No, he's just turned on by Kasparov. He wants Kasparov to be his boyfriend but he is thinking about what would happen if he cheats on his wife (just joking).
I love the first few minutes - he just goes around slamming down pieces, seemingly without stopping to think. Bang... bang... bang... OWNED, OWNED, OWNED.
@bodwisa I didn't assume they were naturally stronger. I stated that they were stronger due to their profound understanding of the game which never existed in Robert Fischer's prime.
The first moves of a chess game are usually book moves,well known and theoritacally established.You don't have to think,you just play them automatically
@1k1llc47s you can do that if you are playing all of them with white pieces or all black pieces. It can possibly done if you are playing the other with opponent with black, then the other is white. thus mirroring the others move making them think that they are paying chess with you but actually they are playing with each other.
I've always wondered (and I know I'm not alone), if all the ATG players were born in the same year, say, 1963, who would rise to the top of the heap? My short list of ATGs would be Morphy, Capablanca, Alekhine, Fischer, and Kasparov. (Others may be added, but I don't include Karpov because he's a contemporary.) I think Fischer and Alekhine might very well edge out Kasparov. Capablanca would obviously be a front-runner, were it not for his relatively nonchalant attitude toward chess study.
That man has an extraordinary look,it makes you both respect and fear him! I wish I had the honour to play against him (even if I eventually lost of course!)
It seems that this was the consensus of most. He tired himself out in trying to trick the machine into making a mistake and was worn out by the time that game 6 in the rematch was played.
According to the Chessmetrics calculation, Fischer's peak rating was 2895 in October 1971. His one-year peak average was 2881, in 1971, the highest of all time.
@rookman64 I for one agree with you. Kasparov is widely regarded as the best ever and for good reason. For sure there were other great players but, from the info we have available (which is the only reasonable thing we can go by), he is the best player to have played the game.
@widebody123 The rules of competition chess say that you must press the clock with the same hand you use to move the piece... I expect Kasparov is in the habit of using his right hand?
its simple how this is done. ive seen it explained. all it is, is he mimics the moves of the other players. pretty much the other players are playing the other people. he is just the "middle man" but on the last match he actually plays the game. thats why you need an odd number.
@dovespin1 no way!! I wanted to know that! really was that short? I wonder if he felt like he had messed up a good position or had felt like he had just played awfully makes your heart break a little seeing that.
@sleepyeyeguy It takes that kind of attitude toward defeat to become world champion. Besides, a loss in chess always creeps under your skin, no matter who it was that beat you.
Does this increase he's Score of a Grandmaster or just a Exhibition game where he gets money? I would love to see one of he's games.. Thanks for the video post..
I never said Kasparov hasn't. It's inevitable too that at sometime in the future someone will build on Kasparov and exceed his achievements. Thats life. A simple way of looking at this would be if every single man who has ever played chess was born tomorrow in 50 years time who would be regarded as the greatest? Great as Kasparov is i'm not convinced he'd be the one.
I think seeing this video made me want to play chess again and start taking it very seriously a year and a half ago. Also Carlsen vs Kasparov and Fischer
It says at 27seconds "the best player of all time" talking about kasparov. haha. Bobby Fischer is clearly the best of all time. But this was a great video, the guitar sounds makes it all intense, thanks for sharing.
Also worth mentioning, is that Bobby played to win, to the kings. Most grandmasters play for the draw unless victory is highly certain, particularly the Russians.
As good as a player as Kasparov was, my most lasting memory of him will be the fact that he lost to Deep Blue in the rematch. Granted he was tired from playing all the tough matches leading to that sixth game, but the fact that the game ended the way that it did is something I am not going to forget
@MrRazorblade999 Fischer peak elo rating 2785 july 1972. Kasparov peak elo rating 2851 july 1999 against a much stronger pack. It's a shame they never played each other.
"he's looking like he wants to kill Kasparov" ??! The man obviously finds himself six feet away from his idol -- he's a chess player and he's standing next to the world champion when the world champion is deeply involved in a chess game -- he is in thrall and mesmerized.
Understand the word 'exhibition'. He only played people of rating 2000 or less. Nobody had any chance of winning;only one game detained him for a slight period of thought.
@matpalmyt he probably thought he was winning, but everyone knows that a good GM makes you think your gonna win and then makes a spectacular move and it's done.
I am a GM chess player. I want to give great respect to GK . He is truly the best chess player of all time. No other player ever came close to his knowledge and vision.
a quote i heard a while ago: "practice doesnt make perfect, Perfect practice makes perfect." now the question is: "what is the perfect form of practice?" at that point people either pay GM's to answer that for them or they go out and try to answer it themselves. So in theory one could get to GM level with 100% hard work, only if that hard work was done efficiently.
