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Bobby Fischer
Fischer 
The Championship Season: Bobby Fischer in 1972.  

Number of games in database: 1,101
Years covered: 1953 to 1992
Last FIDE rating: 2780
Highest rating achieved in database: 2785
Overall record: +432 -87 =248 (72.5%)*
   * Overall winning percentage = (wins+draws/2) / total games in the database. 334 exhibition games, blitz/rapid, odds games, etc. are excluded from this statistic.

MOST PLAYED OPENINGS
With the White pieces:
 Sicilian (202) 
    B90 B32 B88 B44 B77
 Ruy Lopez (128) 
    C92 C69 C95 C98 C97
 French Defense (80) 
    C19 C18 C11 C16 C10
 Ruy Lopez, Closed (79) 
    C92 C95 C98 C97 C89
 Caro-Kann (52) 
    B11 B10 B18 B13 B14
 French Winawer (47) 
    C19 C18 C16 C15 C17
With the Black pieces:
 Sicilian (126) 
    B92 B99 B90 B97 B93
 King's Indian (117) 
    E80 E62 E97 E60 E67
 Sicilian Najdorf (83) 
    B92 B99 B90 B97 B93
 Nimzo Indian (23) 
    E45 E46 E40 E43 E34
 Grunfeld (20) 
    D86 D79 D98 D80 D85
 English (18) 
    A16 A15 A10 A19
Repertoire Explorer

NOTABLE GAMES: [what is this?]
   D Byrne vs Fischer, 1956 0-1
   R Byrne vs Fischer, 1963 0-1
   Fischer vs Spassky, 1972 1-0
   Fischer vs Benko, 1963 1-0
   Fischer vs Myagmarsuren, 1967 1-0
   Fischer vs Fine, 1963 1-0
   Fischer vs Petrosian, 1971 1-0
   Letelier vs Fischer, 1960 0-1
   Fischer vs Tal, 1961 1-0
   Fischer vs Panno, 1970 1-0

WORLD CHAMPIONSHIPS: [what is this?]
   Spassky - Fischer World Championship Match (1972)

NOTABLE TOURNAMENTS: [what is this?]
   Stockholm Interzonal (1962)
   US Championship 1963/64 (1963)
   Havana Olympiad Final-A (1966)
   Solidarity Tournament (1967)
   Rovinj / Zagreb (1970)
   Palma de Mallorca Interzonal (1970)
   Vinkovci (1968)
   Buenos Aires (1970)
   Netanya (1968)
   Fischer - Spassky (1992)
   Mar del Plata (1960)
   Bled (1961)
   Zuerich (1959)
   Havana (1965)
   Bled-Zagreb-Belgrade Candidates (1959)

GAME COLLECTIONS: [what is this?]
   -ER RJF by fredthebear
   1964 Fischer simul exhibition tour by gauer
   Fischer vs The Russians by wanabe2000
   Match Fischer! by dwinco
   Match Fischer! by amadeus
   Bobby Fischer: Selected Games from 1955-1992 by rpn4
   Bobby Fischer: Selected Games from 1955-1992 by rpn4
   Bobby Fischer: Selected Games from 1955-1992 by Sergio X Garcia
   Bobby Fischer: Selected Games from 1955-1992 by igiene
   Bobby Fischer: Selected Games from 1955-1992 by wanabe2000
   Bobby Fischer: Selected Games from 1955-1992 by fernando.laroca
   0ZeR0's Favorite Games Volume 31 by 0ZeR0
   Bjelica_125 by Gottschalk
   book: Russians versus Fischer by Baby Hawk

GAMES ANNOTATED BY FISCHER: [what is this?]
   Petrosian vs Pachman, 1961
   Unzicker vs Fischer, 1962
   Fischer vs Bolbochan, 1962
   Korchnoi vs Fischer, 1970
   Zukertort vs Steinitz, 1886
   >> 16 GAMES ANNOTATED BY FISCHER


Search Sacrifice Explorer for Bobby Fischer
Search Google for Bobby Fischer

BOBBY FISCHER
(born Mar-09-1943, died Jan-17-2008, 64 years old) United States of America (federation/nationality Iceland)

[what is this?]

Robert James ("Bobby") Fischer was a chess prodigy born on March 9, 1943 in Chicago.

