Interview with Rafael Vaganian
There is an interview in Russian with Rafael Vaganian on the chesspro.ru website with period black and white photos of himself, Karpov, Tal, Kholmov and Sokolov.
http://www.chesspro.ru/interview/vag...interview_1115
Part of the interview has been transcribed into English and is available at
https://chess24.com/en/read/news/raf...and-won-t-lose
He speaks about the state of chess today, about Anand-Carlsen and Kasparov.
A small excerpt:
Chess (today)is totally different. Those champions (of yesteryear) worked in another setting, playing another kind of chess. With no computers, they worked and created on their own, and their creativity was immense. If they found something it was with their own minds, while now there are these amazing programs. Theory has “grown” to 30-35 moves, and you simply can’t compare the two types of chess. Frankly speaking, I don’t like modern chess, and I’m not sure what’s going to happen next. After all, a person isn’t capable of remembering so much, so they simply suffer because of it. They need to remember and learn it all, but then what of creativity? They barely play at the board, but at home, and that’s bad.
I consider those champions to have been greats, though perhaps that’s natural, since I’m a chess player of that generation – the Soviet School – and it all means a lot to me. I find modern chess alien, so it’s possible I’m not objective. Botvinnik, Karpov, Kasparov – they beat everyone for 10-12 years in a row, while for me the thirteenth champion is a separate topic. The way Kasparov and his group worked was incredible. They were a class above the rest and therefore he crushed everyone.
________
Rafael Artemovich Vaganian is an Armenian grandmaster born on October 15, 1951 in Yerevan.
He became a Grandmaster in 1971 at the age of 19.
Wikipedia says that he played in Toronto in 1990. Chessgames.com gives games vs Marovic, Hebert, Piasetski, O’Donnell, Vranesic and Kozul. Does anyone have any details of that tournament?
There is an interview in Russian with Rafael Vaganian on the chesspro.ru website with period black and white photos of himself, Karpov, Tal, Kholmov and Sokolov.
http://www.chesspro.ru/interview/vag...interview_1115
Part of the interview has been transcribed into English and is available at
https://chess24.com/en/read/news/raf...and-won-t-lose
He speaks about the state of chess today, about Anand-Carlsen and Kasparov.
A small excerpt:
Chess (today)is totally different. Those champions (of yesteryear) worked in another setting, playing another kind of chess. With no computers, they worked and created on their own, and their creativity was immense. If they found something it was with their own minds, while now there are these amazing programs. Theory has “grown” to 30-35 moves, and you simply can’t compare the two types of chess. Frankly speaking, I don’t like modern chess, and I’m not sure what’s going to happen next. After all, a person isn’t capable of remembering so much, so they simply suffer because of it. They need to remember and learn it all, but then what of creativity? They barely play at the board, but at home, and that’s bad.
I consider those champions to have been greats, though perhaps that’s natural, since I’m a chess player of that generation – the Soviet School – and it all means a lot to me. I find modern chess alien, so it’s possible I’m not objective. Botvinnik, Karpov, Kasparov – they beat everyone for 10-12 years in a row, while for me the thirteenth champion is a separate topic. The way Kasparov and his group worked was incredible. They were a class above the rest and therefore he crushed everyone.
________
Rafael Artemovich Vaganian is an Armenian grandmaster born on October 15, 1951 in Yerevan.
He became a Grandmaster in 1971 at the age of 19.
Wikipedia says that he played in Toronto in 1990. Chessgames.com gives games vs Marovic, Hebert, Piasetski, O’Donnell, Vranesic and Kozul. Does anyone have any details of that tournament?
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