Exactly, everyone benefits from the advancement made by their predecessors, and it was during Fischer's era that chess made the biggest leap by far. There is no question Kasparov is amazing, but I believe what Fischer did is unparalleled. Many improvements have been made on Einstein's theories, but I will still contend that Albert's advancements remain superior respectively.
He's a spectator. I've ssen and participated in simuls. Nothing out of the ordinary at all with how this guys looks at the World Champion. The bigger the status of the player giving the simul, the more enthralled players and spectators feel. You do realize I hope that the players and surely most of the spectators are, let's say, far below the level of a grandmaster... Some of them are there only for the novelty of the whole thing...
You would be surprised at the amount of stars who don´t give signatures... It might have to do with the fact that the more autographs you give, the less monetary value they have. Maybe he has the option of one day being able to profit from autographs in some way or form, maybe by selling signed books of his own after he writes them.
@RomeoSOF2 what the hell are you talking about ? the most powerful enemy kasparov can have in simultaneous games is the aggressive player, like me and many others. i bet if there were 25 such players no way kasparov would win all games. i'm having trouble thinking about a single such opponent, and i can play games in my mind, without table.
@DoctorLawyerWhatever I used to find them boring too, but one day a friend asked me to play with him, and then i realized why chess is so great! Saludos...
@jooodsdssdd cheaters using chess computers are often caught out. I bet ritalin or modafinil would be very useful in a tournament where you're playing solidly for hours.
Fischer was great. His unexpected huge destruction of all his opponents to take the challenge to Spassky in the 70s and win, then return 20 yrs later from silence and duplicate his win was amazing. But Kasparov (and a couple of others) held the title longer and you can only go with what you have. Would Borg (tennis) have won multiple Australian opens if he'd entered them and been the greatest ever? Hindsight is great but we can only deal in what we have.
@widebody123 Er...excuse me, but you're forgetting (or ignoring) the relating INFLATION that has gone on over the decades. THREE decades is a long time in terms of rating inflation. And how are you so sure the pack was "much stronger" in 1999? Yes, they have the advantage of computers and developed theories, but to assume they were naturally stronger than the best in 1972 is a big (and silly) assumption.
I love go and chess, but I think that Shogi, japanese chess, should be internationalized as well. It has many chess tactics and opening strategies, I believe all 3 games should be played, if not just one.
His first marriage was to Masha in the early 1990's.His second marriage was to Yulia (Julia) with whom he shares his son, Vadim, born in 1997. They live in Moscow.His current wife, with whom he shares a daughter, Aida Garryck Weinstein, born on April 13, 1963 in Baku, the capitol city of Azerbaijan in the Soviet Union, was the son of Kim Moiseyevich Weinstein and Klara Shagenovna Kasparova. his father died in an automobile accident. Soon after, Garryck changed his name to Garry Kasparov
3:15 "Soon...I shall have your soul!"
No, he's just turned on by Kasparov. He wants Kasparov to be his boyfriend but he is thinking about what would happen if he cheats on his wife (just joking).
2:47 Kasparov is like "Well, I have billion ways to beat you, which one you do you prefer?"
I love the first few minutes - he just goes around slamming down pieces, seemingly without stopping to think. Bang... bang... bang... OWNED, OWNED, OWNED.
i like how the music/ atmosphere changes twice in this video
Kasparov is awesome to watch in simuls. Unstoppable!
@bodwisa I didn't assume they were naturally stronger. I stated that they were stronger due to their profound understanding of the game which never existed in Robert Fischer's prime.
just love kasparov, he has a colourful character!
The first moves of a chess game are usually book moves,well known and theoritacally established.You don't have to think,you just play them automatically
@1k1llc47s you can do that if you are playing all of them with white pieces or all black pieces. It can possibly done if you are playing the other with opponent with black, then the other is white. thus mirroring the others move making them think that they are paying chess with you but actually they are playing with each other.
I think the only way to judge is to see how much better were they than their contemporaries? Using that as a guide I would probably agree with you.
I've always wondered (and I know I'm not alone), if all the ATG players were born in the same year, say, 1963, who would rise to the top of the heap? My short list of ATGs would be Morphy, Capablanca, Alekhine, Fischer, and Kasparov. (Others may be added, but I don't include Karpov because he's a contemporary.) I think Fischer and Alekhine might very well edge out Kasparov. Capablanca would obviously be a front-runner, were it not for his relatively nonchalant attitude toward chess study.
i love his expressions (show the power of his mind) especially on 1:15!!! just respect!!!!
That man has an extraordinary look,it makes you both respect and fear him! I wish I had the honour to play against him (even if I eventually lost of course!)
It would be such an honor to play one of the best Chess players ever.
@Elmirgtr no, he pitted them against each other, won most, but lost some
after 7:43 gary does not sign the book...does anyone know why that was so?
