April 9, 1972: Chess champ Bobby Fischer on 60 Minutes

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  • Опубліковано 24 лис 2024

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  • @vajee5
    @vajee5 2 роки тому +276

    Bobby had everything.
    Good looks, super intelligence, talent, confidence.
    A loner who found his own way.
    Didn’t need anyone.
    I so admire him.

    • @jackcarpenters3759
      @jackcarpenters3759 Рік тому +19

      sigma male

    • @ponglerman
      @ponglerman Рік тому +13

      he gave everything to chess and it shows. GOAT

    • @benjastuff1347
      @benjastuff1347 11 місяців тому +10

      yes, but it seems as though he had everything except what he truly longed for; real love, i think that is partly what drove him insane.

    • @koko40800
      @koko40800 8 місяців тому +11

      @@zer0h0urs000 And I find your stock psychoanalysis oversimplistic, as stock psychoanalysis tends to be....I've read several biographies of Fischer....he wasn't so much 'abandoned' by his mother, as much as he pushed her away...they were both fiercely independent, headstrong geniuses with their own ambitions, in a tiny NYC apartment....someone had to go....Fischer asked her to leave (or demanded she leave), and it was best for both of them...Bobby got the place to himself, and Regina went on to pursue her medical studies abroad

    • @vajee5
      @vajee5 7 місяців тому +4

      @@mr.k.3856 but it wasn’t intentional psychological warfare.
      Bobby was on the spectrum for autism.
      He truly felt and believed those suspicions he had.

  • @rickintexas1584
    @rickintexas1584 4 роки тому +274

    This is the time I have seen this interview. The one thing that sticks out more than anything is that he had no coach or trainer. He did it alone. That is simply amazing.

    • @rickintexas1584
      @rickintexas1584 4 роки тому +2

      @@Jj-gi2uv - awesome! I wasn't aware of that. Thanks! It is impressive that someone can do so much by themselves.

    • @OlJackBurton
      @OlJackBurton 3 роки тому +12

      @@rickintexas1584 But Bobby didn't even have personal support (parent, friend, etc.)...

    • @High_Priest_Jonko
      @High_Priest_Jonko Рік тому +3

      Bobby did have teachers when he was young but he outgrew them and put in the bulk of the work himself

  • @drumcircler
    @drumcircler 6 років тому +2363

    Bobby beat me and 19 other players in a simultaneous exhibition a few months prior to his demolition of Spassky in the World Championship. He polished off all 20 of us in 42 minutes. It was a great honor to play him, he was a stone cold genius.

    • @brainsterind
      @brainsterind 6 років тому +81

      Old Uncle Bob pretty cool story!!

    • @edwardshowden5511
      @edwardshowden5511 6 років тому +129

      And bobby probably wasnt complaining about your level as garry kasparov who was furious when hed found out that one of the players was 2000-2200 :D garry wanted to play only amateurs on exhibition match so he could crush them all in 5 minutes and be perceived as a genius :D
      of course garry was a fantastic player, but his ego is huge

    • @Jonathan-gh6dn
      @Jonathan-gh6dn 6 років тому +167

      Kasparov had a right to be angry in that situation since he had asked what the rankings were of all the players attending and they didn't mention the 2000 elo player so he wasn't putting the due amount of concentration he would've put if he had known the elo of the guy. I'm pretty sure any pro would've been angry about being misled that way especially if they had asked ahead of time

    • @hkhjg1734
      @hkhjg1734 6 років тому +11

      can you post your game somewhere, id love to go over it

    • @edwardshowden5511
      @edwardshowden5511 6 років тому +13

      My game? My games arent interesting, im an average player
      Do you have chesscom account? If you do, write your login so i can send you a challenge

  • @mensaswede4028
    @mensaswede4028 5 років тому +960

    What makes him spectacular among other chess geniuses in history, was that he reached the top of the world virtually by himself.

    • @fundhund62
      @fundhund62 4 роки тому +20

      So Tal or Spassky were unlucky to be born in the USSR? That´s a pretty weird take.
      Had Fischer been a soviet citizen, he would still have been an amazing player, regardless of him having the support of the state.
      I mean, he read all their books and articles, anyway..

    • @smalltrashman4227
      @smalltrashman4227 4 роки тому +3

      @@fundhund62 Doubt it.

    • @hyzercreek
      @hyzercreek 4 роки тому +76

      @@fundhund62 Totally illogical, argument. Mensa Swede said it was remarkable that he did it by himself and you argue that he would have been just as good if he had help? What sort of stupid logic is that?

    • @natebacon6205
      @natebacon6205 4 роки тому +10

      Morphy

    • @radicalbradical3164
      @radicalbradical3164 4 роки тому +10

      @@hyzercreek huh? if anything the help would've made him a better player.

  • @cursive187
    @cursive187 4 роки тому +701

    I have a lot in common with Bobby, except the child prodigy and genius part.

  • @joesmith8270
    @joesmith8270 5 років тому +742

    He is not arrogant. He is just supremely confident in his ability. He knows he is the best, and he proved it a few months later.

    • @Smaug1
      @Smaug1 5 років тому +18

      What about where he says he likes to crush a man's ego? That's kind of warped. Reminds me of a kid who likes to pull the legs off of spiders, just to watch what happens afterwards.

    • @mikef2813
      @mikef2813 4 роки тому +9

      Jeremy D boxers have done it for years. Crush the ego for the future. You might have to play or box them again.

    • @EarthSurferUSA
      @EarthSurferUSA 4 роки тому +37

      I don't care if he was arrogant. I love to see individual human greatness. A person who achieves greatness can have any damn personality he/she wants in my book.
      I call it, "The Flavor of Greatness". :)

    • @davidmartin7163
      @davidmartin7163 4 роки тому +11

      Playfer true, a person can be arrogant and supremely confident at the same time. In fact I would usually the best in the world are both. That’s why they are the best. You usually don’t hear the best person in the world at their particular sport or event say “well I am okay at (whatever sport). To be the best in the world and then be humble about it is really a lie. They are the best lol

    • @pookz3067
      @pookz3067 4 роки тому +3

      That’s called arrogance lol

  • @henryseidel5469
    @henryseidel5469 2 роки тому +39

    "I am still under the shock of this loss for the world of chess. In my view 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)

  • @AdamantSeraph
    @AdamantSeraph 5 років тому +700

    Bobby Fischer - the miracle of individualism and the tragedy of its loneliness

    • @Vjl5280
      @Vjl5280 4 роки тому +27

      What’s tragic? That he doesn’t dance to the music of the masses? What’s more insane? That we are the most amazing beings that have the ability to be whoever we want and choose to be like everyone else? He was just Bobby. Period

    • @Madvideoclips
      @Madvideoclips 4 роки тому +37

      That’s actually really profound

    • @lewisticknor
      @lewisticknor 4 роки тому +3

      @@Vjl5280 Right On

    • @AdamantSeraph
      @AdamantSeraph 4 роки тому +4

      @@Vjl5280 actually you said the same thing. Except admiting his life was cursed with a terrible loneliness

    • @RipperBravo
      @RipperBravo 4 роки тому +3

      Love the way you put that.

