 Hello everyone and welcome back to Conversations with Tyler. Today I'm honored to be in Chennai with Vichy Anand, five-time world chess champion and one of the greatest chess players of all time. Vichy, welcome. Thank you, Tyler. Let's go back in time. 1991, you're playing in Reggio Emilia, arguably the strongest tournament of all time when it happened. Karpavis there, Kasparov, even Poligevsky shows up, right? And you win. What was the change in you that enabled you to be in a position to win that tournament? I think it's just the work I've been doing had kind of accumulated and I had hit a certain level. So to give you some background, I qualified for the candidates for the first time in the Interzonal in Manila in 1990, about July 1990 and Reggio Emilia was a year and a half later. So for the first time, I started to work seriously on my openings. I got together some trainers. This training will look very funny to modernize, but back then it was considered, let's say... What is it they would do to you? Well, we would actually sit on the board and move the pieces ourselves and for the first time they systematically went down a list and said, if you're going to play this opening, all these things have to be checked. And I had not thought like that before. My thing was, I'll check the top two things and I'll figure out the rest. Which was not as silly as it sounds today because back in the day, that's how you played chess. The computers couldn't play chess at all at that stage. So for the first time I thought in an organized way, I started to work and you know, there are people opposite you who contradict you or strong enough to contradict you and tell you, no, actually, I think you're wrong here. You should think of this move or this is better. That is better. I once did this and what have you. So you start to work like that on a systematic basis. I played my first Candidates match in January in Chennai against Rave. And suddenly I was paired against Karpov for the quarterfinals. That was going to be in Brussels in July, so roughly a year since I qualified. Again, I worked with Guravich, who had been on Kasparov's team and so on. I started working with him a lot. I had played Linaras, I had played Munich. So I suddenly started to play very strong tournaments and face his opposition regularly. Guravich taught me lots of things. First of all, a lot of personal insights about Karpov. You know, he always used to say when Karpov was fidgeting with his lips like this that means he's not quite, he's calculating, but he's not quite sure what's happening and he's nervous. And then you look for it and you actually see the man fidgeting with his lips and then you realize that his moves are shaky. You know, it kind of opens your eyes to the practical element. We went on, we worked very hard. Again, I think the level with him was one notch higher than what I'd worked with Vandeville and Heller's. So I worked with Guravich in a very one funny story. The first day I asked Guravich if I could watch, there was a Star Trek going on in the background. Would he mind if I watched that while we work? And he said no. He said, if you want to watch Star Trek, I'll go to my house. You call me when it's over, I'll come back, but we're not doing two things at the same time. This is a classic Star Trek. Yes, we are talking 91. Yes. And I said, OK, OK, then forget it. I'll switch it off. And I didn't see why I couldn't have that running in the background, which just shows the gulf in professionalism, if you like. But it was like that. His thing was very, very systematic. During the match with Kapov, we would adjourn games that, again, were still happening then. We'd adjourn games, which means that you seal your 40th or your 60th move, you continue another day. And Guravich would sit and analyze for me. We would discuss the position briefly. Then he'd tell me, no, you go to sleep. I'm going to spend the whole night working. So he would work till three or four in the morning checking everything alone. And the next morning when I woke up, he would brief me on everything. So and then you suddenly realize, oh my God, how many things he found while he was working in this position? Mine was very scatterbrained because I was an intuitive player. I often couldn't explain what it is I was going to do. I would find the correct move very often. But if you pin me as to why, I didn't really know. It was just the way I played chess. So this kind of thing, I played a couple of tournaments between Brussels and Regia Melia. Specifically, I played in Tilburg, I beat Kasparov, I beat Kapov, I beat Kamsky, I beat Kochnoy. I beat Schott. But I also lost to Kasparov. I lost to Kamsky, I lost to Kapov. And some of these losses were just ridiculous. Because you were playing too intuitively? Because I was volatile. I would, some positions I would get excited, think that things are going very well. I'd start playing fast, miss a few things, then come back. I stepped over the mark, this, that, all the things. What I think made the difference was I was suddenly facing people who didn't resign the game very quickly, who didn't collapse, especially Kapov. Even in the worst positions, he would continue resisting. And that's an art you learn. And then you realize, this point, this point is not going to come easily. I've got to push again and push harder and push harder. And it's one thing, training for this, but it's not real. The second thing is actually facing it over the board. And then it becomes real in a way. So, and all these things combined. And then in Regia Melia, I won my first game with Salov. I suddenly thought, I actually played that game quite well. I don't know what happened, but I played that game quite well. Then I beat Kasper in the second round. Again, it seemed pretty easy and I've already beaten him twice within two months. Then I lost to Guravich, my trainer. Your trainer, yes. My trainer. And he seemed to know, he lured me into a totally harmless position and then waited for me to get impatient. And I mean, literally someone who has good psychological insight into you. That was annoying. Then I got incredibly lucky against Polugayevsky. And then a couple of draws against Gelfand and Ivancho, amongst others. And in the last round, I beat Believsky, still in a natural way. I mean, it's not like I had gone that far from my roots, but it happened. And Kasper drew with Halifuan, a couple of drew with Gelfand. And I realized I'm on first place. So