Chess is life. -- Bobby Fischer
All I want to do, ever, is just play chess. --
Bobby Fischer
I don't believe in psychology. I believe in good
moves. -- Bobby Fischer
All that matters on the chessboard is good moves.
-- Bobby Fischer
You can only get good at chess if you love the
game. -- Bobby Fischer
Chess demands total concentration and a love for
the game. -- Bobby Fischer
I give 98 percent of my mental energy to chess.
Others give only 2 percent. -- Bobby Fischer
Your body has to be in top condition. Your chess
deteriorates as your body does. You can't separate body from mind. --
Bobby Fischer
I prepare myself well. I know what I can do before
I go in. I'm always confident. -- Bobby Fischer
Psychologically, you have to have confidence in
yourself and this confidence should be based on fact. -- Bobby
Fischer
People have been playing against me below their
strength for fifteen years. -- Bobby Fischer
It’s just you and your opponent at the board and
you're trying to prove something. -- Bobby Fischer
Chess is war over the board. The object is to
crush the opponent's mind. -- Bobby Fischer
Chess is like war on a board. -- Bobby Fischer
I play honestly and I play to win. If I lose, I
take my medicine. -- Bobby Fischer
You have to have the fighting spirit. You have to
force moves and take chances. -- Bobby Fischer
That's what chess is all about. One day you give
your opponent a lesson, the next day he gives you one. -- Bobby
Fischer
I like to make them squirm. -- Bobby Fischer
I like the moment when I break a man's ego. --
Bobby Fischer
There are tough players and nice guys, and I'm a
tough player. -- Bobby Fischer
I am the best player in the world and I am here to
prove it. -- Bobby Fischer
You know, I can beat all those guys. -- Bobby
Fischer
There's no one alive I can't beat. -- Bobby
Fischer
Let's play. I'm willing to play anywhere. -- Bobby
Fischer
I add status to any tournament I attend. -- Bobby
Fischer
Genius. It’s a word. What does it really mean? If
I win I'm a genius. If I don't, I'm not. -- Bobby Fischer
Patzer sees check, Patzer makes check. -- Bobby
Fischer
When I was eleven, I just got good. -- Bobby
Fischer
The turning point in my career came with the
realization that Black should play to win instead of just steering
for equality. -- Bobby Fischer
If I win a tournament, I win it by myself. I do
the playing. Nobody helps me. -- Bobby Fischer
If you don't win, it’s not a great tragedy - the
worst that happens is that you lose a game. -- Bobby Fischer
Don't even mention losing to me. I can't stand to
think of it. -- Bobby Fischer
Chess is a matter of delicate judgment, knowing
when to punch and how to duck. -- Bobby Fischer
A strong memory, concentration, imagination, and a
strong will. -- Bobby Fischer (on what it took to become a strong
chess player)
I know people who have all the will in the world,
but still can't play good chess. -- Bobby Fischer
I really love the dark of the night. It helps me
to concentrate. -- Bobby Fischer
It’s pretty tough because of all the tension and
all the concentration, sitting there hour after hour.
It’s...exhausting. -- Bobby Fischer
It’s like taking a five hour final examination. --
Bobby Fischer
Different people feel differently about resigning.
-- Bobby Fischer
It doesn't pay to be petty like they are. -- Bobby
Fischer
They've almost ruined chess. -- Bobby Fischer
The Russians have fixed world chess. -- Bobby
Fischer
You know I'm finished with the old chess because
it's all just a lot of book and memorization you know. -- Bobby
Fischer
The old chess is too limited. Imagine playing
cards, black jack for example, and every time the dealer has the same
starting hand you have the same starting hand. What's the point? --
Bobby Fischer
I have nothing to do with politics. I came here
(Yugoslavia) to play chess and nothing else. -- Bobby Fischer
I despise the media. -- Bobby Fischer
Is it against the law to kill a reporter? -- Bobby
Fischer
They like to write only bad things about me. --
Bobby Fischer
I'm not as soft or as generous a person as I would
be if the world hadn't changed me. -- Bobby Fischer
I think it's almost definite that the game is a
draw theoretically. -- Bobby Fischer
Tactics flow from a superior position. -- Bobby
Fischer
Best by test. -- Bobby Fischer (on 1.e4)
I wanted to give them something to think about
when they prepare for me in future tournaments. -- Bobby Fischer (on
why he played 1.d4, 1.c4 & 1.Nf3 a few times)
It's just a matter of throwing in a few
sacrifices, then checkmate! -- Bobby Fischer (on playing against the
Sicilian Dragon)
For the first lesson, I want you to play over
every column of Modern Chess Openings, including the footnotes. And
for the next lesson, I want you to do it again. -- Bobby Fischer
(advice to his biographer, Frank Brady, who had asked for chess
lessons)
Concentrate on material gains. Whatever your
opponent gives you take, unless you see a good reason not to. --
Bobby Fischer
My opponents make good moves too. Sometimes I
don't take these things into consideration. -- Bobby Fischer
As Olafsson showed me, White can win... It's hard
to believe. I stayed up all night analyzing, finally convincing
myself, and, incidentally, learning a lot about Rook and Pawn endings
in the process. -- Bobby Fischer
I don't like American girls. They're very
conceited, you know. In Europe they're more pleasant. -- Bobby
Fischer
Sometimes girls write me. One girl in Yugoslavia
sent me a whole slew of love letters. I don't know how she got my
address. She was in a crowd watching me play. She says when I left
there the stars fell out of the sky over Yugoslavia, or something
like that. -- Bobby Fischer
I don't keep any close friends. I don't keep any
secrets. I don't need friends. I just tell everybody everything,
that's all. -- Bobby Fischer
I'd like to travel around, be an international
playboy. They have all that money; they could really do it right.