  • @daniellos333
    @daniellos333 4 роки тому +668

    It's so upsetting that Nicholas Cage in his prime never got a role as Bobby Fischer

    • @deegiambattista35
      @deegiambattista35 4 роки тому +32

      Hah I'd never noticed that before but you're right!

    • @gnamp
      @gnamp 4 роки тому +12

      or James Woods. Or Peter Weller.

    • @onelove154
      @onelove154 4 роки тому +13

      Christopher Eccleston is a great actor and looks a lot more like Fischer than any other actor, but alas he's too old now. He's the same age as Nick Cage.

    • @sas6561
      @sas6561 4 роки тому

      @@gnamp ... Fischer was a much better chess player than Woods, but was not nearly as well hung!

    • @gnamp
      @gnamp 4 роки тому

      @@sas6561 There's always a machine that can do it better.

  • @kajaskov6270
    @kajaskov6270 4 роки тому +215

    What I love the most about Bobby is his total lack of false humility!!!

    • @nonel4515
      @nonel4515 3 роки тому +8

      Exactly - not "arrogant" except about what he is good at.

    • @WondrousMindTrick
      @WondrousMindTrick 2 роки тому +11

      Would love to see one of today's players have this type of personality instead of all the virtue signallers out there. I don't see today's social climate making that happen though. Maybe we see a backlash one day.

  • @jamie49868
    @jamie49868 5 років тому +617

    When you understand what Fischer was up against, nothing less than the entire Soviet Chess apparatus that included WC's Smyslov, Tal, Petrosian, future WC Karpov, along with every GM they could muster, it almost incomprehensible that Fischer went in alone, and destroyed them. Just an amazing story!

    • @richaragonzales1355
      @richaragonzales1355 4 роки тому +27

      He clearly didn't make it out of this unscathed

    • @200_cuentos
      @200_cuentos 4 роки тому +2

      So true.

    • @davidmartin7163
      @davidmartin7163 4 роки тому +41

      Yes and to do it at the peak of the Cold War the symbology is amazing. Socialist machine against an individual, and the individual won! That is what I love about the US, it’s emphasis on the individual and not the collective. When you cater to one group or another it’s counterintuitively bad for the entire group.

    • @thenarrator1921
      @thenarrator1921 4 роки тому +26

      @@davidmartin7163 "that is what I love about US" sounds awfully un-individualistic I'd say, given how much you've praised individualism there's an ironic patriotism and groupthink there.
      In all seriousness the games were less about politics and national identities, none were too black-and-white, and none too symbolistic unless you see what you want to see. Fischer went in there for the chess and *statistically*, he's an awful representation of USA, or any one group for that matter. Taking a nationalist pride for something a man did then got betrayed by the same damn country he was championing aren't so great things either

    • @smalltrashman4227
      @smalltrashman4227 4 роки тому +3

      @@thenarrator1921 That isn't true at all. That is to assume that every entity of multiple organisms is actually an amorphous conglomerate of their parts.

  • @TomBarrister
    @TomBarrister 4 роки тому +214

    They cut out the end of the interview, where Wallace wishes Fischer well, saying: "I hope you win (the match against Spassky)." Fischer replied, matter-of-factly: "I will." There was never a question in his mind about it.

    • @mateiacd
      @mateiacd 4 роки тому

      Can you provide a web link to some article or video in support of your statement?

    • @ChrisHyde537
      @ChrisHyde537 4 роки тому +3

      @@mateiacd There’s another version of this interview although I don’t know how to conjure it at the moment. I think that I’ve seen all of English language interviews of Fischer which have been published. Unfortunately, the longest interviews were the ones from his waning years after he went around the bend.

    • @ophiolatreia93
      @ophiolatreia93 4 роки тому +1

      He blundered the first game

    • @True_Christian
      @True_Christian 3 роки тому +2

      @@ophiolatreia93 But that's because the organizers put him in a room with distracting conditions, which wasn't his fault. No one can play chess properly under those circumstances. Might as well just flip a coin instead to see who is the winner.

    • @ophiolatreia93
      @ophiolatreia93 3 роки тому

      @@True_Christian hardly... He's a professional... Was autistic tho. Love bobby tho the Hendrix or johnny rotten of chess

  • @justinpinard6434
    @justinpinard6434 6 років тому +1181

    "Champion of the world? I didn't even compete, he's not much of a champion of the world." what an absolute legend lmao

    • @petemayes1940
      @petemayes1940 6 років тому +15

      Justin Penis

    • @velvetshy1300
      @velvetshy1300 6 років тому +2

      @@petemayes1940 Hahaha.....

    • @Jacob-sb3su
      @Jacob-sb3su 5 років тому +13

      @@davynnbalinski8102 hes the greatest chess player to ever live.
      So theres that

    • @nelsonx5326
      @nelsonx5326 5 років тому +38

      Justin
      Shortly after this 60 minutes story aired, Bobby Fisher was the champion of the world. He's the legend.

    • @edwin884
      @edwin884 5 років тому

      @@davynnbalinski8102 hello mrs.horseface

  • @jakemaye95
    @jakemaye95 4 роки тому +65

    "I used to say I was the best player in the world, and everyone said 'he's an arrogant, terrible, conceited person.' but it's just an obvious fact." incredible

  • @OzzyCat16
    @OzzyCat16 4 роки тому +268

    Fischer was a different kind of cat. Enjoyed his solitude, didn't seem to pay much mind to what people thought of him. Absolute legend in the chess world and I'm glad everyone can appreciate his greatness.

    • @sayantanmitrabliss
      @sayantanmitrabliss 4 роки тому +3

      Didn’t he care about what Russians were writing or saying about him?

    • @Wenshihan
      @Wenshihan 4 роки тому +9

      @@sayantanmitrabliss I think what he wanted to say is fisher perceives things on his own way

  • @Krishnashares
    @Krishnashares 3 роки тому +82

    "He is the best they have got. Big deal". Fischer's confidence is at another level

  • @elizabethjones2084
    @elizabethjones2084 3 роки тому +85

    He's perfectly fine. Their complaint is that they can't understand him but he doesn't exist for them to understand. What a hit piece to this man's personality for no reason.

