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Bobby Clears The Board For The Title
The audience in the
Teatro General San Martin in Buenos Aires seemed mesmerized as Bobby
Fischer took his seat in a leather desk chair and pushed his king's
pawn forward two squares. P-K4. The first game of the scheduled
12-game chess match between Tigran Petrosian of the Soviet Union and
Fischer of the United States had begun as expected. Fischer, playing
the white pieces, made his usual, almost inevitable first move. He
pressed a lever stopping his time clock and starting Petrosian's,
then jotted down his move on the score sheet beside him. Two young
men hurried forward from the obscurity of stage rear-one checking
the move Fischer had made, the other duplicating it on a large
red-and-white chessboard set against the backdrop behind the players.
Twenty-seven days later, after eight games, 42 hours on the stage
and a total of nearly 350 moves each, Fischer and Petrosian had come
to the brink. Or rather, Petrosian had. After a four game lapse in
which he had played listlessly or ineptly, Fischer had regained his
summer form and had reduced the former world champion to a pawn, a
knight and a king in the ninth and, as it turned out, last game. For
all that, the scene appeared much as it had when the matches began.
One change was the
chessboard: Petrosian had objected to the bright colors on the red-
and-white layout, and so the red squares had been changed to a dull
brown. But the audience for the ninth game was as it had been for
the first: entranced with the situation and the Fischer personality.
The broad panels of fluorescent lights threw the same pallid,
shadowless illumination on the two immobile figures onstage-Fischer,
age 28, dark blue suit, dark maroon tie, tall, thin, pale, intent;
shifting hardly at all except to move his chessmen or to rest his
fingers against his bony cheek or to step into the wings
occasionally to take a bite of a grilled-kidney sandwich and a swig
of orange juice; Petrosian, age 42, short, square-shouldered, bulky,
abundant black hair over his grave Armenian features, bending over
the board and peering at each of Fischer's moves like a diamond
merchant appraising a possible purchase. He too was immobile except
for a rare walk to the referee's table for a cup of coffee from his
thermos bottle.
Between moves, Petrosian
deliberated much longer than Fischer-as much as 25 minutes. At such
times the audience squirmed with anticipation, but nothing happened-
unless the squirming got too noisy. Then red signs went on at both
sides of the proscenium: SILENCIO. The sameness, the nothingness,
was all camouflage, however. These 27 days had shaken the chess
world.
The Fischer-Petrosian
match was the third and final round in the eliminations to determine
the challenger next spring for the world championship now held by
34-year-old Boris Spassky of Russia. Under the rules the first
player to score 6½ points-a victory counting for one point, a
draw half a point-was the winner. But the issue was settled, for all
practical purposes, by the seventh game. After that victory by
Fischer, Petrosian would have had to take four of the last five
games to win. Despite this air of inevitability hanging over the
last days of the competition, something new and undefined charged
every game. Fischer had arrived in Buenos Aires after the most
sensational string of chess victories ever recorded-19 in a row over
some of the world's greatest players (SI, Aug. 2). He was quite
sociable-for Fischer, that is. He gave interviews, tramped the
streets at night with hero-worshiping young journalists, smiled
stiffly for photographers and responded amiably when President
Alejandro Agustin Lanusse gave him and Petrosian exquisite
chessboards of green-and-white onyx. Ordinarily, Fischer is socially
evasive rather than hostile, likely to greet even an old friend as
if he were expecting a subpoena. Despite his good humor, he was
under a strain: he wanted to keep his unbroken string going, but he
also wanted to show that it had not gone to his head.
Petrosian arrived with a
record as impressive in its way as Fischer's. In 42 preceding games
he had been beaten only twice-but he had won only a handful of the
rest. The others were all draws, reinforcing his reputation as the
most cautious, imperturbable, resourceful defensive player of all
time. And so Petrosian was under no strain to uphold an impossible
standard. He arrived with his wife Rhona, a friendly and motherly
woman, together with a number of Russian chess officials and experts
and a pair of muscular bodyguards.
Petrosian began the first
game against Fischer as if bodyguards were the last thing in the
world he needed. On his 11th move in a Sicilian Defense
opening, Petrosian introduced a surprise variation that refuted
Fischer's favorite line in such situations. The effect was to
reverse roles. Petrosian was suddenly attacking with Fischer's
boldness, and Fischer was defending with Petrosian's habitual
caution. Fischer exchanged pieces, simplifying the game, but still
appeared to be losing. Then, unexpectedly, Petrosian reverted to his
usual passivity, drifting into an infirm end game in which his
allotted time was woefully short. He offered Fischer a draw. Fischer
refused. With only seconds remaining on his clock (Fischer had half
an hour), Petrosian staggered into a hopeless position and resigned
on the 40th move. Fischer's unbroken string of victories
had now reached 20 games. Still, he had been outplayed. If not for
his time trouble, Petrosian could easily have drawn, and possibly
won.