Look at (Errol) Flynn. -- Bobby Fischer
You're a good guy. I like you. Twenty thousand
will do it. -- Bobby Fischer (to a Dutch chess promoter)
Yeah, I used to dress badly until I was about
sixteen. But people just didn't seem to have enough respect for me,
you know And I didn't like that, so I decided I'd have to show them
they weren't any better than me, you know? They were sort of priding
themselves. They would say, 'He beat us at chess, but he's still just
an uncouth kid.' So I decided to dress up. -- Bobby Fischer
Yeah, there are too many Jews in chess. They seem
to have taken away the class of the game. They don't seem to dress so
nicely, you know. That's what I don't like. -- Bobby Fischer
Well, I'm not sure I know what you mean by a prima
donna, but if something doesn't interest me or if someone bores me,
or if I think they're a phony, I just don't bother with them, that's
all. -- Bobby Fischer
I don't think so. I don't like to see millionaires
in there. He has it too soft, you know. I don't think he's ever had
any hardships. Besides, he doesn't have any class. He puts his hands
in his coat pockets. God, that's horrible! -- Bobby Fischer (on
whether he would vote for John Kennedy)
You don't learn anything in school. It's just a
waste of time. You lug around books and all and do homework. They
give too much homework. You shouldn't be doing homework. Nobody's
interested in it. The teachers are stupid. They shouldn't have any
women in there. They don't know how to teach. And they shouldn't make
anyone go to school. You don't want to go, you don't go, that's all.
It's ridiculous. I don't remember one thing I learned in school. I
don't listen to weakies. My two and a half years in Erasmus High I
wasted. I didn't like the whole thing. You have to mix with all those
stupid kids. The teachers are even stupider than the kids. They talk
down to the kids. Half of them are crazy. If they'd have let me, I
would have quit before I was sixteen. -- Bobby Fischer
Lots of the time I'm traveling around. Europe,
South America, Iceland. But when I'm home, I don't know, I don't do
much. I get up at eleven o'clock maybe. I'll get dressed and all,
look at some chess books, go downstairs and eat. I never cook my own
meals. I don't believe in that stuff. I don't eat in luncheonettes or
Automats either. I like a waiter to wait on me. Good restaurants.
After I eat I usually call up some of my chess friends, go over and
analyze a game or something. Maybe I'll go to a chess club. Then
maybe I'll see a movie or something. There's really nothing for me to
do. Maybe I'll study some chess book. -- Bobby Fischer
She and I just don't see eye to eye together.
She's a square. She keeps telling me that I'm too interested in
chess, that I should get friends out- side of chess, you can't make a
living from chess, that I should finish high school and all that
nonsense. She keeps in my hair and I don't like people in my hair,
you know, so I had to get rid of her. -- Bobby Fischer (speaking
about his mother)
My sister bought me a set at a candy store and
taught me the moves. -- Bobby Fischer
Reshevsky and I are the only ones in America who
try (to earn a living from chess). We don't make much. The other
masters have outside jobs. Like Rossolimo, he drives a cab. Evans, he
works for the movies. The Russians, they get money from the
government. We have to depend on tournament prizes. And they're
lousy. Maybe a couple hundred bucks. Millionaires back this game, but
they're all cheap. Look what they do for golf: thirty thousand
dollars for a tournament is nothing. But for chess they give a
thousand or two and they think it's a big deal. The tournament has to
be named after them, everybody has to bow down to them, play when
they want, everything for a couple thousand dollars which is nothing
to them anyhow. They take it off their income tax. These people are
cheap. It's ridiculous. -- Bobby Fischer
It's the fault of the chess players themselves. I
don't know what they used to be, but now they're not the most
gentlemanly group. When it was a game played by the aristocrats it
had more like you know dignity to it. When they used to have the
clubs, like no women were allowed and everybody went in dressed in a
suit, a tie, like gentlemen, you know. Now, kids come running in
their sneakers. Even in the best chess club-and they got women in
there. It's a social place and people are making noise, it's a
madhouse. -- Bobby Fischer (on the lack of financial support for
chess)
I don't care! I don't have to show anybody my
games just because they're a big shot! -- Bobby Fischer
All my games are real. -- Bobby Fischer
There was open collusion between the Russian
players. They agreed ahead of time to draw the games they played
against each other. Every time they drew they gave each other half a
point. -- Bobby Fischer
The Russians have held my title for ten years and
they're going to be in for it when I win the Championship. They're
going to have to wait and play under my conditions. -- Bobby Fischer
They have nothing on me, those guys. They can't
even touch me. Some people rate them better than me. That really bugs
me. They think that no Americans play chess. When I meet those
Russian Patzer I'll put them in their place. -- Bobby Fischer
I usually never stay at the board after a game.