    • @saxenas
      @saxenas 3 роки тому +7

      Agreed. I didn't see anything wrong w/ the man's personality he was just into his thing and didn't care about following the jones. Media just tries to sensationalize things. He seemed like a leader not a follower, what's wrong w/ that...

    • @amarforest
      @amarforest 2 роки тому +3

      perfectly said

    • @JimmyDaGent796
      @JimmyDaGent796 2 роки тому

      Women wouldn't understand the first thing about bobby fischer, let alone chess. Stick to makeup.

    • @zah936
      @zah936 2 роки тому +11

      @@JimmyDaGent796 clown

    • @andremaster1752
      @andremaster1752 Рік тому

      He wasn't perfectly fine. He was abandoned by his parents as a child. He needed mental help.

  • @pronemanoldbutyoung5548
    @pronemanoldbutyoung5548 4 роки тому +135

    That Bobby had no second, no coach, makes him even a greater WC in chess

    • @stevedavis8329
      @stevedavis8329 Місяць тому +1

      not entirely true. william lombardy and anthony saidy were both basically seconds to him.

  • @Baz87100
    @Baz87100 4 роки тому +134

    You simply have to admire his honesty in every sense. That is all.

  • @mizuhonova
    @mizuhonova 3 роки тому +73

    Wow, I never knew he didn't have a coach or trainer. Dude was really alone in the world and shouldered everything himself. He was so amazing at what he did but at the cost of almost everything one would say makes a human human.

  • @martinhyizna3299
    @martinhyizna3299 6 років тому +37

    His brilliance emanates from him, it can still be felt today

  • @bkb04g
    @bkb04g 4 роки тому +29

    I love his creation, Fischer Random, and feel it truly isolates talent...

  • @richwarega2584
    @richwarega2584 4 роки тому +39

    Took on and embarrassed the Soviets ( taimanov, Larsen) all by himself,, its often underestimated how much work he put into chess,,even learning Russian just to read the Soviet chess magazines.. as far as me and any other true chess fan out there are concerned,he was a pure genius and legend of the game..RIP Bobby, you're legend will never be forgotten

    • @jaironunez7196
      @jaironunez7196 4 роки тому +5

      Larsen was from Denmark... but you forgot to mention another Soviet he defeated in the final match that decided Spassky's challenger: Tigran Petrosian.

  • @mitchelll3879
    @mitchelll3879 3 роки тому +20

    I know Kasparov held the title for 20 years, Karpov was great, Carlsen higher rating..but I think if u look at his ratings and his closest competitors and the way he absolutely demolished the absolute best players in the world, with the backdrop of the Cold War and the fact he did without any help or coaches or advisers and computers to save and study every game and position at ur fingertips, I think unquestionably he is the greatest player ever

    • @GH-oi2jf
      @GH-oi2jf Рік тому +1

      It is questionable, because he refused to prove it. Had he beaten Karpov, then Kasparov, then Kasparov again, you might have a case. Why was Bill Russell the greatest champion in any sport? Because he proved he was a champion again and again.

    • @gregoriopalofuego9808
      @gregoriopalofuego9808 Рік тому

      Mitch~
      My thoughts exactly. I've posted my reasons to point out, without any hesitation- Bobby was the most brilliant, creative, dedicated chess player this planet will ever have.

    • @ricardosilaban
      @ricardosilaban 3 місяці тому

      But he is jewish 😊

  • @xavlionheart
    @xavlionheart 6 років тому +512

    Sounds like a badass not gonna lie

    • @JimKalpa-qd9zr
      @JimKalpa-qd9zr 4 роки тому

      Mehdi X did you notice the look on Fischer's face and the kids . hunter and prey.

    • @Kaddywompous
      @Kaddywompous 4 роки тому +6

      It’s the Brooklyn.

    • @smalltrashman4227
      @smalltrashman4227 4 роки тому

      @@JimKalpa-qd9zr What is wrong with you?

    • @Vivi-cu7ez
      @Vivi-cu7ez 3 роки тому +1

      An authentic one

    • @mavfan1
      @mavfan1 3 роки тому

      do you usually lie?

  • @sybo10
    @sybo10 3 роки тому +12

    I turned 9 years old when this aired and remember watching this, youtube is awesome

  • @bobluhrs
    @bobluhrs 6 років тому +36

    Good glimpse of a very busy man determined to do the best work he can in a very difficult, demanding field that takes everything he's got. He answers questions politely enough, but knows they are all tangents to what he's doing.

  • @swansonz3534
    @swansonz3534 3 роки тому +31

    They did the whole birthday thing to see how bobby reacted with the cameras on. They knew this is something Bobby wouldn't like. All for a reaction and act like they are a friend while doing it. Scoundrels.

    • @firebir11
      @firebir11 3 роки тому +7

      I agree, a setup to display “lack of family”...Bobby saw right through it.

  • @Welderborea
    @Welderborea Рік тому +11

    Never let anyone tell you this man was crazy, he was truly one of the brightest minds of the modern world.

    • @MetaMan09
      @MetaMan09 Рік тому +4

      Yes he was 💯

    • @gregoriopalofuego9808
      @gregoriopalofuego9808 Рік тому +2

      Welder~
      I put Bobby Fischer equal to Einstein and Tesla.
      They had an ability to see things that normal humans just couldn't comprehend.
      E=mc2. Alternating current. Being the best chess player in the history of the world.
      I wish I were the best at something.
      Maybe in my next life. We'll see...

    • @meshzzizk
      @meshzzizk 4 місяці тому

      he was extremely good at a board game. other than that his thinking was cringe-inducingly disordered and he was a deeply miserable, unstable person.

  • @brotherabdullah
    @brotherabdullah 6 років тому +480

    He was a very complex character - just look at how he responded to the t.v. crew bringing him a birthday cake on his 29th birthday - "i've been worrying about this..." I feel sorry for him because he was a real genius but unfortunately didn't have a happy life.

    • @sunnyshores7520
      @sunnyshores7520 6 років тому +45

      He hated his parents and was embarrassed to be part Jewish.

    • @StephenDoty84
      @StephenDoty84 6 років тому +62

      He may have been on the autism spectrum and tone-deaf to manners and empathy. The people who got the cake and sang for him were embarrassed by his reaction, I imagine, but he didn't care.
      Imagine if they brought out a huge cake and a stripper jumped out.
      Bobby: "Now this is what I'm talking about! Twerk that moneymaker, baby! Yeah!"

    • @katpottz
      @katpottz 6 років тому +32

      I think Bobby didn't want the cake because of his skin, when you have acne at that age you do everything you can to try to stop it, i can speak to that personally.

    • @StephenDoty84
      @StephenDoty84 6 років тому +9

      Good point. You are a sensitive soul. Cutting out sugar, dairy, and fried foods is often step one when you have that. I myself have never had a pimple, but I understand it can be a terrible thing.

