yes ok that was childisch my medication one game more or not.
yes waffle you are disinforming me thank you
yes ok that was childisch my medication one game more or not.
yes waffle you are disinforming me thank you
lol i looked at chessgames.com and fischer had 3 wins agains tal with white
Their game at Curacao 1962 was a blitz game, and as you already know, Tal was ill and had to be hospitalized during the tournament.
well i thought it was a full game but you are right he had to be hospitalized, still tal only beat fischer when he wasnt at his prime
chessgames.com could be wrong though. It's user-created-content, just like the big Wikipedia.
i didnt know thank you
lol i looked at chessgames.com and fischer had 3 wins agains tal with white
Their game at Curacao 1962 was a blitz game, and as you already know, Tal was ill and had to be hospitalized during the tournament.
well i thought it was a full game but you are right he had to be hospitalized, still tal only beat fischer when he wasnt at his prime
The same could be said of Fischer's victories over Tal.
but what about bled in 61? tal was healthy there, wasnt he?
Tal was pretty much never healthy. Something that makes his achievements all the most astounding.
He plays an entirely positional game until move 30, and then finally decides to execute the final breakthrough. Nxh7 doesn't even need precise tactical calculations - 2 pawns and an attack for a piece with his position should easily be enough compensation.
Capablanca (I hope nobody claims he is not a positional player) also sacrificed material to breakthrough.
Riga - Thanks for posting the winning line on the Fischer-Byrne match. The double sac of the rook and then bishop - a breathtaking finish.
Morphy, in my opinion.
Also, if you read through interviews, many of the players mentioned in this thread (Capablanca, Fischer, et cetera) have said Morphy was superior to themselves.
Morphy had a secret weapon that not every knows about, though: he had an eidetic (photographic) memory.
Rashid Nezhmetdinov he schooled Tal so many times he became his coach.
Averbakh said Nezhmetdinov could kill anybody.
Morphy, in my opinion.
Also, if you read through interviews, many of the players mentioned in this thread (Capablanca, Fischer, et cetera) have said Morphy was superior to themselves.
Morphy had a secret weapon that not every knows about, though: he had an eidetic (photographic) memory.
well he had ofc not a photographic memory as the other pointed out. he just new about development the other didnt, ofc he also didnt play perfect enough for a photographic memory i would assume, yeah he would beaten me every time though but his game was still very unsophisticated in my view, compared to more modern players. yes im a patzer but thats just my opinion and that might or might not be wrong. even so there is still tremendous beauty in many of his games how the pieces harmonize.
Second calling Fischer just a classical player is a bit unfair for the greatest player ever together with kasparov. Fischer might be not called an attacking player, more of a best moves player. But he definetly was more of an attacking player then just a classical player. but then again what do i know i shouldnt judge as im just a patzer, but that is my opinion.
whats a classical player anyway?
but gruenfeld, kings indian, najdorf, pannov botvinnik attack and that he is not so good against the french i mean definetly making it seem to the average patzer that he was an attacking player and that you shouldnt feed the trolls and i spend too much time on forums
I'm not trying to argue with you, I'm simply informing you. It makes no difference if you disagree with me or not.