Is it a computer? Is it a program?
No, it's Bobby Fischer (some wish)
The story is that Bobby Fischer sometimes logs on to the Internet Chess Club
(ICC) as a guest and plays an incredible series of blitz games against random
opponents. The pattern is always the same: "Fischer", who does not have an ICC
handle, will make contact either directly or through a third person and then
play a series of very fast blitz games ("bullet chess"), using preposterous
openings and whipping the living daylights out of his opponents. They are sworn
to secrecy, so the games are seldom published. Only the stories of the apparition,
of the bone-chilling encounter with the ephemeral chess legend remains.
All this was a chess-club story, until Nigel Short went public with his encounter
with the mysterious ICC Fischer in the Telegraph
last Sunday (9.9.01). Nigel revealed that he has played nearly 50 speed
chess games against Fischer during the past year. "I am 99 per cent sure that
I have been playing against the chess legend. It's tremendously exciting," he
said. In October last year, in the first of their four confrontations, Nigel
lost 0:8, although he is one of the world's best speed chess players. "In my
opinion Fischer is a much stronger speed chess player than Kasparov, which is
incredible when one considers that at 58 he is virtually a geriatric in terms
of the modern game," Nigel said.
Acevedo? Siegen 1970!
The final proof came when Nigel asked his mysterious opponent: "Do you know
Armando Acevedo?" (an obscure Mexican player). The response was immediate: "Siegen
1970." Fischer had played Acevedo in the Siegen Chess Olympiad of 1970.
Okay, let's take a look at this piece of evidence first.

-
I have my ChessBase or Fritz program loaded.
-
I press Ctrl-F to get the search mask, type in Acevedo,
Fischer.
- Five seconds later I have the one game played between Acevedo
and Fischer. The tournament is given as "Siegen Olympiad 1970".
Maybe I would have added "It was an A49 – Anti-King's Indian
system with 1.d4 Nf6 2.Nf3 g6." or something to that effect.As an experienced
user it would take me about ten to fifteen seconds to prepare the message. I
have know Nigel since he was a child, and I can tell you this is what he means
when he says "immediately".
58-year-old genius at lightning chess
Now let us look at the logic of the whole story. After his "rematch" against
Spassky in 1992 Fischer cannot return to the United States, since the State
Department had forbidden the match which broke the embargo imposed on Yugoslavia
at the time. Fischer spent a number of years in Hungary, today he lives in Japan.
Is it possible that from there he is fopping the Internet community?
The ICC Fischer usually starts his game with some really crazy moves, like
1.f3 d5 2.c3 Nf6 3.Kf2 e5 4.Ke3 or 1.e4 c5 2.Ke2 Nc6 3.Ke3. And he wins. Aha,
obviously this points to two things: the ICC Fischer wants to avoid the main
lines of modern chess theory, just as he has propagated with his Fischer
Random Chess. Secondly the legendary Fischer is the only player with the
god-like abilities to actually win such games against strong players – all the
way up to a top professional like Nigel Short.

Bobby Fischer 1972 in Reykjavik

and 1992 in Sveti Stefan
Okay, we look at the logic of this second piece of evidence. Since his historic
match against Boris Spassky in 1972 Fischer has only played 30 public games,
in the 1992 rematch in Sveti and Beglrade. Do you believe that this man, now
58 years old, could suddenly resurface, and beat the strongest GMs in the world
in lightning blitz games, after giving them a tremendous advantage in the opening?
No, not beat them, tear them to pieces, wipe the floor with them. If you can
believe this you must have great powers of credulity and faith.
But what is the alternative? Who else could be doing this? There is an obvious
answer. Only a computer would be able to do what the mysterious ICC Fischer
has done on the Internet. In fact it is exactly what you would expect from a
fast, tactical program. You can easily try it out. Load Fritz, Junior, Shredder
or Tiger, preferably on a 1.4 MHz or faster machine, force the first moves of
the ICC Fischer player and then play on against the program. At three minute
time controls. You can also jump into the sea off the Florida coast and pick
a fight with the denizens swimming around there.
Personally I find it much easier to believe that Nigel Short and the rest are
getting mauled by a very fast computer (and a very proficiet computer operator)
than by a 58-year-old non-playing GM – however great and charismatic this player
might have been thirty years ago. As to the question why on earth anyone would
perpetrate such an eloborate hoax, I again have a pat answer: because it
is fun! Can you imagine anything more entertaining than whipping Nigel Short,
convincing him that he is getting licked by a ghost, and then having him publish
it all in the Telegraph.
Is it him, or isn't it him?
But not everbody gives up so easily. My old friend Tim Krabbé originally thought
the ICC player was not Fischer. "Playing over these games, you get the impression
that the mysterious guest is a fantastically strong player," wrote Tim in his
Chess
Diary (article 134). But he gives three reasons why the player cannot be
Fischer after all:
- As a chessplayer, Fischer was always a gentleman. The real Fischer would
not insult his opponents with ridiculous openings.
- As Fischer indicated in one of his Radio Bombo interviews, using pseudonyms
is typically Jewish. The real Bobby Fischer would never stoop to Jewishly
logging on as guest-so-and-so - he would choose a name that would robustly
reveal who he is.
- Most telling, the real Bobby Fischer would never play a move like Kf4, as
in the game above, which is known to have always been favored by Jews.
The last point is tongue-in-cheek: Krabbé gives positions by three Jewish players
who, deep in the game, had indeed moved their kings to the square f4 (Tim is
a chess humourist).
Now
Tim has had a change of heart and frankly says "I take back everything I said
and claim the opposite" (see Chess
Diary article 139). He has found convincing evidence that the ICC player
is not a computer. The evidence turned up in a series of 25 three-minute blitz
games that one 'Guest71' played on 24 April 2001 against 'Beber', the French
IM Robert Fontaine (right), who had then an ICC rating of 2827 (and a FIDE-rating
of 2452). guest71, always with absurd openings, won 20 games, lost 3, and two
games were drawn. For Tim the most interesting game was the following:
Guest71 – Beber, ICC 3 0, 2001: 1.e4 c5 2.Ke2 Nc6 3.Ke3 g6 4.Nc3
Nd4 5.d3 Nf6 6.Kd2 d5 7.Ke1 Bg7 8.h3 O-O 9.a3 e5 10.Bg5 Be6 11.exd5 Bxd5 12.Nxd5
Qxd5 13.c3 Ne6 14.Be3 Rad8 15.Qa4 e4 16.dxe4 Nxe4 17.Rc1 a6 18.Be2 b5 19.Qxa6
c4 20.Rd1 Qf5 21.Nf3 Nxc3 22.bxc3 Bxc3+ 23.Nd2 Nc5 24.Bxc5 Bxd2+ 25.Rxd2 Rxd2
26.Kxd2 Rd8+ 27.Kc1 Qe5.