Fischer arrived three
minutes late for the second game, and with the black pieces played a
reckless match. In a rare lapse of judgment he overreached himself
in the opening, was unable to castle and found himself in the end
game with a wandering king. He resigned after 32 moves. The great
winning streak was over.
"Over?" said Isaac
Kashdan, a former U.S. champion. "It's smashed to smithereens!" The
crowd-1,200 inside the theater, 2,000 in the lobby--chanted,
"Tigran! Tigran!"
Games three, four and
five-all draws-represented another kind of turn in the Fischer
fortunes. In the third game Petrosian barricaded his king behind a
hedgehog formation and waited for Fischer to come and get him.
Fischer made a speculative sally, sacrificing a pawn and offering to
sacrifice the exchange (trading a stronger rook for a bishop), but
Petrosian declined. For a time his ruthless precision promised
another victory, but he again got into time trouble, and Fischer
gained an automatic draw on repeated moves. It was a lucky save for
the Americana the score, now 1½ to 1½, could easily have been
3-0 in favor of Petrosian.
For the next 10 days,
while he took on all the earmarks of a loser, Fischer reverted to
kind. No photographs. No smiles. No interviews. "I've been seeing
too many people," he said. He caught cold. He changed hotel rooms
repeatedly. He could not sleep and blamed it on the sound of traffic
rising from the Avenue of the Ninth of July. "I do not know how many
times Mr. Fischer changed his room," said the hotel manager with
dignity. "Every day, I think."
Edmund Edmondson, a
retired Air Force colonel and executive director of the U.S. Chess
Federation, acted as Fischer's buffer against photographers,
television cameramen, journalists and innocent bystanders. When a
well-wisher told Edmondson that he looked forward to happier chess
occasions for Fischer, the colonel said hollowly, "A draw is a happy
occasion."
The fourth game was a
grand master's draw, a perfunctory 20-move affair, with Fischer
proposing and getting a draw after only an hour and 20 minutes of
play. In the fifth game Petrosian offered a draw on the 34th
move, and Fischer refused, only to turn around four moves
later and offer one that Petrosian accepted. "Petrosian is making
Bobby play his kind of chess," said Larry Evans, Fischer's second.
The draws seemed to
increase, rather than reduce, the tensions of the crowds, which
appeared, in the great mirrored lobby, to reach out into infinity.
People stood shoulder to shoulder, like a crowd in a subway rush
hour, remaining till the final move of each game. In addition to the
fans trying to figure out each player's next move, there were those
who studied something else: they were watching Fischer come down
from his mountain of unbroken victories, to the plains of victory,
loss and draw.
With the white pieces in
game six, Petrosian was relaxed and confident. Fischer was pale, if
not haggard. And yet, after half a dozen moves Fischer had calmed
and begun to concentrate. About an hour into the game two stench
bombs went off in the last row of the theater. All over the theater
handkerchiefs were held to noses; in the back rows people headed for
the exits. Referee Lothar Schmid, a West German publisher and chess
master, approached Petrosian and Fischer to ask if they wanted to
stop. "It's a gas bomb," he said.
"Poison gas?" Fischer
asked.
Assured it wasn't,
Petrosian and Fischer agreed to continue. But it turned into a
sterile game for Petrosian. Fischer broke through on the queen side
just before the game was adjourned at the 40th move; when
it was resumed at five o'clock the following day Fischer demolished
the blockades that Petrosian tried to set, and after the 66th
move Petrosian resigned.
Fischer's victory in game
six was simplified because Petrosian played badly, but there was no
such weakness in the seventh, a classical, logical demonstration of
mastery and the turning point of the match. Tradition has it that
when two chess masters are of roughly equal ability the winner will
usually be the one in the best physical condition-or, as chess
players put it ironically, no body has ever won a match from a
healthy opponent.
Until this stage of the
drama, Petrosian looked better than Fischer. But two days later, at
the last possible moment before the eighth game, Petrosian requested
a postponement, submitting a certificate that he was suffering from
low blood pressure complicated by the hot, humid weather of the
Buenos Aires spring. He spent the day wandering through the city and
listening to Tchaikovsky records in a music store.