At 13, he won the stunning brilliancy D Byrne vs Fischer, 1956, which Hans Kmoch christened "The Game of the Century." At 14, he won the United States Championship (1957/58), making him the youngest U.S. Champion ever.

Fischer's victory qualified him for the Portoroz Interzonal (1958). He tied for 5th-6th, which sufficed to advance him to the Candidates Tournament to decide the challenger to World Champion Mikhail Botvinnik. This made the 15-year-old Fischer the youngest candidate for the World Championship. It also made him the youngest grandmaster ever - a record that stood until Judit Polgar broke it in 1991. At the Bled-Zagreb-Belgrade Candidates (1959), Fischer finished fifth out of eight, the top non-Soviet player.

Fischer won the US Championship all eight times he played, in each case by at least a point. In the US Championship (1963/64) he achieved the only perfect score (11-0) in the history of the tournament.

Fischer won the Stockholm Interzonal (1962) 2½ points ahead of Efim Geller and Tigran Petrosian. This made him a favorite to win the Curacao Candidates (1962), but he only finished fourth, behind Petrosian, Geller, and Paul Keres. In a famous article in Sports Illustrated magazine, The Russians Have Fixed World Chess, he accused the Soviets of cheating: Petrosian, Geller, and Keres had drawn all 12 of the games among themselves at Curacao, most of them quickly.

Because of this, Fischer refused to play in the next Candidates cycle. He did play in the Sousse Interzonal (1967), but left it while leading, because of a scheduling dispute occasioned by Fischer's refusal to play on Saturday, his Sabbath.

He won the Palma de Mallorca Interzonal (1970) by a record 3½ points. The following year, he shocked the chess world by sweeping the Fischer - Taimanov Candidates Quarterfinal (1971) and Fischer - Larsen Candidates Semifinal (1971) by identical 6-0 scores, the only perfect scores in the history of the Candidates Matches.

Fischer also won the first game of the Fischer - Petrosian Candidates Final (1971) against former World Champion Tigran Petrosian, giving him a modern record of 20 consecutive wins at the highest level of competition. He won the match by 6½-2½ to advance to the World Championship match against reigning champion Boris Spassky. This also gave him a FIDE rating of 2785, making him at that time the highest-rated player in history.

In Reykjavik, he won the Spassky - Fischer World Championship Match (1972) by 12½-8½ to become the 11th World Chess Champion. In 1975, Fischer forfeited his title after FIDE refused to meet his conditions for a World Championship match with Anatoly Karpov. He then virtually disappeared from the public eye for nearly 20 years.

After ending his competitive career, he proposed a new variant of chess and a modified chess timing system. His idea of adding a time increment after each move is now standard, and his variant "Fischerandom" (or "Chess960") is gaining in popularity.(2)

Fischer resurfaced in 1992 to play a match against his old rival Spassky in Yugoslavia. Fischer won Fischer - Spassky (1992) 10-5 with 15 draws. The United States considered that Fischer, in playing this match in Yugoslavia, violated U.S. Treasury Department regulations that forbade transacting business with Yugoslavia. Fischer evaded authorities for twelve years until July 13, 2004, when he was arrested in Japan. On March 22, 2005, he was granted Icelandic citizenship and finally freed from Japan. He died of renal failure in Iceland on January 17, 2008 at the age of 64. Gravestone photo: http://www.sjakkfantomet.no/wp-cont....

Fischer's anthology, My 60 Memorable Games, was published in 1969. It has been described as a "classic of objective and painstaking analysis,"1 and is regarded as one of the greats of chess literature.

(1) Hooper & Whyld. The Oxford Companion to Chess. 1992

(2) Wikipedia article: Bobby Fischer

(3) User: jessicafischerqueen 's YouTube documentary of Fischer http://www.youtube.com/playlist?lis...