    • @jd.elie1
      @jd.elie1 6 років тому +54

      I agree. They call Magnus the Mozart of chess, but when you examine Mozart‘s life it seems more fitting, at least in my opinion, that Fischer was really a Mozart of chess...

  • @anthonyc9131
    @anthonyc9131 6 років тому +327

    G.O.A.T. what else needs to be said

    • @edwardshowden5511
      @edwardshowden5511 6 років тому +1

      He wasnt the greatest according to elo ratings, centipawn loss per game and % of best engine moves. Some people say "inflation", but this is not true. Some studies were conducted on this topic and authors concluded there was no such thing, it was rather deflation. A comment from the authors - 'This shows a steady progression in IPR [intrinsic performance rating] throughout chess history, mirroring the improvement of sporting records in other fields and ascribable to better human health overall, and greater wealth allowing there to be more enthusiasts. This argues against ratings having inflated relative to skill.'

    • @vivek3631
      @vivek3631 6 років тому +1

      piotr monn please tell me what do u mean by that?

    • @cavaleer
      @cavaleer 6 років тому +1

      EXACTLY. Just like Jordan and Hendrix...haha. Love the Ego and fierce Independence. Quintessential American/New Yorker.

    • @seanf5634
      @seanf5634 6 років тому +20

      This may be true, but you have to remember today's Grandmasters can check their games against computers to see how to improve (improving ELO). In a sense, your coach is the greatest chess player (computer) and any strategy can be played out through a computer. If Fischer, Spassky, TAL, Morphy had today's machines to play against and improve, I would say, only then could we know who was the greatest of all time.

    • @SenorQuichotte
      @SenorQuichotte 6 років тому +10

      Other players take on individuals, Fischer took on a tyrannical communist soviet chess machine. Fischer raged against the machine and beat it. Quixotic. GOAT

  • @reasonableconservative4497
    @reasonableconservative4497 4 роки тому +32

    I don't care if he did go nuts in his later years, I love this guy and his entire outlook on the situation. ONE GUY went up against the entire USSR, and kicked 'em in their teeth! Love this guy!

    • @barranquillarespondetv2512
      @barranquillarespondetv2512 4 роки тому

      Yes he's the ultimate example of the individual. Don't care his nut thoughts that was after he became world champion.

    • @innosanto
      @innosanto 2 роки тому

      @@barranquillarespondetv2512 effectively I think he wasn't interested in chess and his mind which wanted to solve problems was creating problems so to solve them. Otherwise a such trained mind would be bored.
      Some focus or direction would lead the mind to create good results.

    • @mircopaul5259
      @mircopaul5259 4 місяці тому +1

      He didn't go nuts, he saw right through the matrix and was honest about it

  • @Wtahc
    @Wtahc 5 років тому +14

    HOW am I only seeing this now. Shame on YT and the media for burying everything about Bobby.

  • @juliendunand6409
    @juliendunand6409 6 років тому +181

    Taking into account the fact that he was training alone, had no seconds, and crushed the whole Russian Chess system on his own makes him by far the greatest in history. Some experts say Carlsen and Kasparov are better than him but I completely disagree. Yes chess has changed since the 70's but if Fischer was playing today he would adapt to modern theory and still beat everyone. He was a genius at chess, and absolutely nothing else. Probably the greatest example of auto-destruction and waste. If he had been well adjusted then the sky would have been the limit. He could have become President. Unfortunately there was no way back from the madness.

    • @cpad007
      @cpad007 6 років тому +29

      I think you find a lot of people in the world who are especially great or excel at something always tend to be off in some form. But I think had Bobby been more "normal", he wouldn't have been so great at chess. Like you said, "He was a genius at chess, and absolutely nothing else."

    • @FacesOfFalastine
      @FacesOfFalastine 6 років тому +8

      Why don't you tell the truth? He was in Armstrong's cult which was a doomsday cult. He was threatened with prophecy of Nazis going to invade. In 1972, nothing happened, and like many -- he began researching and became skeptical of Armstrong. Haven't you even read his own testimony? "Bobby Fischer Speaks Out!" in the Ambassador Report? 1977.
      No, you haven't. Nobody cares to know the truth about what REALLY happened to him and prefer their fiction over fact.
      William Lombardy gives confirmation on the mythology fed to chess enthusiasts like yourself.
      I was in the cult. I was there. The same things happened to me, and I have newspaper articles to prove that.
      People can find the true story by Googling "Vindication-of-bobby-fischer" . co and they will find not only the true story but the large newspaper article archive (1955-2008) I am building to honor his legacy and set his history straight with the fake news stories being churned out and circulated today.
      I am tired of people ignoring what Bobby Fischer said himself and opting for silly stories from people who weren't even there.

    • @FacesOfFalastine
      @FacesOfFalastine 6 років тому +3

      Auto destruction -- bah!
      People can CTRL + C : "Justice's pursuit of Bobby Fischer is embarrassing" 1993 ... and read the article by Syndicated Columnist Leonard Larsen. There they will get the true story about how the United States federal government ignored financial barracudas committing white collar crimes under their nose, but chose to go after Bobby Fischer for a non-existent crime.
      I have a lot of newspaper articles archived from 1955-2008... A LOT of history to refute the myths circulating around the life of my church brother.

    • @dangerspouse4741
      @dangerspouse4741 6 років тому +4

      I always go back and forth. Fischer....Tal....Fischer....Tal......

    • @MagnusJohanssonSWE
      @MagnusJohanssonSWE 5 років тому +1

      Julien Dunand -- What madness?

  • @joemamaurmama
    @joemamaurmama 5 років тому +10

    My Dad taught me the moves in 1972. Probably because he saw this. Have been playing, quite well, since then. Thanks for sharing this.

  • @jessiejames7492
    @jessiejames7492 6 років тому +94

    If he was a champ nowadays he would be earning trillions. Hes got everything to be a megastar. Talent, uniqueness, cockiness, intelligence and a mind of his own. Good looks too.

    • @StephenDoty84
      @StephenDoty84 6 років тому +16

      No one wasted more of a chance at stardom than he did. He gave a third of his winnings to a corrupt church, then hid from those who wanted to pay him to sponsor things, eventually losing his possessions in a storage locker foreclosure for unpaid rent, as he had delegated that one task. He blew it big time. Then he blamed the Jews for his lost fortune and cheered when 911 happened.

    • @brianmccullough2420
      @brianmccullough2420 6 років тому +7

      doesn't have any social skills in my opinion unfortunately. I think he was an incredible genius and hard worker, but unfortunately had a hard life.

