The King is Dead: Bobby Fischer, King of the 64 Squares, Dies at 64

Submitted by RetGuvvie98 on Fri, 01/18/2008 at 4:53am.

REYKJAVIK, Iceland (AP) — Bobby Fischer, the reclusive American chess master who became a Cold War icon when he dethroned the Soviet Union's Boris Spassky as world champion in 1972, has died. He was 64.

Fischer died Thursday in a Reykjavik hospital, his spokesman, Gardar Sverrisson, said. There was no immediate word on the cause of death.

Born in Chicago and raised in Brooklyn, Robert James Fischer was a U.S. chess champion at 14 and a grand master at 15. He beat Spassky in a series of games in Reykjavik to claim America's first world chess championship in more than a century.

The event was given tremendous symbolic importance, pitting the intensely individualistic young American against a product of the grim and soulless Soviet Union.

It also was marked by Fischer's odd behavior — possibly calculated psychological warfare against Spassky — that ranged from arriving two days late to complaining about the lighting, TV cameras, the spectators, even the shine on the table.

Spassky said in a brief phone call from France, where he lives, that he was "very sorry" to hear of Fischer's death.

Fischer's reputation as a genius of chess soon was eclipsed by his idiosyncrasies.

Fischer was world champion until 1975, when he forfeited the title and withdrew from competition because conditions he demanded proved unacceptable to the International Chess Federation.

After that, he lived in secret outside the United States. He emerged in 1992 to confront Spassky again, in a highly publicized match in Yugoslavia. Fischer beat Spassky 10-5 to win $3.35 million.

The U.S. government said Fischer's playing the match violated U.N. sanctions against Yugoslavia, imposed for Serb leader Slobodan Milosevic's role in fomenting war in the Balkans.

Former Russian chess champion Garry Kasparov said Fischer's ascent of the chess world in the 1960s was "a revolutionary breakthrough" for the game.

"The tragedy is that he left this world too early, and his extravagant life and scandalous statements did not contribute to the popularity of chess," Kasparov told The Associated Press.

Over the years, Fischer gave occasional interviews with a radio station in the Philippines, often digressing into anti-Semitic rants and accusing American officials of hounding him.

He announced he had abandoned chess in 1996 and launched a new version in Argentina, "Fischerandom," a computerized shuffler that randomly distributes chess pieces on the back row of the board at the start of each game.

Fischer claimed it would bring the fun back into the game and rid it of cheats.

He renounced his American citizenship and moved in 2005 to Iceland, accepting an offer of citizenship from the country still grateful for its role as the site of his most famous match.

Fischer had been detained for nine months detention in Japan for trying to leave the country using an invalid U.S. passport. Japan agreed to release him after he accepted Iceland's offer of citizenship.

Fischer told reporters that year that he was finished with a chess world he regarded as corrupt, and sparred with U.S. journalists who asked about his anti-American tirades.

 

 

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Comments:

by abuyog - 10 months ago
Philippines
Member Since: Nov 2008
Member Points: 21

Well Fischer is the legend of chess all his games are now legacy.

by NM Reb - 21 months ago
Lisbon Portugal
Member Since: Sep 2007
Member Points: 4037
A legend in chess has left us and I mourn his passing. He will always be remembered for his beautiful games as long as chess is played. The lone genius defeated the collected might of the Soviet chess school and their best players, even humiliating them. Its sad that there are some so full of hate that they remind us of the negative in Mr Fischer even at such a time. I dont know how others are raised but I was always taught that if you cant say anything good about the dead you shouldnt say anything at all. As a Christian I believe there is a God and I certainly hope He is more forgiving than some  people are for if He's not then theres no hope for any of us. I have never met Robert James Fischer but had always dreamed I might someday, now that dream is gone.  RIP  " Bobby"
by RayDuqueIII - 22 months ago
New York City, NY United States
Member Since: Sep 2007
Member Points: 1301

Bobby Fischer is the greatest chess player in the world. He will be remembered in the chess community around the world forever. He is the King of chess games. May he reat in peace.

 

Ray Duque III
New York City

 


by Sysoplinux - 22 months ago
Longview United States
Member Since: Jan 2008
Member Points: 1

To GM Fischer,

I have admired your genius of this game of kings since I was a small child. Like so many before you, your genius was too much for any man.

We will all study your games, and style of play. I only wish that you would have written more books. My own father went crazy at the end because of a brain tumor. He was always ranting in shocking ways, yet he could fix a car like no other even at the end.

GM Fischer although I have never really gotten to know you, You were and may always be the Elvis Pressley of chess.