Especially against Spassky. I made a dumb suggestion and he refuted
it instantly! I know I'm going to have to play him some day and it
was really stupid to look like such a jerk in front of him. -- Bobby
Fischer (on a '66 post mortem)
I haven't had any congratulations from Spassky
yet. I think I'll send him a telegram. Congratulations on winning the
right to meet me for the championship. -- Bobby Fischer (after
defeating Petrosian in the '71 Candidates Final)
I'm not afraid of Spassky. The world knows I'm the
best. You don't need a match to prove it. -- Bobby Fischer (just
prior to their '72 match)
Americans like a winner. If you lose, you're
nothing. I'm going to win, though. It's good for the match that
Spassky has a plus score against me. We've met five times. He's won
three times and we've drawn twice. But I'm a stronger player and a
long match favors me. -- Bobby Fischer
First of all, I'll make a tour of the whole world,
giving exhibitions. I'll charge unprecedented prices. I'll set new
standards. I'll make them pay thousands. Then I'll come home on a
luxury liner. First-class. I'll have a tuxedo made for me in England
to wear to dinner. When I come home I'll write a couple chess books
and start to reorganize the whole game. I'll have my own club. The
Bobby Fischer ... uh, the Robert J. Fischer Chess Club. It'll be
class. Tournaments in full dress. No bums in there. You're gonna have
to be over eighteen to get in, unless like you have special
permission because you have like special talent. It'll be in a part
of the city that's still decent, like the Upper East Side. And I'll
hold big international tournaments in my club with big cash prizes.
And I'm going to kick all the millionaires out of chess unless they
kick in more money. Then I'll buy a car so I don't have to take the
subway any more. That subway makes me sick. It'll be a Mercedes-Benz.
Better, a Rolls Royce, one of those fifty-thousand-dollar custom
jobs, made to my own measure. Maybe I'll buy one of those jets they
advertise for businessmen. And a yacht. Flynn had a yacht. Then I'll
have some more suits made. I'd like to be one of the Ten Best-dressed
Men. That would really be something. I read that Duke Snyder made the
list. Then I'll build me a house. I don't know where but it won't be
in Greenwich Village. They're all dirty, filthy animals down there.
Maybe I'll build it in Hong Kong. Everybody who's been there says
it's great. Art Linkletter said so on the radio. And they've got
suits there, beauties, for only twenty dollars. Or maybe I'll build
it in Beverly Hills. The people there are sort of square, but like
the climate is nice and it's close to Vegas, Mexico, Hawaii, and
those places. I got strong ideas about my house. I'm going to hire
the best architect and have him build it in the shape of a rook.
Yeah, that's for me. Class. Spiral staircases, parapets, everything.
I want to live the rest of my life in a house built exactly like a
rook. -- Bobby Fischer (on what he'd do when he won the world
championship)
When I win, I'll put my title on the line every
year, maybe even twice. I'll give players a chance to beat me. --
Bobby Fischer
I'll play a lot, stake matches. Not like the
Russians. They win the championship and then hide for three years.
Every few months, anyway twice a year, I'd like to get up a purse and
meet a challenger. It's good for the game, keeps up interest in
chess, and it's good for the bank account. I want to get some money
together. Like take professional football. All these athletes making
hundreds of thousands of dollars. Contracts, endorsements. If there's
room for all of them, there ought to be room for one of me. I mean,
after all, I'm a great goodwill ambassador for the United States!
Besides, I want money so I can tell some people I don't like to go
... yeah. -- Bobby Fischer (on what he'd do when he won the world
championship)
Well, you know, in America everybody is interested
in making the dollar fast. In Yugoslavia no matter how much you
hustle you're not going to get rich, so you might as well play chess.
-- Bobby Fischer
I object to being called a chess genius, because I
consider myself to be an all around genius, who just happens to play
chess, which is rather different. A piece of garbage like Kasparov
might be called a chess genius, but he is like an idiot savant,
outside of chess he knows nothing. -- Bobby Fischer
Karpov, Kasparov, Korchnoi have absolutely
destroyed chess by their immoral, unethical, prearranged games. These
guys are really the lowest dogs around. -- Bobby Fischer
Maybe I should publish the book. The world is
coming to an end anyway! -- Bobby Fischer (on My 60 Memorable Games)
I don't need them to correct anything for me, even
with the help of computers. Of course the book has mistakes, but I
can correct them myself. They changed my things on purpose. -- Bobby
Fischer (on changes made to the new edition of My 60 Memorable Games)
Most people are sheep, and they need the support
of others. -- Bobby Fischer
I read a book lately by Nietzsche and he says
religion is just to dull the senses of the people. I agree. -- Bobby
Fischer
I had some personal problems, and I started
listening to a lot of radio ministers. I listened every Sunday all
day, flipping the dial up and back. So, I heard just about every guy
on Sunday. And then I heard Mr. Armstrong, and I said, "Ah, God has
finally shown me the one, I guess. -- Bobby Fischer
Well, I kind of split my life into two pieces. One
was where my chess career lies. There, I kept my sanity, so to speak,
and my logic. And the other was my religious life. I tried to apply
what I learned in the church to my chess career too. But I still was
studying chess. I wasn't just "trusting in God" to give me the moves.
-- Bobby Fischer (on his involvement with a religious cult)
I know the Bible says, "Vengeance is God's." I'm
not trying to "get" those guys. And I'm not interested in getting my
money back. I'm trying to protect others. I just want to make sure
that nobody gets ripped off mentally. -- Bobby Fischer (on the
Worldwide Church of God)
You know, I didn't improve my living standard one
bit either. It wasn't like I just didn't help my mom. I didn't do
anything for myself either. You know I don't even have a car. About
the only luxury I got was quite a few $400 suits. I got ten maybe.
But still what I'm saying is that that is still not a lot of money
spent on me considering all the money I made. It wasn't like I was
living high on the hog and neglecting my mom, but she's living real
poor in a crummy apartment in England. She doesn't even have a
bathroom. I just saw her a few months ago. I have to help my mom now.
