The art of chess: a brief history of the world championship | thearticle
The art of chess: a brief history of the world championship | thearticle"
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Last week Barry Martin, along with Patrick Hughes, one of the world’s top chess playing artists, asked me to identify the most significant happenings in the chess world over the past ten
years. Barry and Patrick used to meet in the final of the Chelsea Arts Club Championship and Barry writes an excellent monthly column in _Kensington, Westminster and Chelsea Today _(KWC).
The point of the question was to celebrate ten years of _KWC_ and ten years of Barry’s column, many of which have been gathered together in the anthology, _Chess, Problems, Play and
Personalities_ (Filament Publishing). Of those significant developments, which define the contemporary chess scene, I have already covered the phenomenon of the new Netflix chess-based TV
series, _The_ _Queen’s Gambit_, in last week’s column. The combination of brilliance and beauty, exemplified in the persona of the chess champion heroine, Beth Harmon, has proved
irresistible to record-breaking audiences around the world. Sales of chess sets alone, a key indicator of a new-found enthusiasm, have soared by 300 per cent since Beth first appeared on our
screens. A second vital element has been the creation of the AlphaZero chess-playing engine, with its amazing abilities, including an almost vertical learning curve, resulting in the
strongest chess-playing entity the world has ever seen. The science has primarily been the work of Demis Hassabis, rewarded with the CBE for his efforts, and a $400 million sale to Google of
his company, Deep Mind. The achievements of Demis, and the brilliantly paradoxical strategies and tactics of AlphaZero, were likewise already covered in my column “Arise Sir Demis” The
games were contested against the most powerful available commercial chess programme, called Stockfish — itself many times stronger than the IBM Deep Blue programme which defeated Garry
Kasparov in 1997. The 1993 World Title Challenger, the British Grandmaster Nigel Short, described the AlphaZero games as being of such beauty that he felt he was in the presence of God.
Demis himself explained that his self-taught programme, which had already mastered the quasi-infinite complexities of the oriental games of Shogi (Japanese Chess) and Go, was the key to
understanding intelligence. This week I turn to the third most decisive development of the past ten years, the meteoric rise and lasting domination of the Norwegian World Chess Champion,
Magnus Carlsen. Carlsen is the culmination of a line of champions which stretches back into the 18th century, yet he is also a uniquely talented representative of the modern era. Magnus has
attained the highest ever chess rating ever recorded, outclassing even the mighty Garry Kasparov. Magnus wins virtually every competition which he enters, and has adapted seamlessly to the
current coronavirus crisis, which has obliged chess to migrate online to a huge extent. Magnus has prudently avoided the damage to his reputation occasioned by suffering defeats against
chess computers, a fate which overtook both Garry Kasparov and Vladimir Kramnik. Finally, Magnus has leveraged all the opportunities afforded by his title of World Chess Champion, adapting
perfectly to the modern environment, even to the extent of floating his online chess company, Play Magnus, for $85 million dollars, while simultaneously earning a fortune as a trendy
ambassador for the fashion line G-Star Raw, often appearing alongside Hollywood superstar, Liv Tyler. The title of World Chess Champion dates to no later than 1886, when Wilhelm Steinitz
defeated Johannes Zukertort in a gladiatorial contest, specifically designed to resolve the question of who was the strongest player in the world after Paul Morphy’s death in 1884, though
Steinitz had claimed that status since 1866. Less clear is whether the great predecessors of Steinitz also merited that proud title. Part of the difficulty of authentication is lack of
evidence of important contests and gaps in the record. The story begins in the 18th century, when the French chess expert François-André Danican Philidor won an important match in 1747
against the erudite Philip Stamma, translator of oriental languages to the court of King George II. Sadly, none of those games has survived. Following Philidor, who died in 1795, there comes
a hiatus, until the brief flourishing of La Bourdonnais during the 1830’s. After this, there is a further gap in the record until the 1840s, when French heir to the Philidor tradition,
Saint-Amant, was overthrown in Paris, the epicentre of European chess life at that time, by the English champion Howard Staunton. Fortunately, from Staunton onwards, there is a relatively
unbroken line of succession, with each champion being dethroned by the next in line. The exceptions are the trinity of Morphy, Fischer (who simply downed tools), and Alekhine who died in
office, thus permanently preserving their hallowed nimbus of invincibility. Also worthy of mention are various champions who have won the FIDÉ title (FIDÉ is the International Chess
Federation, the governing body of chess competitions), without gaining universal recognition from the global chess community. These include Max Euwe, Efim Bogolyubov, Vesselin Topalov and
Viswanathan Anand. A common outcome is that such FIDÉ champions have gone on to contest matches against the universally recognised laureate, and in two such cases (Euwe and Anand) have
emerged victorious to become undisputed champions themselves. The most recent world championship match, staged in London 2018, was run entirely under the auspices of FIDÉ, the authority of
which is now universally accepted under the reliable new Presidency of Russian Arkady Dvorkovich, and his English Vice President, Nigel Short. The first great player who could be considered
a World Champion was Philidor, who dominated the chess scene of his day. The term “World Champion” was not used when describing him, with commentators preferring to employ such metaphors as
“wielding the sceptre”. There is also the problem that very few of Philidor’s games on level terms have survived, his reputation largely being constructed on his blindfold simultaneous
displays, which so electrified London chess enthusiasts. Philidor was able to conduct three games blindfold at once, a feat that led to a letter of admonishment from the French
encyclopaedist, Denis Diderot, warning Philidor that such exploits might lead to brain damage. It is interesting to note that Philidor was the first great apostle of pawn power in chess.