Tim Krabbé writes: "White is two Bishops up, but he cannot prevent a perpetual
with 28...Qa1+ or, after 28.Kb1, with Qf5+ 29.Ka1 Qe5+. White played the surprising
28.Bxc4. At first, I thought this was a typical computer move. My computer
programs do look at it, but finally they play 28.Qxb5 Qa1+ with a draw. However,
there is also a typical human maxim for this kind of situation: "You can only
take one at a time." So why not Bxc4? – after Qxc5, you have 29.Qxb5, and will
remain a pawn up. What makes Bxc4 human too, is that it does not change the
result: after 28...bxc4 29.Qb6 it's still a draw with Qa1+. It could just as
well be a very human last attempt to let the opponent go wrong, and win a drawn
game."
What do we say to that? Well, a quick check with all top engines does reveal
that they will play 28.Qxb5, but if the operator is running in multiple variation
mode he might well see the text move come up as the second or third best line.

In this example (on a 666 MHz computer) we can see that Deep Fritz sees at
least two ways to draw the position. If I select the second line, and then start
entering the black moves as played by Beber/Fontaine, Fritz duplicates every
single move after that, all the way to the final mate: 28...Qc3+ 29.Kb1
bxc4 30.Rc1 Qb3+ 31.Ka1 Rd2 32.Qc8+ Kg7 33.Bf8+ Kf6 34.Qc6+ Kf5 35.Qc5+ Kf6
36.Qe7+ Kf5 37.Qxf7+ Kg5 38.Be7+ Kh6 39.Qf8+ Kh5 40.g4#.
A bit of further exploration reveals that some programs actually
have 28.Bxc4 as their first line:

As you can see in the picture above Gambit Tiger (a good choice
for the wild ICC Fischer games) switches to 28.Bxc4 after one second. It sticks
with this move for as long as you care to let it run.
Tim has one more argument: "The ICC keeps this kind of game in their database,
with times used for each move. When I looked at that, I was in for a surprise:
guest71 never took more than 3 seconds for any move in that game, but 28.Bxc4
cost him 12 seconds."
Interesting. That means that he was probably using Deep Fritz in multi-variation
mode, and paused to think about the options available at move 28. He may have
even played through a few moves and decided that there were greater pitfalls
after 28.Bxc4. Or he may have simply run through the first line
to see the full draw (28.Qxb5 Qa1+ 29.Kc2 Qa2+ 30.Kc3 Qd2+ 31.Kxc4 Qxe2+
32.Kb4 Qb2+ 33.Kc4 =), before deciding to go for the"other drawing line".
Finally it is entirely possible that our ICC Fischer is using a dual processor
system and running multiple engines, choosing the move he thinks is most promising.

Deep Fritz and Gambit Tiger running in parallel, each giving
its first move.
So what do we conclude? It could be that Bobby Fischer hath decended unto us
to play miraculous games of chess. But Occams Razor forces at least the author
of this piece to believe that ICC Fischer is a prankster using a fast computer
and one or more of the top programs available today to create an urban legend
that will stay alive in chess circles for a long time to come.
Games of ICC Fischer
We give you some of the games by "Fischer" on the ICC.
The first 24 are against "Beber", which is the handle of IM Robert Fontaine.
The second set is against "Ural", who is IM Alexander Reprintsev (42),
FIDE rating: 2428 (June 2001). You can replay the game on our Java boards.
You can use the control buttons below the board or click the notation
on the right, which will cause the board to follow.
If you have any theories on the games, e.g. which program
duplicates the moves of "Fischer" in a specific game, or if you have played
any games yourself against the ICC Fischer, please contact
us..
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Frederic Friedel