Please excuse the lenght of my post.

Thank you.

Go with God.

by micgao - 22 months ago
vancouver Canada
Member Since: Aug 2007
Member Points: 25

Bobby Fisher is one of the reason i continue playing chess. Now his dead who will replace him. thank you for all the move you gave me to study. Leave in peace

 

by Redwall - 22 months ago
Uppsala Sweden
Member Since: Aug 2007
Member Points: 288

Bobby Fischer was was, like several uther chess players, mad during the end of his life, and, as most older chess players, he drank alot.

Despite this, i loved his play, his glory, and the fact that he ran away with 3 miljan dolers, to Japan, and was hunted be the US.

Three chears for Fischer! May he be mist.

Jonathan


by foreman - 22 months ago
Sao Paulo Brazil
Member Since: Aug 2007
Member Points: 15
Bobby Fischer was for chess like Pele was for Soccer.
by Alejandro_Gutierrez - 22 months ago
Clifton, Co United States
Member Since: Dec 2007
Member Points: 164
Rest in peace fellow chess player king of 64 may god be with you.Cry
by Dalems - 22 months ago
New Mexico United States
Member Since: Dec 2007
Member Points: 28
Rest in peace king of the 64.
by mile_matrix3 - 22 months ago
Serbia
Member Since: Jan 2008
Member Points: 1
Thank You Bobby.
by RedSoxpawn - 22 months ago
Birmingham, Alabama United States
Member Since: Nov 2007
Member Points: 24362
I know this is not the right time to say this, but the title of this article is a rather good play on words. Now I will say rest in peace Mr. Fischer
by dott - 22 months ago
Edmonton Canada
Member Since: Jan 2008
Member Points: 23
rv wolfpack right on. can we not give any credit to such a genius? I myself am not anti-semitic but I can fully understand and sympathize with people like Fischer who spoke their mind about the U.S. Who am I to oppose this dead man's views? All he did was play a chess game and his own country attacked him even as such an important figure. id hate them too.
by Nilesh - 22 months ago
Philadelphia, PA United States
Member Since: Aug 2007
Member Points: 488
He was the best no doubt, but I can't respect his disrespect for the U.S. or the jews.
by Freelance - 22 months ago
Mauritius
Member Since: Sep 2007
Member Points: 31
 Thanks Bobby Fisher for everything. May your soul now be in peace with your God! Now I would like in chess.com that we can preview all his games one by one of course, & discucc only about his tactics, his openings & all that is relevant to chess only !! This can be the way that here in chee.com HE WILL BE IMMORTAL !!
by jeffrey - 22 months ago
Brooklyn United States
Member Since: Nov 2007
Member Points: 31
Richard M. Nixon said," it's alright if your enemies hate you, but when you hate them back they win bacause you destroy yourself ". Hate rather it be self-hate or hating of others is toxic to the human body and destroys more cells than smoking or breathing carbon monoxide for one half hour. Bobby Fischer developed a hate that  I to this day can't understand; the chess world would have given this man anything he wanted but instead he turned his back. R.I.P. Robert James Fischer.
by lithium11 - 22 months ago
Wellington New Zealand
Member Since: Dec 2007
Member Points: 609
The man became what he had learned, like the rest of us.
The bottom line is that passing judgement in a negative way is NOT useful.
Bobby Fischer has passed, he was a chess genius. Look for and recognise the good in others, and so it shall be found more easily in yourself.

Peace out Bobby
by chezzy - 22 months ago
Durian City (Davao) Philippines
Member Since: Jan 2008
Member Points: 27

 

MY CONDOLENCES TO BOB'S FAMILY AND FRIENDS. 


by Ercan - 22 months ago
Istanbul Turkey
Member Since: Aug 2007
Member Points: 100
I'm sad...He was young to die.
by unclemike - 22 months ago
Barbados
Member Since: Jul 2007
Member Points: 58

Serious chess players will respect the fact that he might have raised the level of their game.  The psychologists will perhaps continue to search for reasons why.  The science of chess is played by a set of specific rules, hence we cannot deny the brilliance of Bobby.  What rules govern what a man should or should not say.  I think that is the problem . We could neither control the moves he made on the board, so how or why should we try to control what he said off the board.  What were the rules of rhetoric?

Thanks for your brilliant games Bobby. 


by edmilz - 22 months ago
caloocan Philippines
Member Since: Jan 2008
Member Points: 38
being a chessplayer, we can be grateful to Fischer... he showed us beautiful chess. thanks bobby, RIP
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