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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
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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 47 OF 160 ·  Later Kibitzing>
Apr-13-17  zanzibar: Reschevsky, I'm pretty sure, made most of his money outside of chess.

Same for Fine (though I wonder how much Fine made in residuals from his books).

Apr-13-17
Premium Chessgames Member
  perfidious: Reshevsky was a CPA, doubtless a lucrative occupation, and there seems no reason to believe he needed chess to survive, though his chess endeavours likely provided a small source of income.

Fine as a practising Psy.D? Had to be in the same boat.

After what they, and others, endured in the 1930s, not hard to understand why they would have turned towards professional lives and away from any possible uncertainties.

Apr-14-17  Jambow: <HeMateMe> Morphy was mentally ill not broke. The allure to be world chess champion was not fiscal reward but egotism. Chess for the ultra elite is financially lucrative today but then only to the very upper echelon. So just made 50k by winning the US championship.

Anyway this has digressed a long way from IQ and chess. Other brilliant non chess players have died broke and by contrast some not so brilliant people are filthy rich too.

Back to Bobby Fischer I'm sure he would have breezed into Mensa but at the top 2% that isn't such a unique feat is it?

Again I think there is a strong correlation between IQ and chess, but certainly you can't go they play at 1900 level so that translates into ____ IQ.

Apr-14-17
Premium Chessgames Member
  Fusilli: <Ron: ... I heard that Najdorf and Reshevsky did well.>

Najdorf did very well indeed in the insurance business.

Apr-14-17  TheFocus: <I've got strong ideas about my house. I'm going to hire the best architect and have him build it in the shape of a rook. Class. Spiral staircases, parapets, everything. I want to live the rest of my life in a house built exactly like a rook> -Bobby Fischer.

I wouldn't live in a round house. Can you imagine trying to find a corner to pee in?

Apr-14-17
Premium Chessgames Member
  ketchuplover: Here are 2 more Fischer games featuring me. I resign both battles. Thus Mr.Fischer now has 1000 games. So let it be posted. So let it be done.
Apr-14-17  zanzibar: A cool grand, ain't that grand?!
Apr-14-17
Premium Chessgames Member
  perfidious: <Fusilli: <Ron: ... I heard that Najdorf and Reshevsky did well.>

Najdorf did very well indeed in the insurance business.>

Is that why he constantly asked other players and spectators how he was faring during games, until being cured of the habit? (laughs)

Apr-14-17  Petrosianic: <I wouldn't live in a round house. Can you imagine trying to find a corner to pee in?>

There is a Rook House near my parent's house. Or a castle house anyway. (Round parapets, though). Whoever built it must have poured enormous sums of money into it, and then had a hard time selling it a few years back, but finally did.

Apr-16-17  zanzibar: A snippet of the 3rd Cavett interview can be seen here:

https://youtu.be/VM__tl9ffh0?t=3612

(it's a few seconds in...)

And yes, Tony Randall (aka Felix) was a guest.

.

Apr-16-17
Premium Chessgames Member
  HeMateMe: Randall is a moron, trying to psychoanalyze a guy who's obviously not real comfortable in front of crowds. That was one of those times when Tony Randall becomes indistinguishable from Felix Ungar.
Apr-16-17  ChessHigherCat: Fischer has a sort of timid charm but he was never the nice sweet little kid some people make him out to be. On the 2nd Cavett interview, when asked what he really likes about the game, he says "You know, I like breaking the other guy's ego". And then there's the famous: "I like to see them squirm". Having a sharp killer instinct is definitely part of being a great player (shach mat = death to the shah). I wonder how many billions of grasshoppers he immolated with this magnifying glass?
Apr-16-17
Premium Chessgames Member
  HeMateMe: I give him points for honesty. Sport is generally a violent game played by violent people. Of the Russians, Flyer center Bobby Clarke said "I hate them. I want to kill them."

Not very subtle. he was a dirty player. in the first big, BIG hockey event, the Canada/USSR hockey summit, Clarke kept slashing at the ankles of the Russian center he was guarding, damaging the guys ankles enough that the Russian played poorly or missed some of the seven games.