that was a very, very nice surprise. I remember faxing a friend. Just I won, I won, I won. I wrote it three times and faxed it to him. I don't know if everyone in the audience will know what a fax machine is, but anyway. We are some of us, remember? Yeah, as I did that and I was very excited and so on. And I felt stronger. I realized that the same people who caused me a lot of problems early in the year, I was at least able to deal with them. It's a work in progress because they also constantly work at self-improvement and so on. But at least I felt I could confront them in equal terms. If you were playing Ivancho back then, when he was at his peak younger, how would you approach that psychologically? Because he's a very dangerous opponent, right? If he's in the right mood, he can whip Magnus at five minute chess. He is very dangerous, but there are some patterns. I found that actually we met in the World Cadet, so the under-16 championships in 1984. And then we kind of kept bumping into each other. And actually my initial score with him was quite positive. I think I've never had a negative score against him. But quite often in painful moments, moments when I wasn't expecting any danger from him, that's when he would beat me. So there's a clear pattern. I wouldn't call it underestimation, but you kind of feel you're wallowing in your strength and you think it'll probably work out fine. There's no need to worry about all these things. And then that's when he would beat you. And when you're fully concentrated, well, his score is not so good. So the solution kind of suggested itself. But he was a tricky opponent all my life. The thing is because I started out with an early plus score against him and he saw it as a stiff rivalry. Initially, I just thought, well, he's Soviet, so he must be better than me. So I didn't feel any rivalry. Then even when I got better than him, I didn't switch into this that he's my rival. I kept thinking, well, we're all rivals, but we're all facing how to get to the world championship. But he felt his rivalry much more. And then the next year, Luis Rentero, the organizer of Linares, he organized a friendly match between Iván Chuk and me. And I beat him there, slightly undeserved. I mean, in a sense, I didn't get good positions, but I won them anyway. But that's chess. And I think it bugged him a lot. And so for many years, he would ignore the rest of the tournament. He almost couldn't concentrate against the others. Then when he came against me, you knew he'd been waiting the whole week for this one game. And it was kind of annoying to have such a mark on your back. There's one guy who is just looking for, thinking of you all the time, while you're thinking of all your opponents in a very organized fashion. Anyway, many, many years later in Tata Steel in 2003, I, in Vaikanzay, I realized that he wasn't even concerned about me anymore. Now the new mark for him was Panamario, who had just beaten him. So I felt really, okay, he can have Chucky. But it's, Iván Chuk's level can vary enormously. And I think that was the tricky part in playing him, that you had to focus a bit harder than others. You couldn't get by in just natural moves because he could be playing genius moves, or his level could drop a lot. And he's even more vulnerable, I think, psychologically than many others. So if he's not in the right frame of mind, his level can plummet. But equally, he can suddenly motivate himself to do great things. And the hardest problem, even, is that he looks totally distracted during the game. And that also lulls you into a false sense of security. So you have to, with him, it's always psychology, watching his face, things like that, which mattered more than the actual moves. 1995, to fast forward, Yubit Kasparov at the Intel Grand Prix. Legend has it you spent only 10 minutes on your moves, and this was a slow, classical game. How did you manage that? Why only 10 minutes? It was actually a rapid game. It was a rapid game. It was a rapid game. So we played it in Moscow. And I kind of found myself playing against him. I didn't, it was a morning session. We had an evening session. So both matches were on the same day. And I just wanted to play something relatively harmless. So I played some solid setup. I thought, today's not the day for the theoretical battle. I just play something sensible. Yeah, Queen d4, again. Queen takes d4, came back, and I'll just do something sensible. And we'll worry about this another day, theoretical battle another day. And one of the things about Gary, it doesn't come up very often. Obviously, his results are very, very favorable to him. But over a long enough career, notice it often enough. You give him a position where he's not very active and he thinks he has to lash out. And this has nothing to do with this understanding of chess. It's simply he has this urge to lash out and be tactical. And for instance, Kramnik is lethal with him because he knew how to get the kind of positions where Gary would lash out and then he would punish it. I, my style didn't allow me to punish him quite so well. So I've exploited it on fewer occasions, but that one went like a dream in Moscow. And later, and it made up for losing to him a little bit earlier in the month in Riga. So I was happy to win that against him. Then when I went and lost to Ivan Chukin, the final, who did his typical thing of suddenly realizing his whole life depended on this one game. So I had, I lost to him and then played the match against Gary a few months later. Speaking of Kramnik, in your match against Kramnik, you played one d4 a number of times, which was surprising. Why didn't he respond with a more hyper theoretical line? Like try the Grunfeld, say, and try to catch you unprepared because usually you've played d4 in your career, at least up till then. That's right. What had changed in the meantime? One is computers, which meant that even a player who didn't have a lot of experience in an opening might simply have good computer moves. And if you have good computer moves, you understand them well and you play them where they're supposed to be played. Then understanding cannot make up for it. The computer's evaluation, the gap is just too strong. So imagine that the computer says, this move and you're plus one. I'll take that against anyone. I'll take that even against a specialist because those are pretty good odds. In fact, it is one of the things which is leveled preparation. That a club player