According to Philidor, pawns determined the structure of the game, they were in fact “the soul of chess” not mere cannon fodder, whose sole task was to make way for the power of the pieces.
In this respect his chess teachings paralleled the rise of the masses embodied in the French Revolution of 1789. France was the dominant chess nation at the turn of the 18th and 19th
centuries, and the next player after Philidor who could be considered an early world champion was the 19th-century French master Louis-Charles Mahé de La Bourdonnais. La Bourdonnais’ claim
to fame rests primarily on his mammoth series of matches against Alexander McDonnell, contested in London in 1834. This represented the finest corpus of games ever created up to that time
and numerous generations of chess devotees learned their basic chess strategies and tactics from these ingenious and well contested battles. Both protagonists appear to have become mentally
exhausted by their efforts and died shortly after their epic series. In the panoply of proto-champions, Howard Staunton, the Victorian polymath, Shakespearean scholar, and assiduous
chronicler of the English schools system, is the only English player who could legitimately be considered as world champion. In a series of matches between 1843 and 1846, Staunton defeated
the French master Pierre Charles Fournier de Saint-Amant, followed closely by victories against the German master Bernhard Horwitz and Daniel Harrwitz, originally from Poland. Staunton’s
match against Saint-Amant was the first contest at the highest level that closely resembled the template for modern World Championship competitions. The chess pieces in regular use for
important competitions, including the 2018 London contest between Carlsen and his challenger, Fabiano Caruana, are named the Staunton pattern, after Howard Staunton. The German master Adolf
Anderssen seized the sceptre from Howard Staunton when he decisively defeated the English champion in the very first international tournament in London 1851. Anderssen was one of that select
group, which includes Mikhail Botvinnik and Viswanathan Anand, who initially assumed the accolade of supreme chess master from a tournament rather than a match. The London event was in fact
put together by Staunton, who thereby created a perfect pretext for losing out to Anderssen in their knockout match, it being notoriously difficult to compete in an event, whilst
simultaneously organising it. Anderssen can claim to be one of the supreme tacticians of all time. Three of his wins are of imperishable beauty. On their own they would justify anyone’s
devotion to chess. They are his Immortal Game against Kieseritsky (played at Simpsons-in-the-Strand, not the tournament) of London, 1851; his Evergreen game against the pseudonymous Dufresne
(in reality the German player E. S. Freund) of Berlin 1856, and his majestic sacrificial masterpiece against Zukertort of Breslau 1869. Paul Morphy was the American meteor who took the
world by storm over the two momentous, whirlwind years of 1857 and 1858. His grand tour of Europe culminated in a match victory against Adolf Anderssen, after which Morphy was universally
acknowledged as the world’s greatest player. Thereafter Morphy issued a challenge to anyone in the world to take him on at odds (Morphy starting the game with a pawn handicap) but no one
accepted. At this point the meteor had burnt itself out and Morphy, tragically, retired from chess, a curious forerunner of Bobby Fischer’s behaviour following his famous 1972 World
Championship victory against Boris Spassky. Morphy understood the principles of chess better than anyone who came before him. Anderssen’s tactical brilliance sprang like Athene from the head
of Zeus, without necessarily having grown from regular organic pre-conditions. Morphy, on the other hand, constructed his positions along sound strategic and positional lines, before
unleashing his devastating arsenal of tactical weaponry. On Morphy’s retirement, Anderssen resumed the position of world leadership which had belonged so fleetingly to the first great genius
of American chess. Anderssen lost a match in 1866 to Wilhelm Steinitz, the first player who could definitively be described as an official World Champion. The previous wielders of the
sceptre, Philidor, La Bourdonnais, Staunton, Anderssen and Morphy, were all, at the time, acknowledged as the leading chess practitioner of their day, but it is less clear that the title
