Vlad sent me PDF files, I converted to txt. The article has several picture. Later I'll include them too.
There will be two posts as too many characters for one post.
If anybody wants original PDF scans let me know.
CHESS CANADA INTERVIEWS...
BENT LARSEN
Bent Larsen has long been one of the world's top grandmasters. In fact, when the USSR played the rest of the world in a team match, Larsen was the world team's first board - ahead of Fischer!
Larsen was born in Copenhagen on March 4, 1935. He won the Danish Championship in 1955 at the age of nineteen and repeated as Champion in 1956, 1959, 1963 and 1964. He is one of the world's most successful tournament players winning such notable events as Palma de Majorca, Lugano 1970, Sousse Interzonal 1967 and equal first at the Amsterdam Interzonal in 1964.
Larsen's tournament victories can be attributed to his fighting style - he plays to win and disdains grandmaster draws.
In match play he was the first foreigner to defeat a Soviet grandmaster when he bested Geller 5-4 in 1966. His other match results have been good (beating Ivkov, Portisch and Tal while losing one earlier to Tal and one to Spassky) except for one notable exception - his loss in 1971 to Fischer when the American grandmaster was masquerading as a steamroller.
Larsen is also a fine author and his Selected Games is a very popular collection. Besides writing books, he also writes newspaper columns and contributes feature articles to Chess Canada magazine.
Larsen was in North America for a simultaneous exhibition tour but besides graciously consenting to give this interview he also took time out to win the World Open in New York and finish 3rd in the Canadian Open in Montreal.
Chess Canada: Was there a reason that you did not play in the recent Olympiad in Nice?
CC: Why is that?
CC: Did the Danish team do as well as you expected, considering your absence?
CC: What do you think about the decision to bar South Africa and Rhodesia until apartheid is lifted?
CC: Won't FIDE now have to start barring many countries including the USSR since they restrict free immigration?
CC: What prompted FIDE to get into politics?
CC: Is it true that FIDE will accept any group with a flag and a chess organization?
CC: There has been talk in Quebec about joining FIDE separately. Would they be accepted?
CC: You mean for instance Manitoba could join FIDE?
CC: Any predictions on the Karpov — Korchnoi match?
CC: Has Korchnoi given up drinking?
CC: Why?
CC: Why did Fischer play Spassky?
CC: Are Fischer's demands for rule changes just a ploy to avoid playing, then?
CC: Were you surprised when Fischer accepted second board under you in the USSR versus the rest of the world match?
CC: What is Fischer's approach to chess?
CC: How about Karpov; what is his attitude''
CC: And Korchnoi?
CC: Could Karpov beat Fischer?
CC: How does Karpov's style compare to Capablanca's?
CC: It has been said that Karpov wins many games that other grandmasters give up as drawn. Why is that?
CC: Who has had the greatest influence on your style?
CC: How did you learn to play well?
CC: Any suggestions on how to improve?
CC: How much time should one spend studying?
CC: Most players seem to get to a point in their games where they don't know what to do. Is there any way this can be overcome?
CC: Why then do we have so many opening books?
There will be two posts as too many characters for one post.
If anybody wants original PDF scans let me know.
CHESS CANADA INTERVIEWS...
BENT LARSEN
Bent Larsen has long been one of the world's top grandmasters. In fact, when the USSR played the rest of the world in a team match, Larsen was the world team's first board - ahead of Fischer!
Larsen was born in Copenhagen on March 4, 1935. He won the Danish Championship in 1955 at the age of nineteen and repeated as Champion in 1956, 1959, 1963 and 1964. He is one of the world's most successful tournament players winning such notable events as Palma de Majorca, Lugano 1970, Sousse Interzonal 1967 and equal first at the Amsterdam Interzonal in 1964.
Larsen's tournament victories can be attributed to his fighting style - he plays to win and disdains grandmaster draws.
In match play he was the first foreigner to defeat a Soviet grandmaster when he bested Geller 5-4 in 1966. His other match results have been good (beating Ivkov, Portisch and Tal while losing one earlier to Tal and one to Spassky) except for one notable exception - his loss in 1971 to Fischer when the American grandmaster was masquerading as a steamroller.
Larsen is also a fine author and his Selected Games is a very popular collection. Besides writing books, he also writes newspaper columns and contributes feature articles to Chess Canada magazine.
Larsen was in North America for a simultaneous exhibition tour but besides graciously consenting to give this interview he also took time out to win the World Open in New York and finish 3rd in the Canadian Open in Montreal.
Chess Canada: Was there a reason that you did not play in the recent Olympiad in Nice?
Larsen: Yes, of course. I am against the rating of individual results of a team tournament.
Larsen: Well, it destroys the team element. The Olympiad is a team tournament, so you must play for the team. The rating of your individual result is ridiculous. Many others agree with me, they say "You are right, but you should play anyway".
But the Olympiads will continue to rate the play individually as this is the only way small countries can get international ratings for their players.