who knows one opening well can play against a top grandmaster in that opening. And so the top grandmasters insight has to be, take a look at the club player, sort of gauge what work he might have done, have a sense of what areas he specializes in, then avoid them at all costs because that's the best strategy for success. You avoid the club player's preparation. It doesn't matter if you're playing it well or bad. The difference in level will show. But if you play into anything whereas the computer could have had a guiding hand, you have pretty bad. Anyway, the thing with Kramnik was that I had a team. All of them were d4 specialists. We had eight months during which I could have trained a lot. And we trained a lot on d4. We found interesting ideas. I played training games. Again, to make up for this lack of understanding. Played training games. Check it again with the computer. Go deeper and deeper. Try to understand hidden nuances and so on. So I was pretty confident that we had lines prepared against the Grunfeld Kings. In fact, I had a complete d4 repertoire. Start to finish. Even the most obscure lines, the job for my second was, give me a line that doesn't lose and I don't look embarrassing. I can make a few moves, come back and then we can go drill deeper if he does something unexpected. So it wouldn't have been that easy. But if he had the confidence, it wasn't a bad strategy to try. He could have done it. Not because he thinks he's gonna outplay me, but because he thinks, well, I know this just as well as you. And let's see what you got. It's that kind of thing. So it's not quite as easy. In fact, I faced this often myself in reverse that Karamani used to play E4 suddenly a lot against me. And it's very nice to say I have more experience than him, but where should I strike? Which is the area he's likely to be weakened. That's not easy to pick out. Two of your wins with black in that match are from the semi-slaw. If you let you get very tactical positions, why would he make that kind of mistake? That is very strange. I would have to say he took it personally. He took this opening personally. He just said, but this opening, my understanding of chess, everything I believe in in chess on the chess board tells me I'm better here. And so he kept going back to it. First time it can happen. I mean, he plays the main line. He thinks he's well-prepared. And then I have this slightly unusual line that I've prepared at depth. It goes bad. But game five, I think he took it personally. By game eight, I had moved on. Because I knew that allowing for everything, we knew that his sense that white was better was correct. And we had run as far with this as we should. And we went to our second opening, which is the Vienna. And we went to that. But it's really only game five. He took it personally. He came in, but once again, we had outstanding prep. And by a miracle, my Polish trainer, Wajtasek, he literally, you know, we have this Harid conference from two to 225 or something where they just brush me up on everything and last minute stuff and everything. So at about 220, Radek said, look, there's one thing I want to show you, sit down. So I sat down and he showed me this one line exactly which happened in game five. And he said, this is a terrible line I've spent all night on it. I finally found an emergency solution. It's an emergency parachute. You play Rook C5 at this point. The Rook is kind of active on this rank. And I've checked it. It doesn't lose on the spot. Go. So his job was, there's no way we can cover everything in chess. I'm giving you sort of this position for dummies. This is all you need to know and you'll have to figure out the rest on your own. So I said, okay. So when I sat at the board and I had this chance to play Rook C5, I thought, thank God he briefed me on this at this point. So there's some luck as well. And I knew every move I made, I said, Rook C5, I don't trust this position well, but Radek told me it works. That's good enough and so on. So we went with that and then he blundered. But I was already in a very good situation. I knew what I had to do. I knew I was where I was supposed to be. And I knew that I wasn't worse, which is enough to take to the board. Your match against Apollo, you had help from Kramnik, Kasparov, Carlson. How did they each help you differently and how does that reflect something about them as chess players? So Carlson, he had already been my sparring partner before the match with Kramnik and we repeated that. So literally he came over, we played three days of Blitz, five minute chess. And the idea was I would select all the positions that I was going to use and play it against him. And we would not tell Carlson what we're going to play. We were using Carlson's strength as a practical player and saying, if I surprise you with this, let me see how you react. Maybe you've faced this before. Let me see how you react. And try to play against that because I thought Carlson is of the level of Kramnik and Apollo. So playing against him gives me a good sense of how they'll play, how the games will materialize and so on. He did that in both times. He didn't help much during the match. I think once in a while, Nielsen was obviously in touch with him. So they would chat on Skype or whatever and he might give an impression, but it wasn't more than that. Kasparov would call in a couple of times. He gave me some of his notes in specific openings. He said, look, they're outdated, but for what it's worth, here they are and you can check them with modern analysis. That's fine. Kramnik was the heaviest, which is literally, so we had come to the conclusion that Kramnik's approach against Apollo hadn't been a bad approach. So we were copying the Catalan, what we call the Alistair variation of the Slav defense and we were copying many aspects of how he played that match. Because he doesn't like to be passive, right? Is that how you think about it? Topolov. Yeah, Topolov doesn't like to be passive, but he's also much more of a, he actually can play positional just incredibly well, but over the board, he tends to lapse in this area and the gap between him, between his positional play and his sharp openings that he's really comfortable with is huge. So stylistically, he's more limited. And the idea was you are a better natural player than me. So you should try to steer the game through to Slav's more harmless, which is how we came under the Kramnik approach, more harmless waters, play