Thank you Fischer

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Avatar of Minato

Today, the 1 year anniversery of Fischer's death, I would like to say thank you to him for his great contributions in chess and for helping to hook me onto this great game along with much of the world.

The world owes you one Robert Fischer Smile

anyone else have something to say about Mr. Fischer (preferably positive)

Avatar of aristeidis9

Yes..one year..Every day i am remembering and working on him at his group as he is still alive!

http://www.chess.com/groups/home/bobby-fischers-group

Avatar of Minato

Interesting point tonydal...............I'm sure he would have, at least in his earlier years..............either way I still think appreciation is worthwhile

Avatar of aristeidis9
tonydal wrote:

But would he have given a damn about any of this gratitude or adulation? (I very much doubt it...)


I don't care about this..For me the point is to learn from him..And that's i am trying to achieve..

Avatar of ADK

He was a good, respectable man! AND a great chess player...

ADK

Avatar of riana

I didn't even know he passed away. Can someone tell me how he died please. He was my mentor as from the age of about 10. I was 10 in 1973. When I started to learn from books, always Bobby. A few years ago I heard he ended up in a home for mentaly desturbed people. Was that true? I also heard that he started to play all of his best old games over by just writing it down, not touching the chess board. Thanks to Bobby, a good mentor.

Avatar of Kupov
tonydal wrote:

But would he have given a damn about any of this gratitude or adulation? (I very much doubt it...)


Should this matter?

Avatar of horcrux

I'd like to thank him for some brilliant games. I'd like to thank him for finally shutting up even if he had to die to do it.

Avatar of TheGrobe
ADK wrote:

He was a good, respectable man! AND a great chess player...

ADK


Well, he was a great chess player anyway.

Avatar of NSgenius
rich wrote:

He is the true genius of the chess.


Wow, you mean there's only one? Someone needs to tell Garry quickly. Smile

Avatar of riana
that's what I was trying to say. you can only learn from a master and it is not a matter of gratitude of adulation but for who he was and what he have done to help others play good. aristeidis9 wrote:
tonydal wrote:

But would he have given a damn about any of this gratitude or adulation? (I very much doubt it...)


I don't care about this..For me the point is to learn from him..And that's i am trying to achieve..


Avatar of CoconutTiger

fischer=100 x rybka    

Avatar of dashkee94

I learned about chess notation and books in 1969.  The next year, Fischer started his incredible streak by winning the last seven (!) games of an Interzonal.  That alone was Hall-of-Fame stuff.  But to win the next thirteen in a row at the Candidates level is just staggering.  Twenty in a row at the Interzonal and Candidates level is just ridiculous.  In GM competition this will never again be remotely challenged, much less approached.  I personally thinkthat this is the single most unapproachable record in all of competitive endeavors, in all of sports.  DiMaggio's 56 game hitting streak will fall long before anybody wins 10 games in a row at that level.  Bobby was the best--far better than anyone else in the post-Steinitz era.

Avatar of k05

Robert James Fischer, one of the greatest heros of the game.

Avatar of TheGrobe

You may want to re-evaluate his life.  Great chess player yes.  Great person...?  I'd say the latter has virtually all of the weighting on one's hero status.

Avatar of chidori

He was pretty awesome, but mysterious.

Avatar of hackcomic

read about him

he was cool

Avatar of Painterroy

I think a good comparison would be Ty Cobb in baseball. An awful awful man, but an immortal legend in Baseball. Sometimes you have to take look at only one aspect of what they did on their respective playing fields. I think Bobby Fischer was possibly the best Chess player ever, just by not only his dominence over all players (especially the Russians, who had incredible backing by their government), but also for the sheer brilliance of his games. I think it was sad that he never continued his career, because if he had, he certainly would have been champion well into possibly his 50's. I respect and admire his chess games, but did not respect his very bigoted attitude in his later years. That part of him I will always try to ignore. Fischer & Cobb...great players, terrible people.