Last updated: 2025-03-27 21:53:15

Try our new games table.

 page 1 of 45; games 1-25 of 1,101  PGN Download
Game  ResultMoves YearEvent/LocaleOpening
1. D Mayers vs Fischer 1-0171953Blitz gameC33 King's Gambit Accepted
2. J Altusky vs Fischer 0-181954Offhand gameC71 Ruy Lopez
3. Fischer vs J Altusky 1-0121954Offhand gameE90 King's Indian
4. A W Conger vs Fischer 1-0121955corrE70 King's Indian
5. Fischer vs S Greene ½-½111955US Amateur ChB77 Sicilian, Dragon, Yugoslav Attack
6. A Humphrey vs Fischer ½-½331955US Amateur ChE61 King's Indian
7. Fischer vs K Warner 0-1281955Lincoln ch-US jrB58 Sicilian
8. W Whisler vs Fischer ½-½251955Lincoln ch-US jrE80 King's Indian, Samisch Variation
9. J Thomason vs Fischer 0-1231955Lincoln ch-US jrE90 King's Indian
10. Fischer vs D Ames ½-½281955Lincoln ch-US jrC47 Four Knights
11. Fischer vs V Pupols 0-1441955Lincoln ch-US jrC40 King's Knight Opening
12. Fischer vs F Saksena 1-0221955Lincoln ch-US jrC53 Giuoco Piano
13. Fischer vs M Pavey 0-1521956Manhattan CC chA07 King's Indian Attack
14. J Tamargo vs Fischer 0-1401956Manhattan CC chB22 Sicilian, Alapin
15. A Turner vs Fischer 1-0531956Manhattan Chess Club Semifinal BE68 King's Indian, Fianchetto, Classical Variation, 8.e4
16. Fischer vs K Vine ½-½361956Manhattan Chess Club Semifinal BB32 Sicilian
17. Fischer vs S Baron 1-0531956Manhattan Chess Club Semifinal BC98 Ruy Lopez, Closed, Chigorin
18. Pat Smith vs Fischer 0-1231956Casual gameC48 Four Knights
19. Fischer vs I Spector 1-0351956Casual gameB95 Sicilian, Najdorf, 6...e6
20. J R Florido vs Fischer 0-1261956Capablanca CC - Log Cabin mC50 Giuoco Piano
21. Fischer vs J A Casado ½-½481956Simul, 12bB32 Sicilian
22. A Jenkins vs Fischer 0-1181956North Carolina - Log Cabin CC mB20 Sicilian
23. Fischer vs J Fermoselle-Bacardi Sr 1-0281956US Amateur chA04 Reti Opening
24. Fischer vs E Nash 0-1511956US Amateur chA05 Reti Opening
25. R Riegler vs Fischer 0-1341956US Amateur chB20 Sicilian
 page 1 of 45; games 1-25 of 1,101  PGN Download
  REFINE SEARCH:   White wins (1-0) | Black wins (0-1) | Draws (1/2-1/2) | Fischer wins | Fischer loses  

Kibitzer's Corner
< Earlier Kibitzing  · PAGE 102 OF 160 ·  Later Kibitzing>
Oct-25-19  Helios727: In 1965 the WC candidates played knockout matches as Bobby had demanded. So why did he not play in the 1964 interzonal so he could be part of the 1965 candidates cycle? Had FIDE not yet given in at that time?
Oct-25-19  Olavi: <Helios> He cancelled his participation just days before the tournament.
Oct-25-19  Helios727: Okay, but does anyone know why?
Oct-26-19
Premium Chessgames Member
  AylerKupp: <Helios727> This article discusses some possibilities: https://www.chess.com/blog/introubl.... But of course, we will never really know.
Oct-26-19
Premium Chessgames Member
  Sally Simpson: ***

Hi Aylerkupp,

We will never know the Fischer story:

From someone who actually met and spent some time with him.

"I threw most of what I’d ever read about Bobby out of my head. Sheer garbage. Bobby is the most misunderstood, misquoted celebrity walking the face of the earth’.

Yasser Seirawan: (page 291 'No Regrets' Fischer v Spassky 1992, by Seirawan and Stefanovic)

***

Oct-26-19
Premium Chessgames Member
  keypusher: < cunctatorg: About "Fischer-boom"!! Quentin Tarantino's recent (masterpiece) movie "Once upon a time ... in Hollywood" makes a short -but clear- reference to "Fischer-boom", presenting a 1969 tv-series, "3 in the Attic" where the three -female- leading actresses are gathered around a chessboard at the series' introductory shot. Brand Pitt's character Cliff Booth watches an episode of this series at the evening of February 8th 1969 in his trailer.

Emilio Estevez's great 2006 "Bobby" movie (starring Harry Bellafonte, Laurence Fishburne, ANTHONY HOPKINS, Sharon Stone, Martin Sheen, Christian Slater, Aston Kutcher, Demi Moore, Lindsay Lohan, Shia LaBeouf and more) did also a clear (and not so short!) reference to "Fischer-boom"; at the movie two old employees of the Hotel where Bobby Kennedy's assassination took place, Anthony Hopkins' character and (most probably) Harry Bellafonte's one are playing a (quite amateurish) prolonged chess game at the Hotel the same day of Bobby Kennedy's assassination.