sensible chess and don't get into forced lines that much and you'll probably have the easier time of it. I mean, more of a philosophical thing. So Kramnik called Kazimshanov after the fourth game and he said, it's a, I'm flattered that you are trying to copy my openings, but you're doing it very badly. Can I help? I mean, literally, but that's what he said, which is the funniest story. So we said, of course you can help. And I was amazed how dedicated he was. He could easily, since he was just doing this on his own thing, so he could have easily said, I'll help you for an hour. I would accept it. I'll look at your notes for 10 minutes, I would accept it. But there were days he sat with the team till five in the morning, working all night. He had just gone to Baku to play an event. He played there. And then at night he would work with us and for the team it was great because we were getting his insights in his opening. We realized there was so much we had missed. He started to think, and every game he basically became my fifth second from game five till the final game. And I couldn't possibly thank him enough. So that was, and I'd just beaten him two years ago in the match. So again, it was, I think his ability to put that aside that impressed me. We had kind of spoken a little bit the previous year about his new born daughter and kind of broke the ice, but I was still feeling awkward. I thought it might take a bit of time for both of us to move on, but in fact he seemed to be able to take this very well. And so they all helped me in different ways and it was nice. It was, when you get that kind of feedback, it of course gives you a lot of confidence. In your 2013 game against Aroni and Atata, when you played Bishop 15 for Black, Bishop C5, all the ensuing combinations and tactics, how much of that were you seeing in advance? So that's literally this position, right? Yes, and you played... And I played Bishop C5, so I'll tell you, I spent 25 minutes in this position because I couldn't remember a thing. I vaguely remembered that, sorry, I'll move the pieces right here, that if he goes H3, then this is the draw. And that's what he should do, right? And that's a draw. And Bishop E4, then? That is some draw. I think you take and Bishop B8, and then the knight is loose. The details are a thing, but when you played F4, I thought this move I don't remember at all. And I was searching, racking my brain to find out why, and I could not figure it out. Then suddenly, I had this, almost something flashed in my head, and this knight was on this square, on D3. In your head? In my head. I suddenly, some variation flashed where I had a knight on D3. I couldn't for the life of me connect it, but I started to look, is there something... There are obvious moves anyway. I can do this, trying to get to D3. I can play E5, based on the same idea as in the game. But none of them seem to work. This one is too slow, he takes, and these things. This one, I mean, he'll allow me to take and recapture it, so what's the deal? Eventually, by elimination, I realized it must be Bishop C5, there's nothing else. But once I started to look at Bishop C5, it started to look good to me, and then it closes very fast. It's like finding out 80% of the map, then the rest fills in very fast. It gets accelerated. You knew Knight DE5 was coming at that point. That was a thing. So I'll tell you, I played Bishop C5 because if he takes, I take, he captures here, then my dream, my vision, whatever, is check and Knight captures D3, and then that Knight, which pops into D3, works. So that's all I had to reconstruct, but it is beautiful that with little, I was able to reconstruct it. Now, I went here, Aronian was a bit shocked because he had not given it a lot of attention, but it was very courageous on him, his part to even get here, because I had prepared this for a match against Gelfand, and the guy lets me, and basically says, show me what you got. Show me what you and your team spent a month on. That's, it's brave, but it's also kind of irresponsible. I mean, unless you've checked it yourself very thoroughly, so he seems to be slightly flippant about it. Anyway, after Bishop E2, the rest played itself. For me, Bishop C5 took 25 minutes. I don't remember, Knight D5 might have taken me five minutes, but more because I was double checking rather than anything, but this came effortlessly, because already we are talking of, this Knight has to support this one, the Queen and Bishop are going to flood into D4, Knight F2 check is going to win, all these little dots. So while this is maybe the most spectacular move, it's the less difficult move to find, especially once you have done this. So now if you ask me, before I saw Bishop C5, did I see Knight D5? I did not even see Bishop E2. I was more focused on the main thing. I didn't see Bishop E2. So once he played Bishop E2, the obvious, everything else failed itself, and I flooded in. And of course, the big advantage was by now, Rotterley V. Rubinstein was coming into my head. So I knew that, I knew what happens, well, we'll get the structure a bit later, but I knew what happens when you get this Bishop, this Bishop, all pointing in this direction. Smothered mate, H3 becomes impossible. Roughly speaking, this was Rotterley V. Rubinstein with the Knight here, and it's a classic game in chess history. And so I knew the patterns and all the details, check out. So once I played Knight D5, the rest came pretty fast. There was only one more thing I had to find, King H1, Knight takes G4. Again, every move loses, except what he did. And then F5 is a brilliant move. F5 is fantastic, because for a dangerously long time, and later on you shiver when you shudder when you realize what you could have done, for quite some time I considered this move. Yeah, but then Queen H7, and it's a draw, right? Or maybe you're even worse? Maybe even I'm worse. But the beauty is, it was, this move was slightly easier to find, because seven years ago, Kramnik had allowed Queen H7 against Fritz, mate. And Kramnik, and pretty much everyone said, there is no way I would have allowed Queen H7 if the Knight had been on F6. Because to a human, immediately it signals danger all over the place. But a Knight on F8, you almost forget it's there. Whereas for a computer, it sees that both moves allow Queen H7. So at some point I realized, oh my God, Queen H7, well, that would spoil a very nice position. Then by elimination again, I could play F5. And