She's an old woman. She could soon be gone and here I was giving
money so that Rader and these guys can have their parties in Beverly
Hills. This whole thing is so sick. -- Bobby Fischer
They cleaned my pockets out frankly. I have some
money left, but not that much. I've got some assets. It's amazing
they didn't get everything. Now my only income is a few royalty
checks from my books. I was really very foolish, but I thought I was
doing what I had to do. When I sent those checks off, I really didn't
have the slightest qualms, no regrets, not the slightest. I don't
really regret it that much, to tell you the truth, even now. -- Bobby
Fischer (on the Worldwide Church of God)
I can remember times coming home from a chess club
at four in the morning when I was half asleep and half dead and
forcing myself to pray an hour and study (the Bible) an hour. You
know, I was half out of my head-stoned almost. -- Bobby Fischer
Church members shouldn't let themselves be
confused. They begin not trusting in their own judgment, and then
they're finished. That's a terrible, terrible thing. First, they get
conducted in with a nice sweet program, no money, everything free,
free, free. And then they get sucked in, and suddenly a few lies get
mixed in. They are told that their human nature is wicked and these
nice people who gave them all these things wouldn't be lying to them,
would they? And then I think once you start distrusting your own mind
you're finished. From there you just get more and more confused. Once
you think that your own mind is not your friend any more-your own
conscience and your own mind is not your friend-then I think you are
on your way to insanity. You have been stripped bare. All your
defenses are gone. -- Bobby Fischer
Our mind is all we've got. Not that it won't lead
us astray sometimes, but we still have to analyze things out within
ourselves. -- Bobby Fischer
They're all weak, all women. They're stupid
compared to men. They shouldn't play chess, you know. They're like
beginners. They lose every single game against a man. There isn't a
woman player in the world I can't give knight-odds to and still beat.
-- Bobby Fischer
Fischer is Fischer, but a horse is a horse. --
Mikhail Tal (upon hearing Bobby Fischer’s claim that he could beat
any female player in the world giving her knight odds)
My God, he plays so simply! -- Alexei Suetin
(speaking of Bobby Fischer)
It is difficult to play against Einstein’s theory.
-- Mikhail Tal (on his first loss to Fischer)
Bobby just drops the pieces and they fall on the
right squares. -- Miguel Najdorf
Do you realize Fischer almost never has any bad
pieces? He exchanges them, and the bad pieces remain with his
opponents. -- Yuri Balashov
Play out a boring game to the end and funny things
can happen; Fischer knew it. -- Hans Ree
You know you're going to lose. Even when I was
ahead I knew I was going to lose. -- Andrew Soltis (on playing
against Fischer)
It began to feel as though you were playing
against chess itself. -- Walter Shipman (on playing against Fischer)
When you play Bobby, it is not a question if you
win or lose. It is a question if you survive. -- Boris Spassky
In complicated positions, Bobby hardly had to be
afraid of anybody. -- Paul Keres
It was clear to me that the vulnerable point of
the American Grandmaster was in double-edged, hanging, irrational
positions, where he often failed to find a win even in a won
position. -- Efim Geller (on Fischer)
In Fischer's hands, a slight theoretical advantage
is as good a being a queen ahead. -- Isaac Kashdan
Nonsense was the last thing he was interested in,
as far as chess was concerned. -- Elie Agur (on Fischer)
His chess was always razor-sharp, rational and
brilliant. One of the best ever. -- Dave Regis (on Fischer)
Bobby Fischer has an enormous knowledge of chess
and his familiarity with the chess literature of the USSR is immense.
-- Boris Spassky
He turned the methods of the Soviet school of
chess against it: Botvinnik-style scientific study of all areas of
the game, in-depth openings preparation that has probably only been
equaled or bettered by Kasparov, and a passionate will to win that
only Alekhine and Larsen could match. -- John Nunn (on Fischer)
As with Steinitz, Fischer's genius has often been
concealed by controversies away from the board. Like Lasker, Fischer
has raised chess to new financial heights despite frequent retreats
from serious play. And, like Capablanca, Fischer is recognized by
millions of non-players and has won the game many new enthusiasts. --
Andy Soltis
President of the chess players' trade union. --
Boris Spassky (speaking of Fischer)
The chess heroes nowadays should not forget that
it was owing to Fischer that they are living today in four- and five-
star hotels, getting appearance fees, etc. -- Lev Khariton
No other master has such a terrific will to win.
At the board he radiates danger, and even the strongest opponents
tend to freeze, like rabbits when they smell a panther. Even his
weaknesses are dangerous. As white, his opening game is predictable -
you can make plans against it - but so strong that your plans almost
never work. In the middle game his precision and invention are
fabulous, and in the end game you simply cannot beat him. --
Anonymous German Expert
Of course a great player like that has no weak
spots. What a player like that does have are absolutely strong spots,
so you surely don't want him to utilize his strengths, because then
your chances decrease to zero. It's not surprising - chess being as
complicated as it is - that Fischer had the greatest problems with
positions, which were unclear in an unthematic way. When in effect
everything just depended on accurate calculation. In those kinds of
positions, he is still better than me of course, but the difference
is not that great anymore, because it's just extremely difficult for
both of us. The chance that he will make an error increases, whereas
in a thematic or technical position he will just play perfectly from
beginning to end and your chances of surviving are zero. -- Edmar
Mednis
He only takes a draw when it's hopeless or when
he's afraid he might get hurt in the position. When I analyzed with
him he would say: "I kill him if I get this position." He deplores
positions without counterplay. Even if he's in bad shape, there must
be tension. This is the essence of his chess style. And that's the
difference between him and Reshevsky. Sammy can defend a passive
position. -- Arthur Bisguier (on Fischer)
Fischer was a master of clarity and a king of
artful positioning. His opponents would see where he was going but
were powerless to stop him. I like to say that Bobby Fischer was the
greatest Russian player ever. All of his great opening moves came
from the Russians. He studied all of their methods. But what made
Fischer a genius was his ability to blend an American freshness and
pragmatism with Russian ideas about strategy. -- Bruce Pandolfini
His opening repertoire was fairly narrow but
virtually impeccable. He did not force play into particular channels
but played with great objectivity into whatever offered the best
winning chances, be it a tactical or positional middlegame or an
ending. He rarely lost the initiative, but could defend well when it
was necessary. He could be brilliant but did not seek brilliancy for
its own sake; he preferred the point on the crosstable.