    • @croakingfrog3173
      @croakingfrog3173 5 років тому +3

      "trillions"

    • @jessiejames7492
      @jessiejames7492 5 років тому +1

      @@StephenDoty84 wasnt he a jew...? maybe non practising. the irony is that in spite of everything he was a Russian in blood. He had russian blood in his veins.

    • @Delmarvellous
      @Delmarvellous 5 років тому +5

      @@jessiejames7492 Yes. His family was Jewish.

  • @MrDlt123
    @MrDlt123 6 років тому +278

    The rest of the world was thinking of this match as the US against the Soviet Union, in reality this was Bobby Fischer against the rest of humanity. He really didn't give a sh#t who was sitting on the other side of the board. He just wanted to crush them.

    • @osvie0167
      @osvie0167 6 років тому +35

      Darrin Nunyah Actually, he really wanted to destroy the Russians because he thought they were conspiring to keep him from being world champion. And he also didn't like how they talked about the kind of person they thought he was. He really despised them in this point in his life, and beating one of them for the world championship was a culmination for him. It had to be a Russian.

    • @FacesOfFalastine
      @FacesOfFalastine 6 років тому +11

      @@osvie0167 No "thought" they were. Obviously you've not read how the Soviet chess players themselves confirmed the cheating that was going on behind the scenes. It was all covered back in 1963. FIDE changed the rules. Quit trying to spread old Soviet and Zionist propaganda, as if "Grandmaster Draws" were a figment of his imagination. People can Google, Soviet "Grandmaster Draws" -- and masters such as Reshevsky and Bronstein, and many others confirmed it.
      "Grandmaster Draws" was common knowledge, and in fact, I have newspaper articles from 1955-1960's written by chess columnists that confirm it was ... common knowledge... Chess columnists, who suggested it long before Fischer came out in the press accusing Soviets of doing it.
      Google "grandmaster draws" 1962 bobby fischer chess hall of shame
      I have a collection of newspaper items on that page, as a collection which prove Fischer wasn't imagining, what the whole chess world was already complaining about, long before he uttered the first complaint to Sports Illustrated about their cheating.

    • @andrewgoodshepherd3975
      @andrewgoodshepherd3975 5 років тому

      Wow! Very well said!

    • @elizastonereliza3545
      @elizastonereliza3545 5 років тому

      @@FacesOfFalastine good for you . I was still a baby .

    • @Wtahc
      @Wtahc 5 років тому

      that makes no sense

  • @tiotito31
    @tiotito31 4 роки тому +204

    He's a legend, but I weirdly feel sorry for him.

    • @АлександрЗибик-ь5с
      @АлександрЗибик-ь5с 4 роки тому +12

      His later life was sad. He couldn't overcome his weakness and it ended up killing him.

    • @svenniepennie4237
      @svenniepennie4237 4 роки тому +27

      It's not weird to feel sorry for him. Fischer led a troubled life and his later years were marked by paranoia and delusion.

    • @campbellpaul
      @campbellpaul 4 роки тому +21

      @@svenniepennie4237 True, but not all of his paranoia was unfounded.

    • @svenniepennie4237
      @svenniepennie4237 4 роки тому

      @@campbellpaul Like what?

    • @campbellpaul
      @campbellpaul 4 роки тому +41

      @@svenniepennie4237 The FBI did follow him from a young age. I also believe what he says about not having his visa revoked in 2004 as the US proclaimed they did. Little things led up to his eventual delusions and conspiracy theories... Just imagine what it must be like having a photographic memory, yet having numerous pre-conceived notions that you can't ignore, you are just hounded by them constantly. I think he did pretty well considering the amount of torment he must have put up with.

  • @DGA2000
    @DGA2000 6 років тому +109

    He was an unstoppable Force

  • @mikewarner3597
    @mikewarner3597 6 років тому +534

    4:42 "do you worry about spassky?" **Cut to fischer** HE'S STUDYING A BOOK DURING THE INTERVIEW HAHAHA.

  • @leeroyjenkins6061
    @leeroyjenkins6061 5 років тому +188

    8:08 Louis Cohen looks like he wanted a piece of that cake.

    • @nemeczek67
      @nemeczek67 5 років тому +38

      Bobby forked his rook. No cake for Louis.

    • @cordialspirit
      @cordialspirit 5 років тому +3

      I noticed that too.

    • @royjonesrampage6684
      @royjonesrampage6684 5 років тому

      aww i just typed that..

    • @sirknight4981
      @sirknight4981 4 роки тому +3

      I think his name is actually Lewis Cohen - as that's the only thing that nets you any relevant searches on Google; Interestingly enough it doesn't seem like anything(chess-related at least) became of him.

    • @AndgaChannel
      @AndgaChannel 4 роки тому +2

      @@sirknight4981 all because that cake. He could had been the best.

  • @TheChessPlayer1956
    @TheChessPlayer1956 3 роки тому +11

    Arguably the Mohammed Ali of chess. After his win against Boris Spassky in 1972, his life became nothing but a tragedy culminating in dying at age 64, the same number of squares on the chessboard. Many years later, I went to a lecture given by Boris Spassky and shook his hand. I am a life member of the United States Chess Federation. Mr. Spassky was an affable, happy, and charismatic gentlemanly man. Bobby Fischer won the World Chess Championship in 1972, but Boris Spassky won in life. RIP both men.

    • @tenningale
      @tenningale Рік тому +3

      Boris Spassky is still alive as I type this (September 2023)

  • @pputnam100
    @pputnam100 4 роки тому +17

    Towards the end I got teary for the man with nobody in hisd life, no woman, no pals, no family on his birthday. So obviously on the spectrum somewhere, poor poor man. What a transcendent talent but lonely existence

    • @echt114
      @echt114 3 роки тому +4

      @Peter: "lonely"? What makes you think he wanted the same things you do?

    • @pputnam100
      @pputnam100 3 роки тому +2

      @@echt114 humans are social creatures, it's biology, not preference

    • @Ram-zm6og
      @Ram-zm6og 3 роки тому +1

      It's lonely at the top. I think fischer was well aware of the sacrifices needed to become the best at something

  • @WinslowLeach1974
    @WinslowLeach1974 2 роки тому +4

    Out of everyone in entertainment and sport, I love Bobby Fischer's interviews the most. Guy was a savage with his honesty and confidence. Absolutely zero time or tolerance for any nonsense or bull. Very matter-of-fact. And he makes a relatively boring game (I enjoy chess) very cool. No wonder he was a sensation.

  • @elagabalusrex390
    @elagabalusrex390 4 роки тому +38

    Judging from what there is to judge from, Fischer seems to have been a singularly ingenious but cold and unhappy individual. Its a less uncommon phenomena than one might think - Beethoven, Picasso, Tesla, Garbo, Michael Jackson, Steve Jobs - all were at the top of their games, but none had especially healthy personal lives. "Though a jewel may have brilliant fire, it gives no warmth."

