Anand on Chess –
from square one to the World Championship in Bonn
Interview Transcript
Location: Chennai
Date: 26th December, 2008.
Interviewers: Sriram Srinivasan and Jaideep Unudurti (Outlook
Business)
What are your thoughts on the game formats becoming shorter?
I think it is a very natural progression. I quite like it. I like playing classical
tournaments but I also like playing in rapid events. They are just more fun
when you have both than when you only play one. There are lots of spectators
who cannot come and sit out a seven-hour game, but you go to Mainz for instance
or Corsica, the hall is full of people because they knew it is going to finish
in an hour. Also there is a decision in an hour. Somebody is eliminated. It
makes it more attractive as a spectator sport.

My match with Kramnik was very well followed in India. So it seems that there
is a role for both. I have absolutely no issues with it. Especially when you
see that you are not the only sport going through with this process of change.
I don’t remember the debates in tennis when tiebreakers were introduced,
but perhaps it was the same.
You mentioned rapid. Would it be fair to say that you are a very intuitive
player? The moment you see a position, an idea comes to you in a flash.
Very strongly. I think it was accentuated by what I did in the Tal Chess Club,
playing those blitz games. You are what you are. The Tal Club definitely accentuated
it and made the effect stronger. Since I grew up with that, I continued. Nowadays
I think a lot. In some of my games in Bonn I was thinking 45 minutes for a move.
That is simply modern chess. You need to work through so much preparation. I
continue to remain an intuitive player.
I think Malcolm Gladwell talks about it in “Blink”. He calls
it “thin-slicing”.
Yeah. And it is the one thing we have over computers. We reject an incredible
amount of information very fast, whereas they have to look at everything. They
are doing it faster and faster and catching up in speed. Once upon a time my
biggest advantage was in shorter controls. I could beat computers in blitz!
To introduce a contrarian note about computers, former world champion
Karpov has gone on record saying that using computers has made you more mechanical
and less creative. Your comments?
I would disagree. Strongly. I would say in general that Karpov is probably
that generation which missed computers completely. You remember my match with
him in Advanced Chess in 1999. He couldn’t use the computer. And it is
not fair, his generation managed without computers. There was this whole generation,
who couldn’t get used to it – Polugaevsky, Geller. I still remember
their impressions when I showed them my computer – “this is all
toys for children” – they had this attitude. Probably they would
have felt it much more strongly when they heard that Kasparov had lost this
game and now humans were losing regularly to computers. They saw chess in a
much more intellectual light, but as a human intellectual thing.

So I would respectfully disagree. Definitely I respect Karpov a lot. He is
really the generation before and he doesn’t have a good feel for the computer’s
influence. I would say nowadays it is impossible to work without computers.
And you don’t become mechanical at all. It allows you to do incredibly
creative things. I mean there are positions I can work on where it was not feasible
to work on alone. The amount of work is too much. But now with the machine you
can break it down so easily. At one level, in one sense, I would agree with
him. Certain areas in chess have become mechanical but in some new areas creativity
flowers.
Now you have “computer moves”. Aesthetically you have these
ugly moves.
Again, at initial stages, I don’t know whether it was because computers
were weaker or our eye was so jaundiced against certain moves that we took longer
to adapt. I don’t know which of the two, it could have been both. But
nowadays, computers are stronger so the suggestions are more respectable. And
you can see the analysis and see why and grasp it immediately. I would also
say we have developed a certain tolerance for unusual moves. I mean, humans
themselves play unusual moves nowadays. When I see some move my first reaction
is no longer “Oh, this is ghastly”. My first reaction is “aha,
the tactics are working” or something. So I would say it is an evolutionary
thing. We have slowly learnt that our understanding of chess was not complete
and computers have gotten better.

Every once in a while the computer will make a ghastly move. There is no question
that in the King’s Indian when it plays Re2 or something in some position
you understand that it just has no clue and there are so many examples in closed
positions where they do ridiculous things. Very often the moves they point out,
while ugly, have some tactical justification. And we have slowly learnt that
a move is good if it works tactically, and it is not beneath contempt. A move
can stand on its merits simply by being tactical rather than having any strategical
depth.
Building on that can you say that in the last century you had the Romantics,
the Hyper-modernists, the various schools. All that is out of the window.
Now whatever works, works. For example, you can have moves like 1.e4 c5 2.
Qh5 played by Nakamura [Anand smiles]. So can you say that style is dead?
Not really. When we look back we tend to think of them as Romantics, Neo-Romantics
and so on. But they also went with what worked. If something didn’t work
they stopped doing it. Capablanca might have been very dismissive of Hypermodern
openings, but he started playing them himself in the 30s. In the 20s he said
okay this is all rubbish, the Queen’s Gambit declined is good.
In chess this feeling has always been there, if you can’t refute something
it has a right to exist. It is not a modern thing. The latest you can associate
that trend with is the 1940s with the Soviet grandmasters, the Soviet school
of chess which started with people like Geller, Petrosian, Smyslov. It was a
very strong feeling they had that if something worked, even if you had prejudices
or you decided on some basis, the way you were brought up, that move was ugly,
you still played it.