once again, all the dots come. And the Queen will come to H4 in one way or another. It will be over. And then you just knew you're completely winning. And there's one more detail, if you like, which is that here, I have to play this, but it wins. It's the only move it doesn't lose, but it also wins. When Magnus did the Lex Riedman podcast, he drew a distinction between chess players who see only short lines, but are great at evaluation. He called himself one of those. Or Karawana, who calculates very long lines, but is not as good at evaluation. Does that dichotomy make sense to you? Very much, it's just the way your brain processes thoughts. So some people fill in the gaps intuitively. When the pieces feel right, when the broad picture looks right, the answers will come to you. And you're guided more by the sense of what is good and not. Of course, Karawana does it as well, but to a lower degree. So he calculates a lot more to fill in the gaps. And therefore Karawana's a lot better at finding exceptions. The natural players miss exceptions, because what looks good to them, well, they happen to stumble on the one position where what looks good isn't good. And it hurts them. Karawana tends to miss that less often, because he's not... In fact, Karawana's approach, you could almost exaggerate and say, it's closer to a computer than many other humans. Of course, he's 1% of the way closer, but it doesn't matter. And there are players who approach chess in a more systematic way, and they're the ones who tend to find exceptional ideas and things like that, because of the way they don't rule out stuff just on dogmatic grounds or something like that. And, but we are talking very small differences. I think Karawana's understanding is much closer to let's say Carlson's than thing. But yes, his approach is to look, calculate everything and look for very specific solutions. Carlson's, as he says, hand will make the move. You just know where the pieces go, and then you don't need the details. And how do you prepare differently against each type of player? I don't get down to that level of detail. If I was playing a match, I could try to incorporate that approach. But so much of chess is just getting the opening right, the moves right, the concepts right, that you don't have time to micro-target like that. It just doesn't work. At least not for me. Perhaps others are able to do it. I would think the maximum level you could do it at is to choose the kind of opening which favors you the most intuitively. And say, from what I know of my opponent, this is the position where he's fidgeting uncomfortably in his chair. And once you've chosen the opening, you hope that, well, that insight actually plays out. But at least for me, I've never been able to target much more. Like I just said, when I was playing Topolov, I used my insight into thing to say, well, these openings will work for me and he'll get impatient, he'll try to do something active. Maybe I can punish him. But once I've done that, the rest are just long lines and I can't use that insight anymore in the games. You'll have flashes of this at most, but chess is actually mostly long variations. What goes on inside your head during a match that no normal human could guess at? Surprisingly, how distracted we are during a match, even in very critical moments, I'll be thinking about I can have a dinner, what I should have done yesterday, that I met that jerk yesterday, and this kind of stuff. And your brain wanders off and it's almost, it's almost like taking your foot off the gas. Your brain wants to wander off for a while, you let it and then you come back and you keep one part focused on what's happening, but while your opponent is thinking, you can wander off. I think whenever somebody tells me, I don't know how you concentrate for seven hours, I understand that they don't know how we play chess, or that they haven't played chess themselves, because we do not concentrate for seven hours. Very few people do it and I would think even they, the brain simply says it goes on strike periodically and then comes back. So I think that's how it works. You've argued in your career, you had a down period, something like 2011 to 2013, until recently, Karawana seemed to have a down period for a while. Why does that happen to very top players? It's very hard to explain. I mean, if you could even see it coming, you could start to think about it, but my feeling is it catches most people off guard. They repeat a recipe probably too long and it's not like anybody else spotted it coming. Suddenly you notice, after one or two tournaments you think, it's not winning quite as much as you used to, didn't it? And then you take a look and you realize that slowly some resistance has built up in his games, resistance to the free flow, the most natural flow, but it's very hard to see it coming and then when you're stuck in it, it's very hard to see how to get out of it. And in most cases, at least in my experience, the way to get out of it is to stop thinking about how to solve it and almost lighten yourself and get back to playing a normal game for normal reasons. And you'd think that method could be refined and you could apply it systematically, but if it did, nobody would have slumps anymore in form. So there is something clearly that we can't quite pick up on. It's a kind of staleness that gets into your game. It's probably an accumulation that if you're doing too well for too long, others have been working nonstop, trying to understand you and at some point, without you or them realizing it, the gap is closed and then you're encountering more resistance. You're doing what worked perfectly before, but you're encountering more resistance, you can't see why. And your opponents don't understand why they're not losing, but they suddenly think, hey, this did work better for me and somehow the gap closes and the time has come for you to move on, try something else, bring some fresh perspective. What's your favorite Monty Python skit? I like the one with the Pope. There's several with the Pope. Well, that's true, that's true. Well, basically Michelangelo, Michelangelo. Yeah, that's a good one. I like argument clinic very much. Yes, and there's a lot of nice stuff with the Ministry of Silly Wolves and Parat is very good. Yes, Cheese Shop is very good. Yes, the Dead Parat is very good. Summer Rice Proust, do you know that one? They didn't show that one that much. Yeah, no, that I missed, but those