    • @davidb2206
      @davidb2206 4 роки тому +7

      He had a Russian communist mom. I think that explains a lot. She was active in communist politics and working for the communist agenda in the United States. Bobby rejected all that, with admirable credit due to his wisdom.

    • @gardenvariety9957
      @gardenvariety9957 3 роки тому +1

      @@davidb2206 but she wasn't Russian. Endgame is a good book about Fischer, really enlightening.

  • @mbfenner
    @mbfenner 5 років тому +20

    A few years ago I read "Endgame" by Frank Brady about Fischer. Great read.

  • @Александр-ю1т2о
    @Александр-ю1т2о Місяць тому +1

    ❤❤ WERY WELL ON RUSSIY !!
    СПАСИБО БОЛЬШОЕ 😮😊❤

  • @thetruthexperiment
    @thetruthexperiment 3 роки тому +20

    This is the most hilarious thing I’ve ever seen! The most arrogant man alive asking the best chess player stupid questions. I love it. It’s one of my favorite videos now.

  • @ryanmichaelhaley
    @ryanmichaelhaley 2 роки тому +2

    This is solid gold, thanks for the upload.

  • @modularmuse
    @modularmuse 4 роки тому +22

    Jaco Pastorious said 'it's not bragging if you can back it up'. Bobby seems very lucid and confident, but not cocky.

  • @spartanchess7859
    @spartanchess7859 5 років тому +64

    "His most reliable friends are the pieces on the board" - 👍

    • @toast2610
      @toast2610 4 роки тому +3

      What does that tell you of the world and who dominates it.

    • @toast2610
      @toast2610 4 роки тому +3

      @Joost Broek If by control you mean coercion (using force and threats), then I disagree. I did not see that in him. If by control you mean using reason (setting truth as the goal), then maybe.

  • @GOD999MODE
    @GOD999MODE Рік тому +7

    His talent, obsession, drive, and sheer willpower/focus was unreal. These are the qualities and sacrifices to be the best at something.

  • @abdurahmanabuavi8459
    @abdurahmanabuavi8459 4 роки тому +7

    I admired him since the beginning he was becaming a famous player...🇮🇩❤️🇱🇷

  • @420captain
    @420captain 4 роки тому +12

    Say what you want about Bobby Fischer, But don't question his Chess game.

  • @umaxi96
    @umaxi96 4 роки тому +2

    I just love everything about this documentary :) - the way they speak, how it is filmed, their outfits, the script...

    • @steveneumeyer681
      @steveneumeyer681 8 місяців тому

      it's amazing. i come back to watch it regularly

  • @Ericbryanmr
    @Ericbryanmr 5 років тому +12

    1. Fischer (1969-1975)
    2. Kasparov (1985-1999) & Carlsen (2010-2014)
    3. Morphy (1855 - 1860)
    The best players and their best years.

    • @jschaeffer5549
      @jschaeffer5549 5 років тому

      just fischer and morphy and casablanka

    • @pablobruise1388
      @pablobruise1388 5 років тому

      Fischer, Morphy, Kasparov, Capablanca.

    • @biffboffo
      @biffboffo 5 років тому +1

      Carlsen seems better than ever right now though.

    • @davidcopson5800
      @davidcopson5800 5 років тому

      What did Fischer do between 1972 and 1975?

    • @Someone-hi1nt
      @Someone-hi1nt 5 місяців тому

      fischer didnt play after 72, so im not sure why you extended it to 75, but also this is just incorrect (sorry to say it)
      whether youre judging based off pure chess or if youre judging based on dominance, newer eras are just better due to more resources
      morphy would likely not even be 2500 in todays game, and fischer would be crushed by a lot of the super gms in todays game if youre ignoring era factors, but if youre going by dominance relative to era itd be morphy due to his being around 300-400 points stronger than any other player of his era and doing it for longer than fischer

  • @renehenriksen1735
    @renehenriksen1735 4 роки тому +9

    No wonder they call it a mystery how he did it all alone when it comes to chess. Unbelievable. I know it might be a silly comparison and maybe it´s an insult to Bobby Fischer. But there is somekind of lone ranger/Lucky Luke the lonesome cowboy over him. The reason why I say it anyway is because Bobby made that dream/illusion/fiction real in a way, and that´s incredible.

  • @spleeeen4it
    @spleeeen4it 4 роки тому +21

    Arrogant yet extremely humble, honest and down to earth. Very likable guy.

    • @santiagoarce5672
      @santiagoarce5672 4 роки тому +4

      There is not a humble bone in his body

    • @rblauson
      @rblauson 4 роки тому +1

      @@santiagoarce5672 that’s because he was the very best of all time.
      He didn’t have to be humble he was that good

    • @santiagoarce5672
      @santiagoarce5672 4 роки тому +1

      @@rblauson ok I’m just disagreeing with OP

    • @ihsahnakerfeldt9280
      @ihsahnakerfeldt9280 4 роки тому +3

      You can't be humble and arrogant at the same time

    • @santiagoarce5672
      @santiagoarce5672 4 роки тому

      @@ihsahnakerfeldt9280 Exactly

  • @ophiolatreia93
    @ophiolatreia93 4 роки тому +16

    0:58 he's really giving it to that chessboard

  • @VizualDK
    @VizualDK Рік тому +3

    I kinda wish professional chess players didn’t have a massive professional team of people helping them with their preparation for games. I know it’s been around for a really long time and it doesn’t make someone any less deserving of a world champion title, but it kinda takes away the element of chess being supposedly a 1 on 1 fight of intellect.

  • @aldenho2561
    @aldenho2561 Рік тому +2

    no training partners, hardly any practice matches, just a big red book and hours alone. Dude literally took on an entire country which bred grandmasters since they were kids plus government. He defeated them all. This is the single greatest accomplishment in chess history.

  • @wojciechgrodnicki6302
    @wojciechgrodnicki6302 Рік тому +4

    Studied 350 past games of his opponent. Incredible.

  • @JimJWalker
    @JimJWalker 6 років тому +103

    Transport computer chess of 2018 to 1970 and Fischer would destroy any alive player today. His work ethic was too high. He would out prepare them in the opening, extract a small middle game advantage, then grind them down in the endgame. Carlsen's laziness would be his downfall against a player like Fischer who was just as talented, but worked harder.

    • @starrynights2343
      @starrynights2343 5 років тому +3

      "His work ethic was way too high" can you please elaborate? I really want to know about his work ethics can you provide some sources where I can know more about that.

    • @dirty7444
      @dirty7444 5 років тому +14

      ​@@starrynights2343 I think he is referring to Bobby's obsessively intense chess training. Chess was his life until 1972.