Let’s remember, openings like the Sveshnikov were laughed at when they
first appeared. But after twenty years of trying to refute it people said well
maybe there is something to it. We look back and think of that period as innocent
or romantic, but they were not playing for beauty, they were playing for points.
I make the same mistake when looking back. It is a very strong effect. But you
have to remember, when you read books on what they thought, they try incredibly
hard to find something that works, and if you look at it from that standpoint,
the standpoint of their views, then they were willing to make any move that
they thought would win. Our sense for aesthetics has also improved, as I said,
our tolerance for certain moves has improved by seeing it more often. Here I
would say it’s imposing your personal views rather than letting the position
decide.
You are now 39. You are the oldest of your generation, along with Ivanchuk.
Are you feeling the effects of age?
I’m aware that chess is becoming very young and that we are probably
the outsiders. But look at Ivanchuk and me the last two years. It seems at least
that if you are motivated and you train physically, you are able to cope.
Kasparov is called the "Beast of Baku", Tal was called the
"Magician from Riga" and so on. You are the "Tiger from Madras",
are you happy with this or would you like to choose something else as a nickname?
No, I’m fine. We don’t have tigers in Madras (laughs), but otherwise
I’m very happy with it. In fact we went recently to see tigers and I quite
like the animal.
Botvinnik became the champion in 1948. You beat Kramnik, a student of
his in 2008. There is no other comparable Russian star. Is the Russian era
over?
Far from it. I think they are going through a brief rough patch. But still
by many measures they are the leading chess country on earth. That’s not
bad, given they had so many bad years recently. I think simply the rest of the
world is catching up. If you compare any single country with Russia they are
still ahead on everything.

Do you still play friendly blitz?
Hardly ever. Only when I’m training for something very specific. Because
when you play blitz, then you lose and you want revenge. It is very difficult
to play a single blitz game! You want to play for a long time. So I tend not
to do that anymore.
Do you go to servers anonymously and start demolishing everyone?
No, I go on servers and watch other people, perfectly anonymously. I like to
watch other people and some interesting games.
Do you visit any chess sites?
Sure. Quite a lot. I generally go to ChessBase and TWIC. Also nowadays go to
many other sites, Chessvibes and Chesspro and so on. The top pages will have
links to tournament websites.
A large part of your preparation now must be opening preparation. Do
you still do tactical exercises, work on endgames?
Yes, before Bonn I was doing tactical exercises every evening, five puzzles.
I did certain endgames I was afraid of. Rook and bishop and things like that.
Amazingly, rook and bishop is the sort of thing you forget very easily how to
defend properly. Even grandmasters have great difficulty holding this ending,
so it is very tricky. So I go over that stuff a lot.

Sriram Srinivasan, Viswanathan Anand and Jaideep Unudurti at the time of
the interview
Part
one – Part
two
The final part four on the World Championship in Bonn will follow soon
Copyright ChessBase
Anand – My Career in Chess

Anand: My Career Vol. 1
The first DVD with videos from Anand's chess career reflects the very beginning
of that career and goes as far as 1999. It starts with his memories of how he
first learned chess and shows his first great games (including those from the
1984 World Championship for juniors). The high point of his early developmental
phase was the winning of the 1987 WCh for juniors. After that, things continue
in quick succession: the first victories over Kasparov, World Championship candidate
in both the FIDE and PCA cycles, and the high point of the World Championship
match against Kasparov in 1995.
3:48 hours playing time.
Anand: My Career Vol. 2
The second DVD begins in 2000, when Anand became FIDE World Champion, and
it ends with his victory in the 2007 World Championship in Mexico. Anand not
only analyses his best games, but casts a look back at the World Championshp
in Delhi/Teheran in 2000 and the years before, he discusses the situation in
the Bundesliga and Kasparov's retirement from tournament chess.
4:28 hours playing time.
System requirements: PC, Windows Vista or XP (SP2), DVD-ROM drive, sound
card.
Price per volume:
32,90 |
€ incl.
VAT |
27,65 |
€ without
VAT (for Customers outside the European Union) |
42,85 |
US $ (without
VAT) |
Click
to order now