The facts that the three leading actresses of a 1969 tv-series are playing (or analyzing!...) a game of chess (!!) and the fact that two Hotel old employees became -at 1968-(extremely amateurs but quite interested) chess fans is more than enough (and ... loud speaking!) evidence of the "Fischer-boom" sociological effect and Bobby Fischer's inimitable influence and epic impact!!>

You're mistaken. There was no Fischer-boom in 1968 or 1969, because Fischer was almost completely inactive and fairly obscure then. I think the boom got underway in 1971 and then really got going in 1972.

Chess was a fairly high profile game in popular culture before the Fischer boom, viz. the "Kronsteen-McAdams" game in <From Russia With Love> in 1963, or HAL in <2001: A Space Odyssey> in 1968.

Oct-26-19
Premium Chessgames Member
  AylerKupp: <<Sally Simpson> I threw most of what I’d ever read about Bobby out of my head.>

It would be great to know what parts Seirawan decided to keep in his head!

Oct-26-19
Premium Chessgames Member
  Sally Simpson: ***

Hi AylerKupp,

It reminds me of one the comments I head a member of the Edinburgh Club saying after Topalov's visit.

He said he was never going to believe anything ever again written about a chess player. Not too sure what they expected but Topalov gained a 100 fans on that visit.

Hi K.P.

Yes 1972/73 was the Fischer Boom - more like a Chess Explosion. CHESS magazine was reporting that such was the demand they had actually run out of chess sets and were waiting for China who it appears were also caught napping to send more. Great times. Genuinely feel sorry for any chess player who was not around when it all kicked off.

***

Nov-24-19  The Kings Domain: cunctatorg: Very true what you say about Fischer's influence and him inspiring the likes of Karpov and Kasparov and heck any world champion since to dominate. Truly one of a kind and his accomplishments will be unmatched for a very long time, if they'll ever be matched, much more surpassed.
Nov-24-19  WorstPlayerEver: Don't be silly, we all know the Fischer story. He never grew up.
Nov-24-19
Premium Chessgames Member
  Knightf7mate: Today there is a world tour of chess champions competing for hundreds of thousands of dollars. This world would never have come to pass but for RJF. The soviet communist hegemony on chess was overthrown by one single man - RJF. He and he alone, through his outrageous (for the times) demands made it possible to actually earn a living playing chess. He made it acceptable for his successors to also make demands. The soviets merely provided stipends. Today it would be unthinkable for players not to be rewarded to the sane degree as other sports figures.

Much of the rest of his story is deplorable by comtemporary standards. Some of us would have done worse if we lived in his shoes. In some ways, Alehkine was worse.

Rest In Peace, RJF.

Nov-24-19  WorstPlayerEver: <Knightf7mate>

Really? This once was a prestigious tournament. Now they play for peanuts.

https://amsterdamchess.com/

First price: minimum €1500

Nov-24-19
Premium Chessgames Member
  Knightf7mate: Yes, really. The text below can be found elsewhere on thus site today.

RJF won when and where it mattered most. That is the mark of a world class champion. His legacy extends beyond the games he played. His approach to timekeeping had also been adopted. And he developed Fischer Random Chess in order to free the game from the repetitive nature of standardized and memorized openings.

GCT Kolkata Rapid & Blitz (2019)
The Tata Steel Rapid & Blitz, taking place in the National Library of India, Kolkata, India from 22-26 November, is the 7th stage of the 2019 Grand Chess Tour, a series of eight events in which the world's best players compete for a total prize fund of $1.75 million. Eight of the 12 tour regulars - Carlsen, Giri, Nakamura, Anand, Aronian, Ding Liren, Nepomniachtchi and So, are joined by event wild cards Vidit and Harikrishna.

Nov-24-19  WorstPlayerEver: Tata has to fire 1500 people in Holland.
Nov-24-19
Premium Chessgames Member
  HeMateMe: Kasparov would have created a similar effect. He was the first WC to really embrace commerce and become a public figure, appearing widely in the western media. Of course this was only possible after Gorbachev opened up Soviet society a little and then the Soviet system collapsed entirely. But, Kasparov has been the best at putting a public face on chess. He worked harder at it than anyone else in chess.

