Larry Evans on Chess: Colossal egos
June 14, 2009

“Chess is vanity,” observed former world champion Alexander Alekhine.

Indeed, humility is a rare affliction among experts.

Efim Bogoljubov was a born optimist unperturbed by losses, and Alekhine used him as a punching bag in two title matches while ducking his arch rival, Jose Capablanca. (Capa refused to pose with a film star, saying, “Why should I give her publicity?”)

In his heyday, Bogoljubov boasted, “When I am white, I win because I have the first move. When I am black, I win because I am Bogoljubov.” He claimed that Alekhine hypnotized him and blithely explained away his steady losses to the new generation: “The young demons have read my book. Now I have no chance against them.”

Wilhelm Steinitz and Johannes Zukertort were once at a dinner where a toast was proposed to the world champion. They both rose!

Ignatz Kolisch, a penniless chess pro, abandoned the game for banking, made his fortune and then became a great patron of chess in the 19th century. He missed a chance for a match with Paul Morphy because the American refused to play for a stake and Kolisch, as a “professional,” refused to play without one.

Dr. Siegbert Tarrasch clicked his heels and bowed curtly before his title match in Germany with Emanuel Lasker in 1908. “To you, Herr Lasker, I have only three words: check and mate.” Tarrasch blamed his lopsided defeat on the fact that he was sensitive to the sea even though Germany was his homeland and Dusseldorf was some 170 miles from the coast.

Amos Burn, a veteran British master, observed at the end of a long career that he never had the satisfaction of beating a perfectly healthy opponent.

Bobby Fischer, sick and tired of hearing excuses, said: “People have been playing against me below their strength for 15 years.” On a TV talk show, Fischer confessed that his greatest thrill came from “crushing the opponent’s ego” — an ambitious but impossible undertaking.

Source: http://www.sun-sentinel.com/

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