were nice. And also the Yorkshiremen, these guys all talking about how poor they were in their childhood. Yes. That's fantastic. I love the idea of a cardboard box in the highway. What's faulty towers ever as good as Monty Python? I'll tell you the first time I was staying with, I visited the Indian Consul General in The Hague and he invited me to stay for lunch because he's also from Chennai. So he invited me to stay for lunch. And so I said, well, that's very nice. Thank you, I'll stay. Either before we were about to have lunch and or about or after we had had lunch, he said, okay, I'll put some, he put a cassette in and it was faulty towers. And I started watching. At first I didn't understand the humor at all. I wasn't even that familiar with Monty Python then. So it gives you an idea. But the humor seems strange. And then there's always this one situation which is so absurd that you just can't stop laughing. And at some point I was laughing, but like a person who could not stop. And I was choking almost. And that's when I knew, so I would have to say faulty towers as good. There are lines which are fantastic. There are simply... Don't mention the war, right? Don't mention the war yet. Maybe I've just watched it way too much. But this hotel inspector is great. The health inspector is good. And what I love is this blind or, well, this deaf old lady who comes by and complains about everything. And he says, what were you expecting from a hotel window talking? And also the lovely thing, yes madam, that's the sea. It's between the land of the sky. It's perfect stuff. What's the most underrated Queen song? I don't know. I rate all of them very highly. Bright and rock I might pick. I've heard Bohemian Rhapsody too many times at this point. Yes, I've heard Bohemian Rhapsody as well. And my problem is my son recently discovered Queen. So we listened to it again almost in overdrive. I don't think... I don't think I have an underrated Queen song. I'm aware that out there there might be songs that are underrated in your view, right? Yeah, but for me, I rate them perfectly highly. But I have this habit of listening to my four or five favorite songs in an album and kind of ignoring the ones I don't like. So my son is more disciplined in that way. He'll actually listen to the whole album. So he asks me questions about songs. Some I'll be. I'll give him two of our descriptions. Other ones I'll say, you know, I've never heard them before. In chess, opening preparation. Where does that end? What's the bottleneck? Does it just keep on going until the first 33 moves are pre-packaged? Some lines will go that far, but equally you can use the computer to solve the problem that the computer's created, which is that if you take a single line and you go, you can go very, very far. But you can also deviate an earlier and earlier stage and you can always, you can have it running on 20 lines and you go for line number 17 and you think and you'll find that you're not able to work it out just as thoroughly. You need time to do it. And before you do that, you move to the next one. So no one's quite able to nail every possibility. You can always surprise someone. We saw this with Ding recently in the publisher. He actually went H3 in one position. Yeah. It was a surprise backfired because Jan seemed to know exactly which line to play and he went for the one line where H3 turns out to be a disadvantage. That's very hard to nail down. You have to get quite deep into it. Mostly that works and, but yes, even with that qualification, the opening preparation everywhere is just building up and up and up. There are lines I neglect for six months and then I come back to them and I realize, my God, I have to update everything. I'm not sure of anything, any of this preparation anymore. The problem in preparation is not whether it's detailed. The problem is whether you can believe in it. And if you have not checked it 100%, it's worthless. I mean, it's like a 99% guarantee before you go to the operation. You want to have 100% guarantee, right? So it's 99% is simply not good enough and that's the problem with opening preparation as well that the computer allows you to question everything. Every new version, every new program, every new piece of hardware, each one of those things can drive it. So every six months or a year, you have to start all over again cleaning your stuff. On the other hand, it's one of the great joys in chess research is to come to an opening that you've not seen in five years. And that first day, you're discovering everything new. Every single line you refute and clean up and you feel like you've cleaned your entire house of clutter and you feel wonderful. So that's, it's a double-edged sword. I will concede that, but it's a pain in the neck when you want to rely on something. The people are playing the guicopiano again. Is it that we've discovered it's better than Rui Lopez or just we're sick of all the old lines and we're gonna try something different for three years and then move on and the two nights game is even coming a bit into fashion. And is it cycling or continuous improvement? It's a lot of it cycling. At some point, I don't remember, maybe five or six years ago, there was a kind of individualistic collective sense that maybe the Rui Lopez is neglected territory, virgin territory. Let's go back there and try that because of Italian and the guicopiano, my God. There's nothing left to find. And then we do, everybody goes after the Rui Lopez for a year and suddenly a couple of guys say, let's look at the Italian again and you think, ah, there are a few things we haven't picked up on. So you swing back there and it goes like this, but it's an arms race and we're not winning. Was it a kind of market inefficiency that the King's Indian defense could survive for so long? I mean, Rajababha did pretty well with it until recently you've played it a fair amount, but it just seems like a bad move, right? There's a time when it looked just lost. No, I mean, there was a time maybe five, six years ago when the King's Indian just looked lost because the computer always said it was lost. And recently, maybe even a year ago, the computer said, no, I confirm it's dead lost. But people have always said that there's something fundamentally unsound about the King's Indian, but it, we couldn't quite prove it and that was why people are going on. You know the famous court of Kotschner, right? He said, he told Aaron Pickett, the King's