<https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=BPI...>

<https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=cUq...>

Nov-24-19  WorstPlayerEver: Let's face it: we talk about corporate assets. 12 players, yes.
Nov-24-19
Premium Chessgames Member
  AylerKupp: <<Knghtf7mate> The soviet communist hegemony on chess was overthrown by one single man - RJF.>

Funny, it seems to me that Fischer had a lot of help in overthrowing the Soviet communist hegemony. From the USCF who supported his participation in the 1970 Palma de Majorca Interzonal even though he had not qualified for it by failing to participate in the 1969 US Championship, to the 10 participants in that championship, not just Benko, who agreed to let Fischer take their place in the Interzonal, to Euwe who as president of FIDE at that time bent the rules to allow Fischer to participate in the Interzonal and later agreed to postponements in the 1975 match when Fischer did not show up in Reykjavik when required and did not show up to the drawing of the colors as scheduled, to James Slater who contributed $ 125,000 to double the prize fund to the 1972 WCC match, to Spassky who agreed to allow Fischer to violate the contract with the Icelandic chess federation by playing the 3rd game of the match in a closed room instead of the auditorium as a result of Fischer's demand to do so.

About that Soviet communist hegemony. It started in 1948 with Botvinnik by winning the FIDE tournament to determine the WCC following the death of Alekhine in 1946 and continued until 1972 with Fischer's defeat of Spassky in their WCC math – 24 years. It resumed in 1975 following Fischer's forfeit of his title to Karpov and continued until 2007 with Anand's defeat of Kramnik (I'm not counting those sham FIDE tournaments in 1999, 2000, 2001, and 2004) – 32 years. Of course, technically the Soviet communist hegemony only lasted until 1991 (16 years) when the Soviet Union was dissolved and communism was officially abandoned, the other 16 years were actually a Russian capitalist hegemony.

So it seems like Fischer's reign at the top was very brief and only an interruption in the Soviet/Russian communist/capitalist chess hegemony of 40/16 years, hardly an overthrow. And it was accomplished with a lot of help from others.

Nov-24-19  WorstPlayerEver: The idea that Fischer would sign a contract wherein he has to be a press puppet after each game.. would never have crossed his mind.

In that sense I have to gave Fischer credits: he never became the lapdog of organizers.

Nov-24-19
Premium Chessgames Member
  saffuna: <The idea that Fischer would sign a contract wherein he has to be a press puppet after each game.. would never have crossed his mind.>

Didn't Fischer speak to the press after each game in the 1992 match?

Nov-24-19  WorstPlayerEver: <saffuna>

Fischer and Spassky gave ten press conferences during the match. On 1 september 1992 Fischer gave his first chess conference in 20 years. Spitting on the order from the US.

I hope that you understand this was not really happening in the context of 'a chess event.' Or by contract.

Nov-24-19  WorstPlayerEver: Besides, he just used Spassky as a vehicle for his thoughts.

<On 1 September 1992, Fischer gave his first press conference in 20 years. When asked about his reaction to the threats by Washington, Fischer took out a letter from the Treasury Department and spat on it.

He accused Kasparov and Karpov of playing "prearranged" matches, and accused Karpov and Korchnoi of the same. Spassky supported the opinion by pointing out the finish of the 19th game of the 1990 match in Lyon.

When asked about his reputation as an anti-Communist, Fischer said "Soviet Communism is basically a mask for Bolshevism which is a mask for Judaism." Asked later about his apparent anti-Semitism, he said, "I'm definitely not anti-Arab, OK?">

https://www.mark-weeks.com/chess/92...

Nov-24-19
Premium Chessgames Member
  saffuna: Didn't he give press conferences after games? I thought I read them in "Inside Chess."

When did he say "Some days you give a lesson, some days someone gives you a lesson"?

Nov-24-19  WorstPlayerEver: <saffuna>

He never said that.

“That's what chess is all about. One day you give your opponent a lesson, the next day he gives you one.”

Nov-24-19
Premium Chessgames Member
  saffuna: That's the quote I meant. When did he say that?
Nov-24-19  WorstPlayerEver: https://m.youtube.com/watch?v=aXPdY...

Notice that Clinton states: "The world wants..."

The world of <saffuna>, I suppose.

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