“world champion” had been universally accepted. Steinitz, on the other hand, insisted on this description and he himself dated his tenure from his 1866 match victory, also in London, against
Anderssen. Steinitz’s pre-eminence was confirmed 20 years later when he demolished Johannes Zukertort in their 1886 match in the US, which was specifically described as a World Championship
contest. Thus far I have described the early years of the World Championship and now I return to Magnus Carlsen’s defence of his title, which he has held since 2013. The 2018 Championship
match in London was fought out between the Norwegian Magnus Carlsen, the highest ever rated chess grandmaster, and the previously unexpected challenger, Fabiano Caruana, who had been
considered somewhat vulnerable and fragile. Caruana originated from Italy but became an American citizen. With energy and vigour, he decimated his rivals among the top ten Grandmasters. In
order to qualify, the winner had to exhibit strength, agility, power, alertness, incredible persistence, stamina, and the power of the “will to win”. From this shark pool, Fabiano became the
number one contender, and number two ranked player in the world. Throughout all the complications of selecting the challenger to the World Chess Champion, the pairing was ideal: a battle
between the two best in the world fighting for the world title. The implication is that chess at this exalted level is a sport, both mental _and _physical – an appropriately termed Mind
Sport. As the Championship was in process a wonderful flash of confirmatory news emerged from the media: Magnus Carlsen was nominated, in Norway, to win the Sports Personality of the Year.
This Championship had emerged as a real_ _Battle of the Titans. Magnus had now won four world title bouts, twice versus Anand and once each against Karjakin and Caruana. The latter two
ended with the tie-breaks, at which Magnus excels. On this occasion, Magnus praised Fabiano, as being his most difficult opponent of the three. Magnus has secured his tenure as World
Champion until at least 2021. He will then have held the title for 8 years thus moves into an equal category of championship longevity with such greats as Capablanca, Petrosian, Kramnik and
Anand, ahead of Euwe, Smyslov, Tal, Spassky and Fischer. Only Steinitz, Lasker, Alekhine, Botvinnik, Karpov and Kasparov held the title for significantly longer periods. In the modern world,
where everything has speeded up, can Carlsen go on to outperform all these titans? If his ambition had seemed to wane during the classical phase of the London contest, it certainly flared
up, as Carlsen’s predator instincts flashed on for the tiebreak. Like the Terminator, Magnus would be back. In every boxing match and in every tennis set, each minute encapsulates a real
battle. Every move in chess is the same. The draws were magnificent mini-battles in every one of the often 65+ moves over the duration of as much as six hours of non-stop sport. And then it
came down to speed. Only in the speed play-off did Carlsen finally overcome the onslaught of Caruana, with the World Champion taking the accelerated shoot out by three wins to zero. I have
tried to distil the quintessential elements of Magnus’ success. Remember that, in Latin “Magnus” was a title meaning “Great”, as in Alexander Magnus (Alexander the Great), or Pompeius Magnus
(Pompey the Great), Julius Caesar’s senatorial rival, as noted in Shakespeare’s _Julius Caesar_, Act I, Scene One: “_You blocks, you stones, you worse than senseless things!_ _O you hard
hearts, you cruel men of Rome._ _Knew you not Pompey? Many a time and oft _ _Have you climb’d up to walks and battlements,_ _To tow’rs and windows, yea, to chimney tops,_ _Your infants in
your arms, and there have sat_ _The live long day, with patient expectation. _ _To see Great Pompey pass the streets of Rome_.” I have reduced the formula to seven memorable “M” principles
for Magnus: Motivation Mobilisation Momentum Material Masquerade Massacre Mate And this week’s game exemplifies these key ingredients of a Magnus triumph. The game was the decisive win which
clinched Magnus’ World Title defence against the former World Champion, The Tiger of Madras: Viswanathan Anand. A MESSAGE FROM THEARTICLE _We are the only publication that’s committed to
covering every angle. We have an important contribution to make, one that’s needed now more than ever, and we need your help to continue publishing throughout the pandemic. So please, make a
donation._
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