@Elmirgtr Yes he did. It said at the end, 25-0
It seems that this was the consensus of most. He tired himself out in trying to trick the machine into making a mistake and was worn out by the time that game 6 in the rematch was played.
@jwlbailey Speak of brave, how much time maximum does he get to make his move?
According to the Chessmetrics calculation, Fischer's peak rating was 2895 in October 1971. His one-year peak average was 2881, in 1971, the highest of all time.
@rookman64
I for one agree with you.
Kasparov is widely regarded as the best ever and for good reason. For sure there were other great players but, from the info we have available (which is the only reasonable thing we can go by), he is the best player to have played the game.
@mrscrewer03 yup! i saw him do this about a month ago
Bobby (Robert J) Fischer and Garry Kasparov. Two of the greatest chess icons ever.
@widebody123 The rules of competition chess say that you must press the clock with the same hand you use to move the piece... I expect Kasparov is in the habit of using his right hand?
its simple how this is done. ive seen it explained. all it is, is he mimics the moves of the other players. pretty much the other players are playing the other people. he is just the "middle man" but on the last match he actually plays the game. thats why you need an odd number.
@dovespin1 no way!! I wanted to know that! really was that short? I wonder if he felt like he had messed up a good position or had felt like he had just played awfully makes your heart break a little seeing that.
@MrMegaChips Thanks jejejeje I haven`t seen that at the video
atsa. wraio dokimanter h vouli. ginetai na anevaseis ligo akoma file?
@toiletscrubbr No, but I would like to read speculations about it.
@sleepyeyeguy It takes that kind of attitude toward defeat to become world champion. Besides, a loss in chess always creeps under your skin, no matter who it was that beat you.
Has there ever been a Grandmaster who's done a Simultaneous, but lost every game? Now THAT would be classic =)
Does this increase he's Score of a Grandmaster or just a Exhibition game where he gets money? I would love to see one of he's games.. Thanks for the video post..
I never said Kasparov hasn't. It's inevitable too that at sometime in the future someone will build on Kasparov and exceed his achievements. Thats life.
A simple way of looking at this would be if every single man who has ever played chess was born tomorrow in 50 years time who would be regarded as the greatest? Great as Kasparov is i'm not convinced he'd be the one.
Does anyone know when was the last time Garry Kasparov actually lost a game?
I'm a huge fan of his, but was disappointed when he didn't sign the translator's book at the very end. Anyone know why??
Greatest player of all time HATSOFF
I think seeing this video made me want to play chess again and start taking it very seriously a year and a half ago. Also Carlsen vs Kasparov and Fischer
@Larravok where u got this information?
Is nice see Kasparaov happy
Kasporov is a legend and very brave man.
It says at 27seconds "the best player of all time" talking about kasparov. haha. Bobby Fischer is clearly the best of all time. But this was a great video, the guitar sounds makes it all intense, thanks for sharing.
What clip were you watching? Kasparov won this simul 25-0!
the greatest. Period.
Amazing footege, the kid there who in defeat is mad at him self. Thats what makes a future Kasparov.
Also worth mentioning, is that Bobby played to win, to the kings. Most grandmasters play for the draw unless victory is highly certain, particularly the Russians.
The interpreter got owned at the end when he asked for an autograph! LOL!
How much did it cost to play Kasparov in a simul and does he use the same opening against most players?
As good as a player as Kasparov was, my most lasting memory of him will be the fact that he lost to Deep Blue in the rematch. Granted he was tired from playing all the tough matches leading to that sixth game, but the fact that the game ended the way that it did is something I am not going to forget
im sure its a great feeling playing against him especially if he needs to think for a wile after you made your move...
@MrRazorblade999 Fischer peak elo rating 2785 july 1972.
Kasparov peak elo rating 2851 july 1999 against a much stronger pack.
It's a shame they never played each other.
"he's looking like he wants to kill Kasparov" ??! The man obviously finds himself six feet away from his idol -- he's a chess player and he's standing next to the world champion when the world champion is deeply involved in a chess game -- he is in thrall and mesmerized.
Understand the word 'exhibition'.
He only played people of rating 2000 or less.
Nobody had any chance of winning;only one game detained him for a slight period of thought.
@SSgtParmer well since he is russian, and russia is in asia.. i think it's probable
Love this guy PERIOD !!!!!
@matpalmyt he probably thought he was winning, but everyone knows that a good GM makes you think your gonna win and then makes a spectacular move and it's done.
I am a GM chess player. I want to give great respect to GK . He is truly the best chess player of all time. No other player ever came close to his knowledge and vision.
