Vishy Anand: I found Bobby Fischer surprisingly normal and calm
The world chess champion on analysing with the legendary American, being a new dad and his love of Monty Python
Sean Ingle
Thursday 1 December 2011 19.17 EST

How does it feel to be back for the London Chess Classic? It’s excellent. I enjoy this tournament immensely. It’s a great showcase for chess in Britain and it has the worthy aim of building chess in schools too.

So when enthusiastic kids ask how they can become chess masters, what do you tell them? Just keep playing often. Concepts fall into place only when you get them on the board. It’s a bit like learning a language; it’s nice to read a book, but only when you speak to someone does it all start to fall into place.

When you are preparing for major tournaments like London how many hours a day do you devote to getting ready? As much as it takes – up to 10 hours if needed – plus another two or three hours during the tournament.

And how do you prepare physically? Mostly by running and doing weights. Mainly it’s to relieve yourself of tension, and to sleep soundly.

It sounds a strange question to ask a world chess champion, but how much can you bench? I don’t bench press but I use machines to work 10-12 muscle groups. Biceps, triceps, a few things for the back, calves, shoulders and so on — and then I’ll go on the running machine, cross-trainer or mountain climber.

The Soviet world champion Mikhail Botvinnik used to get training partners to deliberately blow smoke in his face to prepare for opponents who may try to unsettle him. Is there anything you do to prepare for psychological tricks or gamesmanship? Not really, but when smoking was allowed I really hated it. Thankfully it’s been banned for 20 years or so now.

Which opponent pushed those boundaries most? [Long pause] Well, I had very difficult matches with [Gata] Kamsky and Garry Kasparov in the 1990s. They were psychologically intense, probably because I was still inexperienced.

So what was it like facing a peak Kasparov glaring at you? Well, it’s annoying – because first of all he makes good moves and on top of that there’s all the other pressure he inflicts too. But what made Kasparov dangerous was his moves. If he was making faces and then played bad moves we would have just laughed at him. These days, I think you can over-estimate the psychological stuff.

How good are you at picking up on your opponents’ ‘tells’? It’s not like I can read their minds completely but I can usually work out in which direction their thoughts are heading. Often their breathing is a tell-tale sign. Sometimes an opponent stops breathing and you realise something drastic has happened and they are trying not to let on. Or they go quiet, or they get fidgety. After a while you pick these things up and become more alert to them.

The BBC are currently showing the documentary Bobby Fischer, Genius and Madman. You met Fischer in 2006, a couple of years before he died. What was he like? I found him surprisingly normal. Well, at least not very tense. He seemed to be relieved to be in the company of chess players. He was calm in that sense. He was also a bit worried about people following him, so the paranoia never really went away. But I am really happy I got the chance to meet him before he died in 2008. It was weird as well because I kept having to remind myself that this was Bobby Fischer sitting in front of me!

Were you tempted to whip out a pocket chessboard and challenge him to a quick blitz game? No, because he whipped out his pocket chess set first and we started to analyse some recent games I’d played.

Really? Yes, I showed him some of my games from Wijk aan Zee and tried to share some interesting developments. He was sort of able to follow everything – he hadn’t lost his sharpness for chess – but his methods were a bit dated. In that sense he had fallen behind.

How do you mean? Well, he had some suggestions, and he was sort of in the ball park … but when I would tell him that the computer says white is winning here, for me that was a sign to move on – but for him it was a starting point to argue with me! [Laughs]. I found it difficult to say to him ‘No, no, no – these computers are really strong. You shouldn’t be arguing with them!”‘

If you could go back in time, which world champion would you have most liked to have faced at their peak? Mikhail Tal or Bobby Fischer. How would I have got on? Well, it depends whether the time machine drops me back in 1960 or 1972 or it puts Tal and Fischer in 2011. It would make a big difference.

OK, on to the important questions. You’re a Monty Python fan, right? Very much so.

Do you have a favourite sketch? I have a few. Of course there’s the Parrot sketch, and Michelangelo and the Pope. And there’s one where some Nazis are in an English hotel. That’s quite funny as well.

And does your love of Python extend to Fawlty Towers and the Life of Brian? Absolutely. I’ve watched all of them. With Fawlty Towers I can pretty much tell you episodes off by heart …

Really? Yes, afraid so. I also watched the whole of the Yes Minister series, and last year I went to the theatre production, which was updated to take in the financial crisis, people trafficking and so on.

Are you a cricket fan? I’m not a big one. But in India you get to watch it every day anyway.

What’s the last album you bought? Coldplay’s Mylo Xyloto. I’m just about getting used to it. I like U2 as well.

And the last book you read? One on Steve Jobs that was published after his death.

Right, time for some crowdsourced questions via Twitter. Benonix asks whether it’s inevitable that Grandmasters decline after 40 – and also how long do you reckon you have left at the top? Grandmasters decline with age. That’s a given. There is nothing special about the age of 40, but age eventually takes its toll. That much is clear. Beyond that it’s about how long you can put off the effects and compensate for them. Mistakes will crop in but you try to compensate for them with experience and hard work.

Figgmeister tweets: I’d love to know what you made of Carlsen doing the modelling gig. Is that OK for a chess master? Sure. I thought it was brilliant. And definitely it improved the image of chess.

Do you read chess books or do you just spend your time mining databases? I do. Right now I’m reading the best games of my next World Championship opponent, Boris Gelfand. He will be a very difficult opponent because he’s so experienced.

You’re a newish father. How is that experience? [With genuine emotion] It’s amazing! For the first time I begin to understand my parents as well. It’s an experience that really changes your life. I’m having a blast. He’s eight months now and he’s just started to stand up and babble a bit too.

Have there been times when you’ve been changing nappies in between sessions on Rybka? Yeah, I did my bit of waking up at 2am but generally my wife has been doing most of the hard work …

Bollywood or Hollywood? I’m more into Hollywood films.

Who or what would you put in Room 101? Excuse me? [Small Talk goes on a long, rambling explanation detailing the finer points of the concept]. Ah, OK. Let’s say traffic. And corruption in India, which is a big problem.

Speaking of India, you were back there last year for a dinner with Barack Obama. How was that? Well, I wasn’t sitting at his table so I spoke to him for only a few minutes.

Did you talk chess or US foreign policy? [Laughs] There wasn’t time! We just made small talk …

Well, we know all about that Vishy. Thanks for your time, and good luck in London. Thanks Small Talk. It’s been a pleasure.

Source: http://www.guardian.co.uk

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