Psychologically he was strong, usually coming back with powerful wins
to avenge past defeats. -- Tim Harding
I consider Fischer to be one of the greatest
opening experts ever. His adventures with the Poison Pawn Najdorf
Sicilian are amazing, legendary in my mind. He challenged the world
to out analyze him, they knew he would play that variation, many
prepared special novelties against him, and still he consistently won
with that risky line. Only Polugaevsky comes to mind in analyzing an
opening to the level Fischer did, the Polugaevsky variation of the
Najdorf Sicilian. -- Keith Hayward
Fischer proved to me how gifted (regarding
openings) he was with his first match against Spassky. The guy played
openings and defenses for the first time in his life almost perfectly
against a world champion! As a human being, the guy's values are not
in touch with the real world, but when it comes to pure chess
knowledge, he has no equal! -- Keith Hayward
There is only one thing Fischer does in chess
without pleasure: lose! -- Boris Spassky
There's never before been a chess player with such
a thorough knowledge of the intricacies of the game and such an
absolutely indomitable will to win. I think Bobby is the greatest
player that ever lived. -- Lisa Lane
Bobby Fischer is the greatest chess player who has
ever lived. -- Ken Smith
Fischer does not merely outplay opponents; he
leaves them bodily and mentally glutted. Fisher himself speaks of the
exultant instant in which he feels the 'ego of the other player
crumbling.' -- George Steiner
Fischer is the profoundest student of chess who
ever lived. He reads incessantly, forgets nothing, turns knowledge
into action with monstrous precision and ferocity. -- Brad Darrach
After World War II, the chess scene was dominated
by the Soviet Union, or rather by the Russians. The only exception,
the only person who managed to put an end to Russian dominance was
Fischer, which testifies to his genius. -- Zoltan Ribli
At this time Fischer is simply a level above all
the best chessplayers in the world. -- John Jacobs
Fischer is the strongest player in the world. In
fact, the strongest player who ever lived. -- Larry Evans
Our position - using here the royal "we" - is that
the Fischer of 1971 and 1972 was the strongest player in chess
history, whereas the Kasparov of 1985 - 2001 is the Muhammed Ali of
Chess. Which is to say, the greatest. -- Larry Parr
Bobby Fischer is the greatest chess genius of all
time! -- Alexander Kotov
Fischer is the greatest genius to descend from the
chess heavens. -- Mikhail Tal
Geniuses like Beethoven, Leonardo da Vinci,
Shakespeare and Fischer come out of the head of Zeus, seem to be
genetically programmed, know before instructed. -- John Collins
Bobby is the finest chess player this country ever
produced. His memory for the moves, his brilliance in dreaming up
combinations, and his fierce determination to win are uncanny. Not
only will I predict his triumph over Botvinnik, but I'll go further
and say that he'll probably be the greatest chess player that ever
lived. -- John Collins
Only the young generation of fearless fighters can
destroy the Fischer myth. You must not let him impose on you his
style, which is like snake poison. The old- fashioned way, heavy with
security devices, incessant tiptoeing on shallow waters of draws,
offers no hope against Fischer. -- Henrique Mecking
The life of a chess master is much more difficult
than that of an artist - much more depressing. An artist knows that
someday there'll be recognition and monetary reward, but for the
chess master there is little public recognition and absolutely no
hope of supporting himself by his endeavors. If Bobby Fischer came to
me for advice, I certainly would not discourage him - as if anyone
could - but I would try to make it positively clear that he will
never have any money from chess, live a monk-like existence and know
more rejection than any artist ever has, struggling to be known and
accepted. -- Marcel Duchamp
He was in the perfect atmosphere to learn chess.
There weren't so many good books then but guys like Artie Bisguier,
Bill Lombardy, Kmoch and Walter Shipman would help him all they
could. Anything he wanted to know, they would try to help him with.
-- Ron Gross (on the young Fischer)
I like to analyze as well as most, but Bobby would
just go on and on. I had to get out of there sometimes and take a
break. -- Ron Gross
Fischer was a good kid but very unsophisticated
about anything but chess. It was all chess for him, every waking
moment. We'd go down to the Four Continents bookstore and he'd buy
any Russian chess material he could get his hands on. He'd learned
enough Russian to get the gist of prose and he just absorbed the
chess part. -- Ron Gross
I was expecting to meet a young boy in strange
clothes, making rude remarks all the time, but it was a great
pleasure for me to see quite another person. -- Alexander Kotov (on
meeting a young Fischer)
Bobby liked to look at pretty girls all right. He
had a good eye. He was way too shy to ever go up and talk to them
though. -- Ron Gross
Bobby wouldn't go out with women who knew who he
was, but he was too shy to ask out the ones who didn't. -- Mike
Franett
When I was ill in Curacao, Bobby Fischer made a
point of visiting me in the hospital. -- Mikhail Tal
When I asked Fischer why he had not played a
certain move in our game, he replied: "Well, you laughed when I wrote
it down!" -- Mikhail Tal
Many chess players were surprised when after the
game, Fischer quietly explained: "I had already analyzed this
possibility" in a position which I thought was not possible to
foresee from the opening. -- Mikhail Tal
Suddenly it was obvious to me in my analysis I had
missed what Fischer had found with the greatest of ease at the board.