Indian is not an opening, it's a disease. And so he was basically, he had it right all along. And so recently Fabiano started playing head six in the King's Indian, the classical King's Indian. And the beauty of that is it's not quite refutable. It's got just enough life to drag on for a while and people come to parts of the King's Indian that they like. So the King's Indian that aligns you that you find difficult to play. But if you come in from a Grunfeld move order and White does something against anti-Grunfeld and you swing from there back to the King's Indian or you come from a Benoni move order and you get into the King's Indian or even you put the Bishop on E seven and rotate it this way, that way. King's Indian concepts turn out to be very, very dynamic and healthy even if you're not getting it to it in the same structured opening. So King's Indian players have found a way to get their, you know, the King's Indian fix for the week without having to go down the old main line. And that's how it goes. But computers will contradict themselves every couple of years. So maybe the pendulum has swung to the farthest side. Does Fisher-Random have a future? Or it's just a side thing forever? Fisher-Random actually has a brilliant future because it's a form of chess which has not been understood at all. However, with this thing, Fisher-Random was conceived as a way of avoiding opening theory. Later on people rediscovered it as a way of avoiding computers. Now we realize we're not avoiding computers at all. They're just as good at Fisher-Random or no-castling as they are at chess. New versions, we're never gonna catch up with computers but for playing amongst ourselves, this is completely new territory and there's a lot of scope for creativity and everything we used to look for. So it's an opening with a lot of, it's a variant with a lot of promise. Maybe the one we'll just play is the most comfortable with. However, in the meantime, I have played no-castling a few times. That turns out to be fascinating. The first time I sat with my computer and I had to play Knight F3 Rook G1 and repeated four corners, all four Rooks and Knights so that White couldn't castle anymore. And then switch on the engine and analyze openings like this. And I realized that almost every opening can be re-evaluated if your king can't castle. And so everywhere the right plan turns out to be H4, H5, Rook H4 thing, except the ones where it's not. And you don't, there are no general rules yet or we have not come that far. So we find every little detail. Now there are lots of other versions that are coming up Versions you can have as many as you dream of. So you can have pawns moving sideways, pawns capturing straight and moving horizontal, I mean, diagonally. You can have every which variant you want. You program it into the computer and let it play a million games and see what comes out. So this may be a solution for the distant future, but for the moment, chess looks healthy enough. Especially if you vary, people who have played too much classical chess have a round of faster controls. And then when you've done too many faster controls, you go back to classical. And if you keep varying like this, that's one thing that keeps the game moving along. The second thing that works very well is for instance what they do in Tata Steel which is to have a mixed field. Not all super prepared top GMs, but a mixture of very young courageous juniors with top GMs, you have that mix. That also leads to a lot of unpredictability. So if you keep moving around, you change the format, change the variant, change the time control, change this change that you just keep shuffling, we can go on for quite some time. Is there a chance that 10 years from now, say rapid play, is the world chess championship? I wouldn't rule it out. I wouldn't rule it out, but I feel that classical would still exist. It's just public taste would have moved along. And the same could be said for blitz chess, if you want. And we're also dealing now with thanks to the revolution of the last five or six years which in general, I mean, what happened with the Queen's Gambit? What happened the last couple of years? Which is that maybe the number of people who are casual fans of chess are far greater than serious fans of chess. Sure, of course. And they are actually following the game now. Whereas before they would follow it once in a while. Now they actually have an impact and you sense it in the numbers. And thanks to them, I think they may not have this old attachment to classical chess. They may also not know who Kappa Blanka was. But, and when that is felt in the sport, then the sport will inevitably cater to their tastes more and more. But I don't think that classical chess will disappear. It's just that it used to be 100% of chess. Then for the last couple of decades, it's been about 80% of chess. Now I would say it's closer to 30, 40% of chess. Which leaves the other variants fighting with 60%. The other time controls fighting with 60%. And it's a question of the mix. There will always be some role for having a lot of time to think and find interesting stuff. But all the time is very hard, especially given modern preparation. How is it you think that playing so much as a streamer seems to have made Nakamura better? Psychologically better too, right? I don't think the streaming helps him become a better player. But what it has done is it's taken a lot of pressure off him. He really felt he had only one way to show who he was. And that was with the chess board. And now he suddenly realizes, I've got this other method where people appreciate me and cheer me. In fact, many years ago in 2011 in Tata Steel, he made a winner speech. And I was kind of surprised the way he said, it's so wonderful to be in Holland where we're appreciated for our chess. In the US nobody would care or something like that. And he did this as the winner in the closing speech. And I thought, well, quite a strange thing to say. But if you keep that thought in the background, now he's got the adulation he wants. In fact, he seems to crave it. He goes back and does a recap every day and things like that. He really seems to want it. What I think is helping him is playing Blitz tournaments nonstop online. That allows him to keep there. And it might be the best way to train for a modern computerized opening preparation era where there's so little to do with preparation because the computer solves everything. But you get to