4/6/2013 – That's what Rocky's trainer says about the seemingly invincible Russian challenger Ivan Drago. And when wife Adrian says: “It’s suicide – you've seen him, you know how strong he is, you can't win,” Rocky replies “The only thing I can do is just take everything he's got. But to beat me, he's going to have to kill me." What does all this have to do with chess? GM Jonathan Rowson explains.
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From March 14 to April 1, 2013, FIDE and AGON – the World Chess Federation’s
commercial partner – staged the 2013 Candidates Tournament for the World
Chess Championship 2013. It was the strongest tournament of its kind in history.
The venue was The IET, 2 Savoy Place,
London. The Prize Fund, shared by the players, totalled €510,000. The winner
of the Candidates is the Challenger to Viswanathan Anand who has reigned as
World Champion since 2007. The main sponsor for the Candidates was State Oil
Company of the Azerbaijan Republic SOCAR.
World Championship match Anand vs Carlsen
Column by GM Jonathan Rowson
There’s a turning point in the film Rocky IV when World Champion Rocky
fights back against the seemingly invincible Russian challenger, Ivan Drago.
After an implausibly generous series of reciprocal blows to the head, the panting
cold war pugilists reach their respective corners, where Rocky’s manager
highlights some indisputable facts: “Now he’s worried. You cut him,
you hurt him. You see. He’s not a machine, he’s a man.”
We recently discovered that the seemingly invulnerable world number one, Magnus
Carlsen, is also human. He just earned the right to play Viswanathan Anand in
a World Championship Match in November by winning the Candidates tournament
in London on tiebreak, but only after two uncharacteristic losses near then
end and a pinch of good fortune.
Magnus is clearly the best tournament player in the world, and he appears to
be younger, fitter and hungrier for the title than Vishy. However, because he
is human, he cannot always perform at his best, and his lack of match experience
is significant because it will add to the kind of fatigue and pressure that
made him appear merely human in London.
In fact, it occurs to me that the 20 or so years and 80 or so rating points
that separate Magnus from Vishy are not that different from the differences
in age, height and muscle definition that separated Drago from Rocky. Now I
know it’s Hollywood, but I like the fact that Rocky’s victory began
with his early resolve not to accept the prevailing narrative that he was doomed.
When Rocky’s wife Adrian says: “It’s suicide. You've seen
him, you know how strong he is. You can't win.”
Rocky replies: “No, maybe I can't win. Maybe the only thing I can do
is just take everything he's got. But to beat me, he's going to have to kill
me. And to kill me, he's gonna have to have the heart to stand in front of me.
And to do that, he's got to be willing to die himself. I don't know if he's
ready to do that. I don't know.”
In a recent interview for India Express Vishy expressed the same powerful sentiment
without the hyperbole: “Carlsen will be ridiculously difficult to play
against... I'm fully aware of the magnitude of the task facing me, and Magnus'
rank and rating speak for themselves. Having said that I don't feel any obligation
to follow the predictions. That's what we are playing the match for. To have
a chance to write our own script.”
Heartening stuff, but of course Magnus is a little more astute than Drago,
and his plan for the match is both chillingly simple and entirely credible:
“I intend to make lots of good moves.”
Vishy has no unsuspected right hook with accompanying sountrack to help him
retain his title, so in addition to the usual grind of opening preparation I
suggest two things: start now to play training games against computers who ‘just
keep going’, even if that means enduring painful losses for a few months
– Magnus will seem easy by comparison. He should also hire an outstanding
physical trainer to become, at 43, fitter than he has ever been before. He not
only has to learn to ‘keep going’, but to enjoy it as much as Magnus
does.
In the final round Magnus, tired, nervous and in time trouble, showed his human
side by succumbing to a vicious counter-attack. He won the event nonetheless
because his main challenger, Kramnik, also lost, so the chess world has the
match it wanted.
Grandmaster Jonathan Rowson is Scotland's strongest player.
He won the British Championship in three consecutive years (2004-2006) before
developing a career outside of chess. He holds degrees in a range of social
science disciplines from Harvard, Bristol and Oxford Universities and is currently
Director of the Social
Brain Centre at the RSA in London. He is best known in the chess world for
his books The
Seven Deadly Chess Sins and Chess
for Zebras and the 50 review columns he wrote for New
in Chess magazine. He is currently preparing a compilation of his weekly
columns for The Herald, Scotland's
national paper, which he has been writing since 2006. He lives in London with
his wife Siva, from India, and their three-year-old son, Kailash. He can be
followed on Twitter at @jonathan_rowson.
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