The five-day rest was
precisely what Fischer needed. With a two-point advantage, 4½ to
2½, and relieved of the pressure of his victory string, he
relaxed Petrosian visibly. He avoided the American chess hack
experts and hung out with a young Argentine champion, Miguel Angel
Quinteros, 24, who was doing commentary for local television.
Fischer played a little tennis at the Buenos Aires Lawn Tennis Club,
swam in the pool of the Club de Gimnasia y Esgrima, played Ping pong
with some Argentine youngsters and hid out from reporters.
What chess players think
about during a game is incommunicable, particularly in matches like
this, when every move they make is being pondered around the world.
Fischer gave one small glimpse of what went on in his mind as he
took stage for the eighth game when he admitted (after the match)
that he was still not confident of winning. He played carefully,
coldly, logically, trying no bold ventures or brilliant forays,
slowly building up a minute advantage in position until he was able
to launch an attack of overwhelming power. "Petrosian's spirit is
broken," said a Russian grand master, Yuri Auerbach, when Petrosian
resigned at the 40th move. "You can't Play chess after you are 40
years old. Spassky will be stronger."
So the stage was set for
the ninth game, same scene, same setting, except that the characters
looked drawn and the crowd spilled out of the theater into the
street. Playing the white, Fischer advanced his queen pawn on the
second move, and it all seemed to have happened before, a static
drama endlessly continued repeated. But now Fischer seemed to be
more mature. He watched Petrosian hesitate over his opening, saw him
spend nine minutes on his seventh move, and two moves later, when
Petrosian wasted another five minutes on a weak response, Fischer
knew he was going to win.
At that point Fischer may
have been the only one who did. But then, chess masters see farther
ahead than ordinary chess players. Petrosian sacrificed material to
set up a mating net on the king side. To the layman's eye (and even
to some experts), Petrosian's web looked lethal, and although
Fischer slowly worked his king to safety, picking up pawns as he did
so, his position seemed hopeless. But Petrosian failed, and on the
44th move had only his king, a knight and a single pawn;
Fischer had his king, rook and six pawns.
"Six pawns!" said Herman
Pilnick, the commentator on the games. "Do you know what that means?
There are only eight to begin with." Two moves later Petrosian
resigned. By any standard, even those of the rankest amateur, he
should have resigned long before. But he went on playing like an
automaton, until he literally had nothing left to lose.
Fischer's recent record
raises the distinct possibility that he has made a breakthrough in
modern chess theory. His response to Petrosian's elaborately plotted
11th move in the first game is an example: Russian
experts had worked on the variation for weeks, yet when it was
thrown at Fischer suddenly, he faced its consequences alone and won
by applying simple, classic principles. Masters like Petrosian may
have become prisoners of the past.
In the moment after
winning, Fischer started to step forward on the stage to acknowledge
the cheers. Then he changed his mind and disappeared through a rear
exit while Petrosian threaded his way slowly through the screaming
mob in the lobby, nodding his thanks to applause. Fischer and
Quinteros ran down the dark back street, pursued by a crowd of
excited youngsters. Finally at Uruguay Street they found an empty
cab, made a brief appearance at the television studio to discuss the
match, and then drove to a bowling alley in a suburb in north Buenos
Aires where the two of them bowled steadily until 3:30 in the
morning.
By Robert Cantwell
Sports Illustrated - November 8, 1971
[Event "Candidates Match"]
[Site "Buenos Aries"]
[Date "1971.10.19"]
[Round "7"]
[White "Fischer, R"]
[Black "Petrosian, T"]
[Result "1-0"]
1. e4 c5 2. Nf3 e6 3. d4 cxd4 4. Nxd4 a6 5. Bd3 Nc6 6. Nxc6 bxc6 7. O-O d5 8.
c4 Nf6 9. cxd5 cxd5 10. exd5 exd5 11. Nc3 Be7 12. Qa4+ Qd7 13. Re1 Qxa4 14.
Nxa4 Be6 15. Be3 O-O 16. Bc5 Rfe8 17. Bxe7 Rxe7 18. b4 Kf8 19. Nc5 Bc8 20. f3
Rea7 21. Re5 Bd7 22. Nxd7+ Rxd7 23. Rc1 Rd6 24. Rc7 Nd7 25. Re2 g6 26. Kf2 h5
27. f4 h4 28. Kf3 f5 29. Ke3 d4+ 30. Kd2 Nb6 31. Ree7 Nd5 32. Rf7+ Ke8 33. Rb7
Nxf4 34. Bc4 1-0
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