SuperMario wrote:
I watched the Netflix documentary on the young chess prodigy on Saturday. He's still young and has to stay on top a bit longer, but I think he might be the best chess player ever. The way he dismantled Anand twice is impressive.
Fischer was a genius with chess, and if he hadn't gone insane during his peak, I would have liked to have seen what he could have done throughout a longer career. Kasparov usually gets credit as the best, and he may be. But Carlsen's intuition is unbelievable.
Fischer might have been eccentric and had eccentric views, but he was not insane like the media would have you believe. Was he paranoid? Yes. Listen to his whole press conference after he landed in Iceland, where he stayed until the end of his life. He destroyed those reporters that had hostile questions toward him, like that asswipe, Jeremy Schaap. The clip they always play of that interview was of Schaap saying Fisher didn't have a sane bone in his body, yet they always omit how Fischer killed him with his prior answers.
No question about it that Carlsen is very, very good. He beat former World Champion, Karpov, when he was only 13 in 2004. In the same tournament, he drew against Kasparov. The one player Carlsen has trouble with, though, is Ukranian GM Vassily Ivanchuk. Ivanchuk has beaten Kasparov, too.
I don't think anyone will ever eclipse Fischer's record en route to becoming world champion. He won 20 straight, beating Taimanov 6-0 and then Bent Larsen 6-0, before finally losing a game to Petrosian. That feat is completely unheard of at the highest levels of chess.