-- Mikhail Botvinnik
Well, he was pretty intense all right but when
something struck him as being funny, he had a great laugh. It's like
he tried to hold it in and then this big, booming laugh kind of
escaped. We always got along well. He could be fun but the subject
was almost always chess. And, by the way, there was no trace of anti-
Semitism in him back then. That came later, after his religious phase
in the early 70's. When he got involved with The Church of God he
blamed the Jews for killing Christ and then, when he became an
atheist, he blamed them for everything. -- Ron Gross
He helped my mother in the kitchen and was very
friendly. My sister Sophia and I played blitz with Bobby occasionally
and we realized that he was still a very strong and capable chess
player. -- Susan Polgar (on being visited by Fischer in Hungary)
Do you want to come with me to the boys' room,
then we'll see who is Jewish? -- Bobby Fischer (on being reminded by
a reporter that he was half Jewish)
I am not today, nor have I ever been a Jew, and as
a matter of fact, I am uncircumcised. -- Bobby Fischer
Being Jewish myself, I somehow didn't see the
problem: who cares what a mentally ill (but strangely likable)
individual says? If he didn't make some money at chess, I could see
him becoming a street person, shaking his fists at cars as they
passed by his corner of the block. Isn't it preferable to have him in
a self-sufficient position rather than as a liability of the state?
-- Jeremy Silman (on Fischer)
He had a funny habit: while his opponent was
pondering a move, he would now and then brush off specks of dust,
real or imaginary, from the opponent’s side of the chessboard.
Eventually, Petrosian broke him of the habit by giving him a rap on
the fingers. -- Alexander Koblentz
He knew what was going on. He just waited until
someone broached the subject. He had learned that people were often
hesitant to say anything to him he might not want to hear and he used
that to his advantage. -- Ron Gross
Being a friend of Fischer obviously is no
undivided pleasure, though being Fischer seems sadder. -- Hans Ree
It was simple. Bobby hadn't played in a long time.
He knew Spassky was a much more dangerous opponent for him than
Petrosian and he got to save all his preparation for another day. --
Ron Gross (on why Fischer agreed to play second board in the 1970
USSR vs. The World match)
He wanted to give the Russians a taste of their
own medicine. -- Larry Evans (on Fischer)
Russians have held the chess World Championship in
all but three of the past thirty-four years. Bobby is the man who
will break that chain. Definitely. Maybe not in 1963, maybe not even
in 1966, but eventually, for sure. -- Frank Brady
It is hard to say how their match will end, but it
is clear that such an easy victory as in Vancouver (against Taimanov)
will not be given to Fischer. I think Larsen has unpleasant surprises
in store for him, all the more since having dealt with Taimanov thus
(a 6-0 victory), Fischer will want to do just the same to Larsen and
this is impossible. -- Mikhail Botvinnik
Not that the two whitewash matches were against
wimps (Taimanov and Larsen, both powerhouses) or as easy as the
scores suggest, but heck, after you lose three or four in a row
against a player like Fischer you may as well call in sick with the
old "the dog ate my preparation" and get out of town. -- Mig
Greengard
I knew of course that Spassky, the reigning World
Champion, was a very strong player, but I had the idea that Fischer,
my chess idol then, was a player of another caliber, someone in a
class of his own. -- Garry Kasparov
Spassky will not be psyched out by Fischer. --
Mike Goodall (on their '72 World Championship match)
If you aren't afraid of Spassky, then I have
removed the element of money. -- Jim Slater (on doubling the prize
fund for the '72 championship match)
Dear Bobby, Your convincing victory at Reykjavik
is eloquent witness to your complete mastery of the world’s most
challenging game. The championship you have won is a great personal
triumph for you and I am pleased to join countless of your fellow
citizens in extending my heartiest congratulations and best wishes.
-- President Richard Nixon (telegram sent to Fischer upon winning the
world championship)
Bobby Fischer won. And this is only the beginning!
-- Burt Hochberg (on Fischer's winning the championship in '72)
When I played Bobby Fischer, my opponent fought
against organizations - the television producers and the match
organizers. But he never fought against me personally. I lost to
Bobby before the match because he was already stronger than I. He won
normally. -- Boris Spassky
There is little doubt that the Soviet Chess
Federation had been severely embarrassed by Fischer's victory over
their boy in 1972 and in view of the long- standing Fischer-USSR
conflict were unlikely to agree to anything suggested by the
"American". -- Nigel Davies
Fischer's victories brought problems for many
people in the Soviet camp, because it was thought there had been
failures of training or discipline that should be corrected. No one
could accept that it was simply Fischer's genius that was causing the
trouble. -- Garry Kasparov
He's completely natural. He plays no roles. He's
like a child. Very, very simple. -- Zita Rajcsanyi (Fischer's
supposed girlfriend)
Bobby pulls me out of oblivion. He makes me fight.