    • @starrynights2343
      @starrynights2343 5 років тому +2

      @@dirty7444
      Hi do you know for a fact any viable sources which claims to affirm about this work ethics. I mean are there any documented sources which shed some lights regarding his work ethics?

    • @northshores7319
      @northshores7319 5 років тому +8

      I agree. Only Alekhine and Botvinnik worked as hard tho' Fischer did not have a job like Botvinnik or drink too much like Alekhine, so he ranks ahead of them all.

    • @seanf5634
      @seanf5634 5 років тому +12

      I agree with you. This is why its hard to compare chess players from 50 years ago, since they didn't have computers to help their game. Considering Fischer didn't have a coach, is simply unbelievable in modern chess, hence with computers and a full coaching staff, he certainly could take on all modern chess players.

  • @matthewelliott5118
    @matthewelliott5118 6 років тому +37

    Well he did do exactly like he set out to do! And he did do it all by himself, without a team or nation backing him up! WE as a nation dropped the ball on thi
    at play. Some say, as mentioned in interview, that he was picky about conditions. But it is HIS sport. he should have been given what ever conditions he or other GRANDMASTERS ask for. You can't go on to football field and blow smoke in quarterbacks face. WE WHO LOVE CHESS MISS YOU BOBBY! GOD BLESS YOU AND THANK YOU!

    • @isaiah4465
      @isaiah4465 4 роки тому +3

      You can't even blow smoke in 99% of establishments in the world today because it's illegal. It's even illegal to smoke in a lot of bars!

  • @brianfischer149
    @brianfischer149 4 роки тому +4

    Interesting because my Dad's name is Robert Fischer and one of his younger Brother's is James ! Loved the interview !

  • @homemadesauce6153
    @homemadesauce6153 3 роки тому +4

    "It's just an obvious fact" I want this confidence bro

  • @abhishektyagi4428
    @abhishektyagi4428 6 років тому +53

    He should have asked about his daily routine

    • @jessiejames7492
      @jessiejames7492 6 років тому +2

      Abhishek Tyagi he doesnt like personal questions as the host said.

    • @StephenDoty84
      @StephenDoty84 6 років тому +23

      We saw it; workout to Jack LaLanne, study chess, watch late night movies. Repeat.

    • @RJavier007
      @RJavier007 5 років тому +8

      And no time for girls ir family. I suspect Bobby trained around 12 to 14 hours daily

  • @tlenkeeb829
    @tlenkeeb829 5 років тому +27

    "Its just an obvious fact"

  • @deniseallisonstout1901
    @deniseallisonstout1901 6 років тому +28

    God Bobby was so awesome!!

  • @salimegypt6277
    @salimegypt6277 5 років тому +23

    Bobby fischer is the . GREATEST

  • @chump1978
    @chump1978 5 років тому +18

    really a good look at the Best , a tribute to dicipline

  • @StephenDoty84
    @StephenDoty84 5 років тому +120

    4:41 "Do you worry about Spassky?"
    Cut to Fischer reading a Playboy magazine.

  • @Maxfr8
    @Maxfr8 6 років тому +39

    And just like that, he belongs to the ages.

  • @timmyasikin3953
    @timmyasikin3953 3 роки тому +3

    Bobby Fidcher chess rambo !
    Thank yor for awesome video.....

  • @snap-off5383
    @snap-off5383 3 роки тому +10

    "I don't believe in luck. I believe in good moves." - Bobby Fischer

    • @hyzercreek
      @hyzercreek Рік тому +1

      He never said that. He said "I dont believe in psychology. I believe in good moves."

  • @TuanVan-ne1fg
    @TuanVan-ne1fg Рік тому +3

    Chess is very hard, so hard that Bobby Fischer is the only American ever to be world champ. He was hundreds of points ahead of the next best in his era. Total legend the greatest most influence

    • @RaineriHakkarainen
      @RaineriHakkarainen 6 місяців тому

      Morphy Tal Alekhine Kasparov had More beautiful games than Fischer!

  • @charlesbromberick4247
    @charlesbromberick4247 4 роки тому +2

    It´s not arrogance if you can back it up, and both Bobby and Mohammad could; I like, respect and admire them both.

  • @TheDavidh123
    @TheDavidh123 5 років тому +26

    No doubt he was a chess genius... a real phenomenon. Whether he can be condemned for his "odd personality" and seeming "character flaws" is up to God alone. Like all of us, he responded to the reality he was presented with in his own way. I didn't personally know him, so I'm certainly not going to judge him. All I know is that his chess prowess, and accomplishments are to be stood in AWE of....he was the best.

  • @captainsplash
    @captainsplash 3 роки тому +7

    Respect to the greatest chess player to ever live.

  • @eddies979
    @eddies979 6 років тому +15

    Absolute legend

  • @pacificule
    @pacificule 5 років тому +9

    Bobby neither needed nor wanted any sort of help because his self-belief was so total, so absolute, it was impossible for him to imagine that someone else could possibly understand chess better than he did. He was king, the rest of us pawns...and why would a god seek advice from mere mortals??
    Wallace's most astute observation in this segment is that Bobby's only friends were the pieces on the board. They were also his only family. His world was that board and his life played out upon it. Bobby could challenge - and defeat - historically renowned, well-financed systems because in the end he understood that chess is just a game. All that matters is two people, one board, and 32 pieces. The rest is fluff and nonsense.

  • @BLD426
    @BLD426 3 роки тому +8

    He's like a fighter pilot. If he's not the best, he's got a problem.

  • @StephenPaulTroup
    @StephenPaulTroup 5 років тому +15

    4:44 LOL! Excuse me Mike, I'm too busy to just sit and do an interview, I've got to read this book at the same time!

  • @pierceferris
    @pierceferris 3 роки тому +3

    “Gradually hating it but still trying to make it work.” That’s the quote I’ve taken away from this interview...

  • @bunkerbunt3390
    @bunkerbunt3390 5 років тому +73

    He got bad press for being honest.

    • @ShaNaNa242
      @ShaNaNa242 5 років тому

      Oh please.

    • @toast2610
      @toast2610 4 роки тому +11

      He did not like fake people. Dishonest people. Unfortunately most of the world thrives on dishonesty.

    • @bassesatta9235
      @bassesatta9235 4 роки тому +1

      Toast generalising the jews wasnt really a good idea. he shouldve just referred to them as zionists. caused confusion amongst everyone

    • @toast2610
      @toast2610 4 роки тому +5

      @@bassesatta9235 The Jews who identify as Jews but claim to be non-Zionists have done nothing to counter Zionists but talk. It is a vital tactic to arrive at their end goal.