Apr-16-17  Strelets: <HeMateMe> Valery Kharlamov, the Wayne Gretzky of the USSR.
Apr-16-17  TheFocus: Bobby Fischer on the Bob Hope Show:

https://m.youtube.com/watch?v=LSWau...

Apr-16-17  TheFocus: Bobby Fischer Against the World (Full Documentary):

https://m.youtube.com/watch?v=VM__t...

Apr-16-17  ChessHigherCat: Maybe this explains why I was never a very good chessplayer, but I never really got my rocks off from checkmate per se. If I make a good sacrifice or surprising combination that works and then blunder away the game at the end, I'm almost as happy as if I won the game (but needless to say, I'm not a pro).
Apr-16-17
Premium Chessgames Member
  HeMateMe: thank you Strelets, that was the Russian star injured by Clarke. Poor reffing, to let that go on.

Fischer looks groggy, somewhat subdued and downcast in the post match interviews, before disappearing completely. I wonder if in this day and age he would have been diagnosed with depression or some other mild mental illness and could have been prescribed something to keep him on an even keel? Maybe the right medication could have resulted in Fischer having a better adult life. Perhaps seeing a doctor was suggested to him and of course he said "No."

Apr-17-17  todicav23: I found fragments of the "interview in the park" (starting at 3:00):

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=xOK...

I haven't seen this before.

Apr-17-17  todicav23: < todicav23: I found fragments of the "interview in the park" (starting at 3:00):

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=xOK...

I haven't seen this before.>

The same interview:

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=pFB...

Apr-20-17  Jambow: <todicav23> @ 5:42 the man claims Fischer is insane because he wouldn't endorse a shampoo for a million dollars, because he didn't use the shampoo. I don't know if that is insanity or character on a level few would aspire too. When I read a biography about Fischer this happened all the time if Fischer didn't believe in your product he wasn't going to put his name on it, I totally respect that. For a guy acused of being money hungry this certainly casts doubt, he wanted what he believed was fair and I think he was correct in that aspect.

Myself I would have tried the shampoo first, maybe the best ever who knows... If it turned out worse than Nair, then no I go to product B perhaps.

Apr-20-17  Petrosianic: Not being greedy isn't insane, though it may seem that way to some.

In this case, though, if someone offered me a million dollars to endorse a shampoo I didn't use, I'd START using that shampoo. Ethical Problem solved.

I remember an old ad that tried to address this issue. Robert Montgomery did a commercial in which he assured the listeners that his contract didn't require him to smoke Lucky Strike cigarettes. He smoked them because he <wanted> to, by golly.

So, that's just opened up two possibilities. One, the one I just suggested (that you start using a product when you endorse it). The other is a tacit admission that some people actually use the product because they have to.

When Jack Benny was the pitchman for Jell-O, he didn't actually use the product (for medical reasons). When he was hawking Lucky Strikes, he actually smoked cigars. Mary Livingstone didn't smoke Luckies either. She smoked Tareytons, but carried them around in a Lucky Strike package, to keep up appearances.

Apr-20-17  Petrosianic: <Jambow>: <Myself I would have tried the shampoo first, maybe the best ever who knows... If it turned out worse than Nair, then no I go to product B perhaps.>

If that happened, I'd go to Brand Y and say "Brand X offered me a million to endorse their stuff, but I thought it was awful. How much would you offer for me to say that?"

Apr-20-17
Premium Chessgames Member
  Ron: Concerning the issue of not doing a shampoo commercial for a million dollars: its not necessarily insane. For example, I can see someone refusing money from an organization because that organization goes against that person's values. In my case, I refuse to work at many government jobs, though some of them (such as public school teacher) would pay higher than my current job, because it goes against my ethical/political views.
Apr-21-17
Premium Chessgames Member
  offramp: The only time I ever spoke to the Queen was when I had a job mowing the grass in St James's Park and I had to ask her where to put the clippings.
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