It's a miracle. -- Boris Spassky (on their '92 rematch)
My God, it is a miracle! Bobby is so kind, so
friendly. He is normal! -- Boris Spassky (on their first meeting
before the '92 rematch)
Well, I must prepare to bite the crocodile. --
Boris Spassky (on preparing for the '92 rematch with Fischer)
Spassky and Fischer were chess artists each trying
to paint the Mona Lisa while grabbing at the other’s brush. -- Larry
Parr (on the '92 match)
It was clean, crystalline, pure, like Capablanca
in a way. This is what no one knew in advance. How would he play? Not
even Bobby knew. -- Lothar Schmid (on Fischer's play in the first
game of the '92 rematch with Spassky)
The legend of the best player of chess has been
destroyed. -- Garry Kasparov (on Fischer's play during most of the
'92 rematch with Spassky)
He is too lazy to study the new opening theory and
he believes that he is World Champion, so why should he play? --
Boris Spassky (on Fischer playing again after their '92 rematch)
I was astonished to discover how unorthodox his
views were about the great chess masters of the past. Lasker,
considered by many the greatest chess player who ever lived, was
dismissed by Bobby as "a weak player". He told me he had played
through the games of Alekhine but they were "nothing too
interesting...he'd make some maneuvers and then the other guy would
fall for some combination." -- Leonard Barden
I still hope to kill Fischer. -- Boris Spassky
I had the pleasure of introducing Boris Spassky to
the great American player (Fischer). They became friends instantly
and have remained so until this day. -- David Bronstein
Already at 15 years of age he was a Grandmaster, a
record at that time, and his battle to reach the top (sometimes, it
seemed, a battle with himself) was the background for all the major
chess events of the 1960s; when he didn't play (as in the two
Candidates series won by Spassky) he was like Banquo's ghost at
MacBeth's feast. -- Tim Harding
FIDE has decided against my participation in the
1975 World Chess Champion title. -- Bobby Fischer
While it is a cause for regret that Fischer did
not continue to produce scintillating games, he perhaps had a greater
impact on chess than any other twentieth century player -- John Nunn
Fischer prefers to enter chess history alone. --
Miguel Najdorf
Since all these books so distort what I consider
to be the true Bobby, I've become skeptical about chess biography. A
hundred years from now no one's going to have the slightest idea what
Bobby Fischer was like because very few people today have a true idea
of him. -- Ed Edmondson
Bobby is the most misunderstood, misquoted
celebrity walking the face of this earth. -- Yasser Seirawan
While there can be no excuse for the public
statements he has made, there can be understanding and even sympathy
- for him, if not for his illness. -- Frank Berry Jr. (on Fischer)
Many people allow their judgments concerning
Fischer the individual to influence their judgment of Fischer the
chessplayer. -- Ed Kennedy
The only positive contribution to chess from
Fischer in the last 20 years. -- Viktor Korchnoi (on the Fischer
clock)
Is Fischer quite sane? -- Salo Flohr
Bobby is not crazy like they say. And believe me,
I know crazy. He simply failed to keep up normal relations. -- Viktor
Korchnoi
No. Not crazy. Irrational judgment. Trauma of the
childhood. No, the father. If you mention the father, he will not
speak the whole night. Mother, he calls every day. And the sister.
Trauma of the childhood. Bad instruction. Poor Bobby. -- Jezdimir
Vasiljevic (on whether he thought Fischer was crazy and whether his
problems stemmed from his relationship with his mother)
Fischer, who may or may not be mad as a hatter,
has every right to be horrified. -- Jeremy Silman (on changes made to
the new edition of My 60 Memorable Games)
He just wouldn't listen to reason. -- Larry Evans
(on Fischer)
Fischer is a law unto himself. -- Larry Evans
Even as a boy, Bobby was his own man. He knew what
he wanted, he felt that he knew what was right, and he made his own
decisions. Once convinced of something, his integrity, pride and
absolute independence ruled out any compromise. Once he made up his
mind there was no changing it. Many often had a go at it; Ethel and I
never did. And even when the general consensus was that he was dead
wrong, it turned out more often than not that he was right. As the
heart has its own reasons, so has genius. -- Jack Collins
Fischer became paranoid about giving away his
secrets. -- Larry Evans
Fischer is under obligation to nobody. -- Joseph
Platz
I guess a certain amount of temperament is
expected of geniuses. -- Ron Gross
The huge egos of great chess players are
legendary. Psychologists have been amazed by their vanity, have
studied it, and anecdotes concerning it are abundant. But never
before has there been such a prima donna as Bobby. Already he has
managed to alienate and offend almost everybody in the chess world.
That includes officials, patrons, writers, almost everybody and
anybody who might be in a position to help him in his career. -- Al
Horowitz
It is, sadly, altogether too easy, in fact
effortless, to find legions of people, not just chess players, who
have every reason to say, and have (and please believe me that I do
not do this out of spite or rancor) from the earliest days of
Fischer's career to this very day, he has been labeled: brash,
arrogant, selfish, self-centered, boorish, loutish, cruel,
unreasonable, difficult, impossible, inconsiderate, ungrateful,
petty, petulant, sulking, crass, insensitive, irrational,
contentious, argumentative, aggravating, insulting, crazy, wicked,
and mad. I would tend to agree. -- Paul Kollar
He has hurt and abandoned those who have helped
him, those who have admired him, and those who have loved him. He has
rejected calls from his friends, his community of fellow chess
players, and from his country to do what was right or fitting. He has
displayed a McCarthyite, commie-bashing, jingoistic political stance
while inexplicably avoiding military service, despite having been a
1A-draft candidate, attaining a very convenient rejection from his
local draft board. His erstwhile cold war patriotism was later much
diluted by his defying, and spitting upon, State Department edicts.
