By Colby Cosh on 7.1.04 @ 12:04AM
When Bobby Fischer went off to war to defeat the Soviets.
Bobby Fischer Goes to War: How the Soviets Lost the
Most Extraordinary Chess Match of All Time, by David Edmonds
and John Eidinow (Ecco, 342 pages, $24.95)
Bobby Fischer might not have been the strongest chessplayer of the
20th century, but he is the gold standard. If you want to prove
that Capablanca or Tal or Petrosian was the best, Fischer is the
comparison you try on first. When a young player crushes an older
hero convincingly, the game everyone looks to is Byrne-Fischer
1956, a chaotic masterpiece won by Fischer at 13.
At 15 Fischer became history's youngest grandmaster. Later
prodigies have moved the bar lower, by inches, but none has
emulated Fischer's further rise to the top. Any devastating rout in
match play, now not much seen, would undoubtedly be measured
against Fischer's 6-0 annihilations of Mark Taimanov and Bent
Larsen in the 1970 Candidates playdowns. These victories are
chess's analogue to Wilt Chamberlain's 100-point night, or Wayne
Gretzky's 50 goals in 39 games: They represent the
incomparable.
Fischer emerged on the scene, accomplished things no other human
has, captured the wider world's imagination for a few precious
months -- and, in essence, vanished, spurning competitive chess to
travel the world in search of privacy and pretty girls. Today he
lives in Japan, where go and shogi are preferred
to the Indo-European game. It is the only place where Bobby Fischer
isn't BOBBY FISCHER. The new book Bobby Fischer Goes to
War recounts the apotheosis and terminus of Fischer's chess
career -- his decisive victory in the 1972 World Championship
against the Russian Boris Spassky.
Chess was an unlikely venue for a '70s sporting showdown between
bear and eagle. Russians had held the World Championship
continuously since 1937. Soviet Man had taken over in 1948, when
Mikhail Botvinnik won a tournament to succeed the late champion,
the alcoholic émigré Alexander Alekhine.
By then, chess dominance had become a Soviet obsession, a symbol
of communism's moral strength. Politically orthodox top players,
particularly Botvinnik, enjoyed state funding and help from teams
of talented assistants. Soviet-bloc players visibly tended to agree
to quick draws with one another in major tournaments, and the
occasional game may have been thrown to favorites of officialdom.
It seemed unlikely that any foreign player could overcome such
coordination and passion, and less likely still that he would be an
American.
BUT A PRETERNATURAL TALENT for pure abstract thinking can appear
anywhere. Young New Yorker Bobby Fischer started out as just
another smart youngster hanging out at the Marshall Chess Club. But
in 1956 he suddenly seems to have intuited some deep secret at the
game's heart: in his own words, he "just got good." Within two
years he was the U.S. champion.
Always neurotic and anti-social, Fischer spent the '60s
eternally frustrated at earning so little money for being a star in
a sport played worldwide. The tacit Russian cooperation in skewing
tournament outcomes infuriated him; although he finished as low as
second only twice between 1962 and 1972, he felt he was being
robbed. A red-diaper baby whose mother had trained as a nurse in
Moscow, Fischer conceived an enduring, venomous hatred for Russians
and Soviets in general.
Fischer's tournament play was always characterized by tantrums,
and in 1972, when his title shot came along, they reached the point
of absurdity. With the chess world agog over a credible challenge
to Soviet supremacy, he refused to fly to Reykjavik until a British
businessman doubled the $125,000 purse and dared him to turn up. On
arriving, Fischer quarreled about the chairs provided for the
competitors, whined about the lighting and the composition of the
chessboard custom-built for the match, had the games transplanted
behind a curtain on the stage of the Laugardalshoell arena, and
tried to ban "noisy" cameras whose footage was necessary to recoup
the staggering costs of the exhibition.
After losing the first game on an embarrassing error, he refused
to show up for the second on account of the imagined distractions.
His clock was started, and after an hour he was forfeited. Down
2-0, he was widely written off; it seemed doubtful he would return
to play at all. But once again, the intolerable thought that he
might go down in history as a coward brought Fischer back to the
board, where he won Game Three and never looked back.
Fischer's antics were surely no mere tactic; he was to prove
convincingly over time that he really was nuts. In 1982 he
published a pamphlet with the incomparable title "I Was Tortured in
the Pasadena Jailhouse!" Today he gives occasional, and invariably
demented, radio interviews in Asia. Before the sun had set on
September 11, 2001, in the Western hemisphere, he was on the
Filipino airwaves crowing, "I applaud the act... F -- k the U.S. I
want to see the U.S. wiped out."
But by Game Three, his opponent had been driven nearly mad
himself by the tension Fischer had created. Spassky, one of the
greatest postwar Soviet players, was never the same after
Reykjavik. Fischer, for his part, refused to defend his title. For
the history of chess, 1972 will forever be an unmistakable border
between eras.
EDMONDS AND EIDONOW'S BOOK tells the story well, though one finds
oneself a little nostalgic for Bobby Fischer vs. The Rest of
the World, an uproarious (and out-of-print) first-hand account
issued in 1975 by Brad Darrach. Darrach, sent to cover the
championship by Life magazine, became an informal member
of Fischer's team, penning tales of the challenger's
absent-mindedness, misanthropy, and social ineptitude. His work of
New Journalism remains the best extant psychological portrait of
Fischer. What the new book supplies -- along with a more detached,
scholarly attitude -- is our first detailed view of the struggles
of Spassky, the squabbles within his own team, and the Soviet
documentation on the match.
There is nothing, however, that dramatically alters the former
consensus. Soviet participants (including Spassky) are sticking
mostly to their old and self-serving stories, and there's no
indication that the sports commissars ever knew anything beyond the
obvious -- namely, that Fischer had unparalleled ability to throw
an opponent off, and that Spassky's gentlemanly passivity would
probably make it hard for him to overcome Fischer's genius.
One senses that this book was undertaken in the hope of a
post-Cold War archival bounty of revisionism. It has ended up as a
competent, somewhat perfunctory recounting of events, rendered in
the same flat tones as most multi-author books. But it is also the
most thorough tome yet on a fascinating, tragic subject.
topics:
Business, Sports, Books, Russia, Communism