9/19/2013 – The Russian Internet TV channel Chess TV has recorded two interview for the upcoming World Championship match. We start with the challenger, Norwegian GM Magnus Carlsen, who speaks very frankly about his talents, his weaknesses, preparation and chances – and also reveals to the interviewer which animal he would (definitely) like to be if he were not a human. Like to guess?
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Interview with Carlsen prior to his match with Anand, 2013
Uploaded on 18 September 2013. Interview with the highest rated chess
player in the world, challenger for the world championship Magnus Carlsen
from Norway, taken after 8th Tal Memorial in Moscow. Most of the questions
regard his upcoming (November 2013) match with World Champion Vishy Anand.
The interview is conducted in a modern format, with the questions not spoken
by the interviewer but shown as text during the entire answer. In our screen
grabs below you can read them in the yellow banners.
I give lots of interviews, and I think often the answers are not that similar,
since what I answer depends a lot on my mood on that day and whatever thoughts
pop into my head. Sometimes there will be some interesting questions asked,
and sometimes not. And then I have people who do repair work, to make it
more consistent.
I think it’s going to be indeed something special, something unusual,
for me and hopefully for the chess world as well. But at the same time it
is important to remember that the game is still the same, and as for preparation
and everything I don’t think I should change too much, because evidently
something seems to be working, most of the time.
I guess my choices often depend on my mood. I try to be emotionally a little
distant from what I do, but at the same time fight hard and really care
about results and so on. But it’s not always that easy.
At the time it was definitely true that I didn't particularly want to be
a part of the Championship cycle. This time in the Candidates I really wanted
to play and really wanted to win. So it was a little bit different. I think
that the World Championship is not that different from other tournaments,
apart for the fact that people spend more time preparing for it. Still I
believe that to some extent the achievement of winning more or less every
tournament is a greater one than being world champion.
Probably to some extent. But at the same time it is also important to focus
on myself. I cannot change the way I play completely because of my opponent.
It's better to try and force him to adapt to my style rather than to adapt
to his – if that makes sense.
There are different approaches. As you see in [the Tal Memorial] when I
beat both Kramnik and Anand the approach was to play something unexpected
that I haven't really played before, not necessarily to get a big advantage
but to get some playable positions. And in both games I succeeded in getting
positions that were playable – against Anand even slightly better
– and definitely not comfortable for my opponent. I think that Anand
and others are so strong in the opening that it might not make sense for
me with my skillset to try and beat him in the opening. I will certainly
prepare some surprises and try to outfox him in a way, but I don't think
it is very realistic that I can try to beat him in the opening. That's not
where my strength is.
I think after [the Tal Memorial] I'll have a little bit of rest, enjoy
the summer, and then there will be a longer training session, before the
World Cup, and then perhaps another training session later on. As for normal
training day, it depends. When I am not at a training session I may not
do any chess, apart from playing through some important games and also just
thinking about it in my head. In general I think it is important not to
overfocus on the match and to keep some kind of balance. That was also important
before the Candidates tournament, to have a good training session with some
qualified people, but also to maintain a balance – to still have some
fun and be relaxed.
I've played some good tournaments and some bad tournaments, but somehow
even in tournaments where I don't play very well I still manage to get a
more-or-less respectable score. I don't know if it has something to do with
youth or other non-chess related reasons. I'll definitely prepare for the
Vishy of 2008 when he beat Kramnik convincingly. I don't expect him to be
in poor shape, like he was [at the Tal Memorial]. It just doesn't make any
sense to me to prepare for that. I think he will be in excellent shape and
it will be an interesting match. I might stumble of course at any time,
but I hope that I will be in good shape, sharper in every sense –
in the opening, in the middlegame, in the endgame, sensing the important
moments. I don't see any reason why I should not be in top shape in November.
I don't think it is going to be a decisive factor. I do not have any match
experience, true, or very little, but at the same time I've already played
in top tournaments for six-seven years now, and I think that should amount
to some useful experience. And I've played Vishy so many times as well.
You can see, for instance, that when Karpov and Kasparov played their first
World Championship match they had actually basically not met in tournaments
at all, so maybe that is part of the reason for the difficult transition
for Kasparov. I have played Vishy in almost every tournament I've played
since I was sixteen-seventeen years old, so we certainly already know each
other quite well.
I think it is easy to forget your own analysis, especially if it is done
with a computer and it doesn't make perfect sense to you, and you are just
memorizing it. I think my memory was very good when I was little, and now
over age it's grown a little worse, as the brain grows and there is more
information. I was intrigued to find that there was some research published
which confirmed this more or less, the feeling I had that when your brain
grows your memory worsens.
I think I am not learning too much anymore – in chess I am still
learning obviously. There are so many way I can improve, I make mistakes
in every game I play. Hopefully I can continue to improve, and I think I'll
need to do that to stay on top. Obviously I love winning, but I am just
motivated by having fun playing chess, and also learning new things. In
general I don't think I will ever lose motivation for chess, until I feel
that I've stagnated, that I'm not learning. I think the game is so rich
that the possibilities will never be exhausted, at any time soon anyway.
Er... a crocodile. It seems to have a good life. A crocodile just lies
there and relaxes, and it can more or less kill any other animal. Crocodile
without a doubt.
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