He skulked away from the first challenge he had for the, not his,
world title, and was happy to let the world think he was victimized.
He cloaked his fearful evasion with an over- elaborate pretense of
remaining steadfast and principled, a favorite trick of his, and
gulled many thanklessly loyal supporters into making tortured and
quasi-moral excuses for him. Yet before this pathetic farce, he
played not one single game, not one, as champion. What cabal or KGB
conspiracy was responsible for this craven non- performance? -- Paul
Kollar
Ironically, if Fischer had behaved impeccably at
Reykjavik, his overall superior skill would have carried him through
anyway; such was the level of his play then. And if Fischer, three
years later, gave FIDE, or even Karpov, the right to decide all the
match issues, and behaved as graciously as any perfect host, he would
have won that match too. He was inhumanly great. He was indisputably
the best chess player of all time. But this is very difficult for
some of us to see and admit unless we turn off all peripheral vision,
and suspend all moral judgments until...when? Is near-perfect chess
worth this sacrifice? If we were to learn, nightmarishly, that
Beethoven was an arsonist, or an abuser of children, would his string
quartets still thrill and lift us? It's a bit of a dilemma. What can
we legitimately excuse for the sake of art? Fischer has not, of
course, physically hurt anyone. But he has, in my opinion, been
guilty of chronic, execrable bad behavior for forty plus years. He
has, by repeated, continual assaults on common standards of decency
and social decorum, approached, if not reached, the level of the
sociopath. His actions immediately before the match at Reykjavik and
during the first three games should have resulted in a permanent
censure, or at least a day or two in the stocks. -- Paul Kollar
Fischer sacrificed virtually everything most of us
"weakies" (to use his term) value, respect, and cherish, for the sake
of an artful, often beautiful board game, for the ambivalent
privilege of being its greatest master. He even sacrificed his
mother, Regina, to become the King of Chess. Anything is permissible
if it wins...sac the queen...the king's the thing...isn't it, Father?
Wherever you are, isn't it? -- Paul Kollar
He is an American chess tragedy on par with Morphy
and Pillsbury. -- Mig Greengard (on Fischer)
Bobby Fischer’s current state of mind is indeed a
tragedy. One of the world’s greatest chess players - the pride and
sorrow of American chess. -- Frank Brady (on Fischer)
Regardless of Bobby’s recent hate-filled rantings,
which I abhor, he is nonetheless one of the greatest chessplayers of
all time. -- Frank Brady
The Unknown remains, probably forever
inexplicable, regardless of how many yellowed game scores, cracked
newspaper clippings, and curled and faded old photos are uncovered.
My appreciation, even awe at his chess talent aside, the nicest thing
I can say about Bobby Fischer is that he's a genuine enigma. -- Paul
Kollar
You want to know what I want? I'll tell you what I
want. I want back what Bobby Fischer took with him when he
disappeared. -- Ben Kingsley (from Searching For Bobby Fischer)
What is chess, do you think? Those who play for
fun or not at all dismiss it as a game. The ones who devote their
lives to it for the most part insist that it's a science. It's
neither. Bobby Fischer got underneath it like no one before and found
at its center, art. -- Ben Kingsley (from Searching For Bobby
Fischer)
The beauty of his games, the clarity of his play,
and the brilliance of his ideas have made him an artist of the same
stature as Brahms, Rembrandt, and Shakespeare. -- David Levy (on
Fischer)
Chess is not to him a means to an end, a
subsidized sport, a forum for testing philosophic hypotheses, or an
outlet for baser emotions. To Fischer, chess is an end in itself. --
Anthony Saidy
I regard him as a mythological combination of
sorts, a centaur if you will, a synthesis between man and chess. --
Garry Kasparov (on Fischer)
If one may judge a player's strength by comparing
him with his contemporaries, it seems to me that Fischer's
achievement is unsurpassed. The gap between him and his closest
rivals was the widest there ever was between a World Champion and the
other top-ranking players of his time. He was some 10-15 years ahead
of his time in his preparation and understanding. This could be
attributed in part to his dedication to the game, which was unequaled
by any other player before or since. -- Garry Kasparov
It’s impossible to compare two players from
different epochs. It’s extremely unfair because we know more now and
also because my opponents are stronger than those Fischer had to
face. I am not trying to underestimate Fischer’s achievements! The
only real point of comparison between the two of us is the size of
the gaps between ourselves and our respective opponents. I think that
the gap between Fischer and his opponents is still the widest in
chess history. The only possible way to compare Fischer, Botvinnik,
Morphy, Steinitz and Kasparov is to place them in the context of
their eras and to measure the distance between themselves and their
opponents. Fischer’s distance was vast! -- Garry Kasparov
By this measure, I consider him the greatest world
champion. -- Garry Kasparov (on the gap between Fischer & his
contemporaries)
Bobby never cared about money, though. His only
desire was to prove that his choices were correct: He wanted chess to
be important, because he was a chess player, and he wanted to be
important. Bobby knew money was important, but he didn't have a clue
why, outside of clothes and status. The only way he could accomplish
what he wanted was to fight for a lot of money. Once he got it, he
gave it away. He did not know how to spend it. And once he'd become
champion, after, essentially, sacrificing his life for it, he didn't
know how to spend his time. -- Bob Wade
There's no doubt that the title meant something to
him. It meant more than anything. Proof of that is the fact that
after winning it he stopped competing. But with or without the title,
Bobby Fischer was unquestionably the greatest player of his time. --
Burt Hochberg