But the Olympiads will continue to rate the play individually as this is the only way small countries can get international ratings for their players.
Larsen: Actually they did much better than I thought they would. [They finished 10th in the B Finals-Ed.] You must realize that this was not our strongest possible team as many of our top players did not have time to participate. If you go you must want to play — look at Mecking; he did not play a game because he wanted to watch a soccer match — his own federation had to call him home.
Larsen: People don't realize that this decision was actually made a few years ago when FIDE passed its new statutes. Then they could not help but bar these countries. Norway had held this up with their threat to try to bar the Soviet Union because of the Czechoslovakia invasion.
Larsen: No, the statutes stipulate countries that discriminate — the Soviet Union does not discriminate; they apply their rules to everyone. Euwe had visited South Africa where he has many friends and so he tried to defend them by saying "They do not discriminate, they even had a black team in a tournament." Of course that was the last straw - 'What no mixed teams, then out'.
Twenty years ago discrimination meant nothing, but now.... I think I'm for the FIDE decision.
Twenty years ago discrimination meant nothing, but now.... I think I'm for the FIDE decision.
Larsen: FIDE has always been a political instrument. In many countries chess is important enough that governments want a say in chess politics.
Larsen: Yes, but you must have a flag, that's important to them.
Larsen: Yes, the Canadian Federation would protest but still FIDE would make Canada a zone. Any of the provinces could join, just as Wales is a separate FIDE member.
Larsen: Why not? When I was in Winnipeg in 1967 I could not call Denmark because Manitoba had not signed a treaty with them. If they are independent in national telephone then why not chess? Of course, it would be ridiculous, but it would be good.
Larsen: Karpov should win. Korchnoi will lose a game 3r two in time pressure. He gave up smoking but not time pressure.
Larsen: Why should he give up drinking? There are some dangers, it is true, like the time Tal got beat up in a bar. The USSR was upset with him, but actually Korchnoi was there and should have protected him. CC: Will Fischer play? Larsen: I never believed as far back as 1972 that Fischer would play.
Larsen: Well you see, before Reykjavik Bobby almost had a nervous breakdown. I'm sure he doesn't want to go through that again.
Larsen: Because Nixon and Kissinger asked him to. Bobby likes chess to be on that level. Now, it would take the Shah of Iran or President Marcos of the Phillipines to get Fischer to play. And only if they organized the match personally.
Larsen: Most likely, or else why did he not speak up in 1972 about these rule changes. It is amazing that FIDE even bothered about his demands. Bobby has done this before when he asked Hilton Hotels for $10 million to play — just his way of saying no. This demand for a two game advantage [Fischer wants to play for 10 wins in the World Championship with the incumbent champion winning if the score is 9-9 thus the challenger must win by two eg. 10-8 - Ed.] is very out of character for Fischer and the first unethical thing he has done. It is his way of saying no to playing.
CC: Were you surprised when Fischer accepted second board under you in the USSR versus the rest of the world match?
Larsen: No, not really, because I knew he was very afraid of playing. He had not played in a long time. He gets more nervous by not playing.
As a chess player he knows himself, but away from the board he is very indecisive.
As a chess player he knows himself, but away from the board he is very indecisive.
CC: What is Fischer's approach to chess?
Larsen: To Fischer, chess is a sport — a place where you can beat the other guy.
Larsen: Karpov is like no other chess master — he collects stamps and weak pawns.
Larsen: I cannot imagine Korchno' - collecting stamps; really I just don't understand Karpov.
Larsen: I cannot imagine Karpov beating Fischer. Hort thinks he can. In a match to ten wins Fischer should win 10 lose 2 and draw 30.
Larsen: Capablanca had several styles but like Botvinnik grew into a simple style when he got old. Botvinnik was very complex when he was young. Capablanca was also complex but not to the same extent as Botvinnik. When Capablanca got over forty his style simplified. I would compare Karpov with the older Capablanca. People compare Petrosian and Karpov but Petrosian is much deeper.
Larsen: Karpov, like others who try to win, does so just because he tries.
Larsen: Nimzovitch, if anyone. I was 12 days old when he died in 1935.,Petrosian and I are the most direct followers of Nimzovitch but we are very different. As it should be because Nimzovitch's style was a great paradox.
Larsen: I read a great deal early; I worked through My System when I was sixteen.
Larsen: Well, you must study but don't study the Najdorf or Closed Sicilian — study rather good games with good notes and learn strange openings. Study something you don't have in your own style.
Larsen: About 2 hours per game or half an hour if it is familiar material. You should always look up anything you don't know. Most people don't study endings but they should. When I was young I studied Fine's Basic Chess Endings
Larsen: Every master also reaches a point in his games where he doesn't know what to do. Chess is very difficult — you cannot expect to play the whole game like memorizing eight o- pening moves.
Larsen: Because people want them. They are not aware enough. Opening books are not good for you.
Comment