He only ever uses his right hand to move pieces. Not sure if this means anything. Maybe he's scared they'll steal his wristwatch?
a quote i heard a while ago: "practice doesnt make perfect, Perfect practice makes perfect." now the question is: "what is the perfect form of practice?" at that point people either pay GM's to answer that for them or they go out and try to answer it themselves. So in theory one could get to GM level with 100% hard work, only if that hard work was done efficiently.
wow, how much time did the matches take?
how many players did he play and win?
Ah, but when playing 25 good players at once, you must be able to rethink and have great memory
@DoctorLawyerWhatever Thank you for your view on games. This is the caremeter [_0%_]
Exactly, everyone benefits from the advancement made by their predecessors, and it was during Fischer's era that chess made the biggest leap by far. There is no question Kasparov is amazing, but I believe what Fischer did is unparalleled. Many improvements have been made on Einstein's theories, but I will still contend that Albert's advancements remain superior respectively.
@matpalmyt ...because he thought this was his shot at the big time; his chance to take down the champ.
He's a spectator. I've ssen and participated in simuls. Nothing out of the ordinary at all with how this guys looks at the World Champion. The bigger the status of the player giving the simul, the more enthralled players and spectators feel.
You do realize I hope that the players and surely most of the spectators are, let's say, far below the level of a grandmaster... Some of them are there only for the novelty of the whole thing...
@jwlbailey yes
why were they all clapping at 4:42? did he lose to that kid?
You would be surprised at the amount of stars who don´t give signatures... It might have to do with the fact that the more autographs you give, the less monetary value they have. Maybe he has the option of one day being able to profit from autographs in some way or form, maybe by selling signed books of his own after he writes them.
That simultaneous game is the one time kasparov lost with his king's gambit accepted. He won the other 7 times.
@RomeoSOF2 what the hell are you talking about ? the most powerful enemy kasparov can have in simultaneous games is the aggressive player, like me and many others. i bet if there were 25 such players no way kasparov would win all games. i'm having trouble thinking about a single such opponent, and i can play games in my mind, without table.
"I don't think chess required any sacrifices of me...except that I didn't have a childhood."
What a mind! And what an attention span!
@CaMaverick amen!
at 2.52 he looks back at the previous table. still thinking about it.
@DoctorLawyerWhatever I used to find them boring too, but one day a friend asked me to play with him, and then i realized why chess is so great! Saludos...
@sleepyeyeguy He probably was analyzing how he lost the game.
He's GREAT!
Did he not sign the book?
@jooodsdssdd cheaters using chess computers are often caught out. I bet ritalin or modafinil would be very useful in a tournament where you're playing solidly for hours.
Fischer was great. His unexpected huge destruction of all his opponents to take the challenge to Spassky in the 70s and win, then return 20 yrs later from silence and duplicate his win was amazing. But Kasparov (and a couple of others) held the title longer and you can only go with what you have. Would Borg (tennis) have won multiple Australian opens if he'd entered them and been the greatest ever? Hindsight is great but we can only deal in what we have.
@widebody123 Er...excuse me, but you're forgetting (or ignoring) the relating INFLATION that has gone on over the decades. THREE decades is a long time in terms of rating inflation.
And how are you so sure the pack was "much stronger" in 1999? Yes, they have the advantage of computers and developed theories, but to assume they were naturally stronger than the best in 1972 is a big (and silly) assumption.
@MrZingnigga
Nah, could have some experienced players who could see some mistake he makes, then make him pay for the rest of the game.
great vid
I love go and chess, but I think that Shogi, japanese chess, should be internationalized as well. It has many chess tactics and opening strategies, I believe all 3 games should be played, if not just one.
very nice vid!
But what an honour for him when he looks back on it later in life, no?
The Best!!!! forever!!!
check out how Itrasposed a kasparov game into music :)
did Gary kasparov had won those games?
His first marriage was to Masha in the early 1990's.His second marriage was to Yulia (Julia) with whom he shares his son, Vadim, born in 1997. They live in Moscow.His current wife, with whom he shares a daughter, Aida Garryck Weinstein, born on April 13, 1963 in Baku, the capitol city of Azerbaijan in the Soviet Union, was the son of Kim Moiseyevich Weinstein and Klara Shagenovna Kasparova. his father died in an automobile accident. Soon after, Garryck changed his name to Garry Kasparov
he is one of the best player all time:)
@WantedReward93 With that terrible crisis over there, I wouldn't say that...
i did not say i saw how it was done but saw how it was EXPLAINED.
both. you need both.
3:15 The look of envy every master secretly has about all the fame and glory Kasparov gets for being the best.
@swootwapa 3 min 43 secs ( and 32 millisecs)
@damthatriver09 In what way is it pure luck? The whole idea of these kinds of tournaments is to test where the human brain struggles: multitasking.
The first 20 seconds is the lobby of the Hilton Tel-Aviv in Israel.
amazing garry!!!
GK simply the greatest chess player of all time.