery accurately notes that FIDE asked Fischer to defend that organization's world title as the reigning champion in 1975, so FIDE itself evidently still regarded Fischer as its champion. Even FIDE's own records list him as its official titleholder from 1972-1975, but facts seldom interfere with Greg's distortion of history. Given Greg Kennedy's logic that FIDE's title is its to dispense and dispose as that organization so deems, then our Greg proves Hillery's case that Evans got it right that Fischer, in effect, defaulted the world title to Karpov. For Bobby still possessed it IF, as Greg says, the title resides with the person FIDE so deems. Greg was obviously unaware of FIDE's position. The universal experience with Greg is that history is to him terra incognita -- whether the subject under discussion is the political borders of Europe ("Bismarck who or Poland what?" as he might ask) or the number of American world chess champions. (In his innocence, Greg did not even know that Steinitz was an American world chess champion.) In the current discussion Greg did not realize that FIDE continued to recognize Bobby Fischer as its champion after he wrote his resignation letter in 1974. Greg is not just silly. He's obtuse. Yours, Larry Parr help bot wrote: On May 5, 1:06 am, wrote: FIDE apparently didn't think so. In June of 1975, they asked Fischer to play Karpov _as World Champion_. Losing the thread; we all agree that the winner of the previous FIDE world championship cycle was Bobby Fischer, and that if he had played, he would have been given pretty nearly anything he wanted, just as in 1972. Fischer's refusal to play that match -- as he and everyone else knew -- had the _effect_ of making Karpov World Champion. Indeed. So, what is your point? There are plenty of reasons for criticizing Evans, but harping on this semantic quibble is just making you look silly. Well, sillier. In my view, you look rather daft in that you can't get past this freaky ratpacker bias thing. It's 2008 AD, and yet some folks are akin to frozen cadavers from the Cold War era; hence the observation by Jurgen that their biases are "antiquated"; the fact is, we have moved well beyond the old biases and are now bashing Russia's Mr. Putin, Venezuela's Mr. Chavez and *China*. Life goes on, with or without the frozen cadaver mindset. Calling me "silly" is well, just plain silly; it's name-calling, and most folks will conclude -- rightly or wrongly -- that you abandoned reason in favor of /ad hominem/ because you must have not had any other choice. The organization known as FIDE controlled the FIDE title-- whether the Evans ratpackers like it or not. Nothing can change that-- not even stubbornness and denial (regardless of quantity). In much the same way, the USCF controlled Chess Lies magazine; it may be unpalatable, but it remains a fact of life. As for criticizing Larry Evans, it appears that others have beaten me to it; when the old man "had a cow" over some pedantic corrections to a couple of his gaffes, he poured gasoline on the flames, spurring Mr. Winter to do a write-up in which numerous such errors were laid out, side by side. I can not even hope to compete with such work as that, since it would require too much time and effort. Besides, I only have a few of all the issues of Chess Lies magazine, so it would be a piecemeal job. Saying that Larry Evans' account is accurate, is akin to saying that Sanny's program plays according to the rules. You can't put lipstick on a pig. -- help bot |
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#30
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wrote in message ... FIDE apparently didn't think so. In June of 1975, they asked Fischer to play Karpov _as World Champion_. Fischer's refusal to play that match -- as he and everyone else knew -- had the _effect_ of making Karpov World Champion. There are plenty of reasons for criticizing Evans, but harping on this semantic quibble is just making you look silly. Well, sillier. In 1991 we saw a new Karpov. Some clouds had lifted from the scene, and there he was in his own words talking not very differently on things that Western journalists, including Evans, had mentioned. Perhaps he is the first W Ch to spontaneously admit that he did things wrong as champion - stuff he was not proud of. But the effect of other players on Karpov, who can be said to have an artistic temperament to chess, was that he said he could never really get excited [artistically] at the prospect of playing Kasparov - but Korchnoi provided him a huge stimulus - and he quantified that, by saying something like 85% of his creative energies. He then continued on this theme, in Karpov on Karpov, to state that Fischer would have been his greatest challenge, in the 90th percentiles. That is an artistic tribute and a sincere one to Fischer-the-player. Sure enough, after following Fischer round the world, the fateful moment came when Fischer actually held the pen to sign the match agreement, but fatally added one more issue to the array, that the title be called the professional world chess championship. Apparently all else had been agreed between the players - but Karpov said right then that they were never going to buy that back in Moscow, and he knew the effort was doomed. Why the Moscow/Fide would have baulked at adding one word to the title is perhaps explained by the 40 years of pretence that Soviet GMs were not state-supported professionals. Indeed, consciously admitted or not, I think Fischer knew his condition would be the deal-breaker, and by then he was sick of talking chess with anyone, East or West. Far better if Fischer-the-player had continued to believe in pawns rather than suffer the fate of the [self] abandoned celebrity. Phil Innes |
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