Menu   ≡ ╳
  • News
    • Major Tournaments
    • General News
    • USA Chess
  • Puzzles
  • Improvement
  • Event
  • College
  • Scholastic
  • Women
  • Search

        More results...

        Or you can try to:
        Search in Shop
        Exact matches only
        Search in title
        Search in content
        Search in comments
        Search in excerpt
        Search for News
        Search in pages
        Search in groups
        Search in users
        Search in forums
        Filter by Categories

        Try these: Sicilian Defense, Empire Chess, USA Chess

    • SPICE
    • Videos
    • Susan’s Blog
    • About Us
    • Contact Us
    • SPICE
    • Videos
    • Susan’s Blog
    • About Us
    • Contact Us
    Menu   ≡ ╳
    • News
      • Major Tournaments
      • General News
      • USA Chess
    • Puzzles
    • Improvement
    • Event
    • College
    • Scholastic
    • Women
    • Search

          More results...

          Or you can try to:
          Search in Shop
          Exact matches only
          Search in title
          Search in content
          Search in comments
          Search in excerpt
          Search for News
          Search in pages
          Search in groups
          Search in users
          Search in forums
          Filter by Categories

          Try these: Sicilian Defense, Empire Chess, USA Chess

      Home  >  Daily News • General News • Major Tournaments  >  The Other World Of Professional Chess Players

      The Other World Of Professional Chess Players

      Anand, Boris Gelfand, World Championship


      The Other World Of Professional Chess Players
      May 29, 2012
      by V Krishnaswamy

      Chess players and their eccentricities could be as intriguing as some of their games

      Caged inside a Glassed Room, they resemble gladiators on a stage, separated from the outside world, as it were, by thick glass panels that keep noises out. When they get up and survey the board from a few feet away, they walk ever so slowly, like tigers on a prowl, circling their victim before going for the kill.

      But in reality, the generals, Viswanathan Anand and Boris Gelfand, have neither swords nor shields but weapons merely mental in nature. Twelve times in three weeks they meet each other inside the Glassed Room and are locked in mental battles that may last two, three, four or more hours or however long they choose to communicate to each other through wooden chess pieces before shaking hands to signal truce or cede victory to the other. They sign peace treaties on pieces of papers, which show how their soldiers moved, and retire to plush hotels to fight another day. Sometimes when one of them loses, though neither has in the first six battles, one signs away a small piece of mental territory.

      In this surreal world, the Glassed Room is lit and the spectators’ gallery dark. Black and white, it would seem. And, how appropriate for chess!

      Silence is the constant companion for these players and the spectators on the other side of the Glassed Room. The players agonise over each move and the spectators get their thrills from seeing the pieces move up or down on the lit-up electronic board they can see from far and in darkness.

      This dark and silent world of elite chess players is different from the world you and I know of. Even before they come to the stage, they spend hours and days, weeks and months, inside locked rooms with heavily guarded and encrypted high-capacity computers with multiple passwords. They have with them aides (called ‘seconds’) preparing various moves and lines for months at end.

      It is also a secretive world. The ‘seconds’ that the outside world knows of are only the tip of the iceberg. Anand has Dane Peter Heine Nielsen, Uzbek Rustam Kasimdzhanov, Polish Radoslaw Wojtazjek and Indian Surya Shekhar Ganguly, while Gelfand has Ukrainian Pavel Eljanov and Alexander Huzman and Maxim Rodshtein, who like Gelfand were born in the former Soviet Union, but are now Israelis.

      But even more interesting are the rumours of who the unofficial ‘seconds’ may be for either side. Anand, before and during his 2010 match against Veselin Topalov, was said to have been helped by Garry Kasparov, Vladimir Kramnik, Magnus Carlsen and Anish Giri, a 17-year-old prodigy born to a Nepalese father and Russian mother.

      This time the rumour is that Carlsen, the World No 1, has again contributed to Anand’s preparation, while Gelfand is said to have been helped by Lev Aronian, one of the very few top players against whom Anand has a very modest record.

      ***************

      Broadly, there are two kinds of people who are fascinated by chess and chess players. Ones who live to play and re-play each game they can lay their hands on and marvel at intricacies of how a player could have thought of moving ‘c4’ instead of ‘f4’ or something like that. To them a mere movement of a chess piece reflects art on a chessboard.

      And the others—I am more this category—who are fascinated by the dark, secret and mysterious lives of chess players. The image of chess players in the former Soviet regimes, sitting in dark cafes, and plotting pawn and knight or rook moves and those then being interpreted as social movements is imprinted in my mind. Strategy, machinations, manipulations, trying to read the opponents’ mind and so on seem to be the world of big-time chess.

      That chess Grandmasters have an IQ way beyond normal is a given. Yet, at the same time, as Jaan Ehlvest, an Estonian, who now lives and plays in the United States, wrote in his book, The Story of a Chess Player, chess players “are not geniuses at all”. He adds that some may in fact possess talent that only applies to chess.

      His book has a very interesting chapter called ‘Secret Life of the Player’ and it starts with a quote from Ernest Hemingway’s For Whom the Bell Tolls: “I guess really good soldiers are really good at very little else.”

      Read more: http://forbesindia.com/article/special/the-other-world-of-professional-chess-players/33018/0

      Chess Daily News from Susan Polgar
      Previous Article Magistral Ciudad de Buenos Aires
      Next Article My 40-Minute Chess Move Was Crucial – Gelfand

      About Author

      Susan Polgar

      Related Posts

      • Carlsen – Caruana World Championship Match LIVE!

        November 27, 2018
      • The biggest threat to Carlsen?

        November 18, 2017
      • Lanka: “Time for Anand to quit”

        September 17, 2017

      1 Comment

      1. Anonymous Reply
        May 29, 2012 at 5:35 am

        Nakamura is the most normal chess player.

      Leave a Reply

      Cancel reply

      Improvement

      • Important Scholastic Coaching Tips
      • My Chess Quotes Over The Years
      • My kids know chess rules. What’s next?
      • Chess Parenting

      Events

      • My Top 10 Most Memorable Moments in Chess (Part 3) May 13, 2021
      • My Top 10 Most Memorable Moments in Chess (Part 2) May 12, 2021
      • My Top 10 Most Memorable Moments in Chess (Part 1) May 10, 2021
      • About Susan Polgar April 9, 2021
      • About Us
      • Contact Us
      • Daily News
      • My Account
      • Terms & Conditions
      • Privacy Policy

      Anand Armenia Breaking News Chess Club and Scholastic Center of St Louis Chess interview Chess Olympiad Chess tactic Chess tournament chess trivia China FIDE Grand Prix Holland India Khanty-Mansiysk LIVE games Lubbock Magnus Carlsen Moscow National Championship Norway OnlineChessLessons Philippines Puzzle Solving Russia Scholastic chess Spain SPF SPICE SPICE Cup St Louis Susan Polgar Tata Steel Chess Texas Tech Tromsø TTU Turkey Webster University Wesley So Wijk aan Zee Women's Chess Women's Grand Prix Women's World Championship World Championship World Cup

      April 2026
      M T W T F S S
       12345
      6789101112
      13141516171819
      20212223242526
      27282930  
      « Sep