    • @euanmacleod3738
      @euanmacleod3738 3 роки тому +1

      Anyone with a morally repugnant belief system can say the exact same thing if they get bad press. The honesty isn't the issue; what is being honestly expressed is. This is slightly different from these days where people can be pilloried for holding extremely moderate or vaguely conservative views... Fischer had some outrageous, hateful, bigoted views, which he honestly expressed, and that brought the bad press. It's testament to how truly great he was that his legacy hasn't been buried.

  • @andrewhall7930
    @andrewhall7930 3 роки тому +4

    To beat Larsen 6-0 and Taimanov 6-0 and Petrosian 6-2 is still perhaps the Greatest string of tournament play the Chess world may ever know.

  • @wannahockachewie897
    @wannahockachewie897 4 роки тому +7

    I wonder how Fischer would stack up if he had today's computers and tools to study the game. It's amazing what he was able to achieve with little outside help.

    • @Pitsenberg
      @Pitsenberg 3 роки тому +3

      He hated computers and openings, said they killed chess on a late interview

    • @True_Christian
      @True_Christian 2 роки тому +1

      ​@@Pitsenberg I don't think it's so much that "he hated computers," but rather, he realized that Chess is ultimately a garbage game because at the end of the day, it is all 100% mathematical calculations and 0% art or creativity.
      Machine AI merely brings that problem to the forefront and makes it explicitly clear. But they didn't *cause* the issue.

  • @tonycruse3648
    @tonycruse3648 5 років тому +20

    Spassky was under HUGE pressure from his country.

    • @5days61
      @5days61 4 роки тому +1

      Tony Cruse and?

    • @badcornflakes6374
      @badcornflakes6374 4 роки тому +2

      @@5days61 Bobby won

    • @zenodotusofathens2122
      @zenodotusofathens2122 3 роки тому

      He didn't give a sh#t about his country as became obvious in his later life. His pressure came from himself

  • @mikemclenison8200
    @mikemclenison8200 Рік тому +1

    Great interview!

  • @conjured_up_skeletons6178
    @conjured_up_skeletons6178 4 роки тому +44

    "So when they go home that night, they can't kid themselves that they're so hot." ... Gotta love that NY accent!

    • @ihsahnakerfeldt9280
      @ihsahnakerfeldt9280 4 роки тому

      Very honest and unpolished

    • @darkhelmet5695
      @darkhelmet5695 3 роки тому

      People who don't understand new yorkers, such as trump, don't get that.

  • @strangebrew1231
    @strangebrew1231 Рік тому +2

    What’s incredible about him is he did it completely alone. The soviets had a system set up of many men. He did it all alone

  • @pronemanoldbutyoung5548
    @pronemanoldbutyoung5548 4 роки тому +9

    People cant grasp what a chess genius Bobby was

    • @rankarat
      @rankarat 2 роки тому

      He wasn't chess genius, he was genius who played chess.

  • @JohnSmith-oe4ci
    @JohnSmith-oe4ci 3 роки тому +2

    Fischer was an amazingly unique & charismatic man whom I admire greatly. As a 15 year old boy he went to Russia virtually alone & single-handedly went toe to toe with their toughest ugliest Stalinist bureaucrats & left them nursing scars for life. He beat 20 grand masters back to back in the run up to World title.

  • @normantaga4212
    @normantaga4212 4 роки тому +2

    He changes the FIDE perspective ...from prizes to tournament organizers to improve playing halls and rules

  • @brankagod
    @brankagod 4 роки тому +2

    Bobby Fisher was the best chess player in the world. And he was different and my favorite.

  • @jimdalziel6226
    @jimdalziel6226 2 роки тому +7

    I suffered from depression and anxiety for decades in my youth and can recognise that in Bobby. He's in survival mode a lot of the time. He attacks before he gets attacked. Modern meds would've helped Bobby overcome his shyness and awkward behaviour. He didn't need to go insane. I wish someone could've helped him, I really do. Maybe that's the price of genius,.but he was a poor lost soul at the end.
    Rest easy icon, for you truly are.

  • @werners5191
    @werners5191 5 років тому +3

    I remember that Americans were proud that an American rose to challenge the Soviet Union in their own cherished realm. And when Fisher won, it was a victory in the Cold War, much like the U.S. Olympic hockey team in 1980. No one has done more for chess in America, and maybe even the world.

  • @deeneroaabrildeagostoadici2689
    @deeneroaabrildeagostoadici2689 6 років тому +28

    sometimes Birthday's cake for someone who father was not in birthday's time, can bring back memories... ´perhaps...

    • @FacesOfFalastine
      @FacesOfFalastine 6 років тому +2

      Thanks for proving how little everyone knows. Bobby Fischer joined the Worldwide Church of God in 1962.
      Birthday celebrations were forbidden.
      Cake with lard baked into it was forbidden.
      People can get the true story from one of his cult sisters by googling "Vindication-of-bobby-fischer co" and there they will find the truth.
      I know what happened because (unlike the fake news of chess establishment) I was actually there.
      I am also building a large newspaper archive from the NY Times / Ancestry Newspaper archive that spans from 1955-2008 with contemporary reports from Chess columnists and syndicated press, as it was happening.
      The fake news spread today, is not historically accurate. In fact, it's patent and packaged "FAKE(TM)".
      Regina Fischer was commended by Eleanor Roosevelt herself as a fine mother and the fake news story you read about Bobby and his absent father... don't worry, Bobby found a "father figure" in the cult leader, Herbert W. Armstrong, who took Bobby under his wing in 1972.

    • @bassesatta9235
      @bassesatta9235 4 роки тому

      Night Owl so what is ur opinion on bobbys mental health? was he really a madmen in his later years

  • @johnputzier5170
    @johnputzier5170 3 місяці тому +1

    I love how he slams the pieces down on every move.

  • @jaironunez7196
    @jaironunez7196 4 роки тому +6

    Bobby's road to winning the World Championship is the most amazing feat in the history of sports!!

    • @GH-oi2jf
      @GH-oi2jf Рік тому

      I don’t think so. He was the best player in the world at the time, so he should have become champion. Amazing was the US hocky team winning the gold medal at the olympics. Amazing was Bill Russell’s cumulative record of championships. Amazing was Dallas Bradan, who lost his mother while in high school, pitching a perfect game for the Oakland A’s on Mothers’ Day.

    • @hyzercreek
      @hyzercreek Рік тому

      @@GH-oi2jf Those things are boring. Amazing is Wilt Chamberlain scoring 100 points in a game in the days before 3-pointers. Amazing is Ali beating Foreman while leaning back on the ropes. Amazing is Nolan Ryan loading the bases with nobody out and striking out the next 3 guys on 9 pitches.