test every concept a million times, practice over the board. And that's why he's so good at it. And that's why all the best players now are playing these online Blitz events. You can put me on the spot and say, well, if you think that's the case, why aren't you doing it? I haven't gotten around. I do some training online, but I don't feel like sitting from midnight till three in the morning playing online Blitz, these Tuesday events and so on. But... If you were much younger, could you imagine yourself as a streamer? It pays me well, right? I can imagine being a streamer now very easily. But what I don't see myself doing is spending all night playing. Also, I don't feel like playing that much Blitz. I always tell myself I should do a bit more, but in the end, the body just doesn't get up and then that's it. You just don't go there. I easily see myself trying streaming or something, but it's a question of how long you want to invest in it. I mean, again, success is not going to come very fast. There's a lot of crocodiles already in that bank. You'll have to, in that watering hole, you'll have to spend quite some time, do stuff daily, things like that. So it's a big time commitment is what I'm trying to say. So I could very easily see myself doing it. And I've done versions of it over the last couple of years. I did a lot of online coaching, lots of my talks that I used to give for companies. I do online as well nowadays. So I've done versions of it. I could see myself doing that, especially commentary. How difficult is it instead of going to a tournament and doing commentary from there, just to sit in your room and do it? It's very easy. So that I could see. The other bit, probably I'm just a bit old. I think it was MVL who made the remark that in a post-Alfazera world, what we've learned is how much chess is truly the concrete and how few generalizations there are. Does that make sense to you? Or what do you think we've learned from AlphaZero? That's a broader trend. I don't even know if it starts with AlphaZero, but maybe that's where it became the most visible. But he's right. There are no general principles anymore. If the computer says, in fact, new general principles emerge. Nowadays, we push the H&A ponds so whenever we want. And it's not a bad move. But 20 years ago, these moves would have been considered betraying the complete lack of an chess education. Now it's not there. So everything we used to think was bad, we're forced to evaluate move by move. Some of them will turn out to be bad, many of them won't. And you'll just have to know specific reasons and you'll just have to get into the details. So he's right about that. I think that's probably a cry from a person who's having to prepare the stuff all the time. But anyway, he's right, I think. Just nowadays, it's about finding out exceptions to everything. And that's where a lot of the growth is at chess player. Because all of us, we are hardwired to think these things are good, these things are bad. But imagine that you now have to wander in the field of everything you thought was bad and realize that half of it might be good. That's kind of where we see ourselves now. Rukchi won against the Night Orph. Is that a novelty move or actually a very good move? Because no one played it in the time of Fisher, right? No, none at all. But even when Fisher played H3, people thought, what the hell is this? And then they said, oh, but Fisher did it, it's okay. So you need a stamp of approval and the computer is now the newest stamp of approval. Rukchi won by the way predates AlphaZero and it predates modern engines. We're talking at least 15, 20 years. Bishop D2 on move six. That is such nonsense. Even when the computer is running, I think that this is nonsense. The fact that it doesn't lose on the spot tells me that, especially with a computer, it doesn't lose on the spot. It tells me nothing, but this is nonsense. But there are people who play it and then next thing, you know, there's theory building up. At age 53, you're still in the world top 10. There's no one else in the top 10 close to your age. And you have been India's number one for what, 37 years, 38 years? 37 years. What keeps you going? What motivates you? I like playing chess. Couple of years ago, I decided to, that maybe, you know, playing full-time, playing the whole year round and trying to compete at the highest level was, wasn't worth it in terms of the amount of time and effort I would have to put in for the results I expected. So I decided to semi-retire. A decision made easy in the pandemic because everyone was semi-retired in the pandemic, but the key thing was not to come back after the pandemic was over. So I played a little bit here and there whenever I could because I still like playing. And I like, for me, chess tournaments are primarily social events. You meet everyone and you hang out with everyone again. So when I did all that, I enjoyed myself and then I would say, okay, now for four months, I'm not gonna play anything, much longer break than before. Also I'm living in India more or less the whole time when I'm not playing. So that's increased, changed a lot. Some of it is family. My son is growing up. So you also want to prioritize what you're doing with your time and so on. But I really enjoy the few tournaments that I play. So when I play these rapid ambulances and I have these one or two events in the year, I try to four or five months before leading up to them. I start training again. Just to get back in this frame of mind where it's chess is not just some philosophical thing where you can do this and you can do that. It's concrete moves, like MBL said. And the most important skill in chess is if I was sitting at the board now with the clock ticking, what would I make in this position? And then suddenly the infinite variety of choices you have becomes irrelevant. You have to make only one move and how do you switch to that frame of mind? I try to stick there. But I really love analyzing and working on chess. And maybe even just like for Hikaru, having something else fill part of your life allows you to come back to chess with much more enthusiasm. These long breaks, then when I get back to chess, I'm much more enthusiastic about playing and I look forward to it. So that might be a huge fact as well. Do you hate losing as much as Kasparov does? To me, it seems he isn't even close to me, but I admit I can't see him from the inside and he probably can't see me from the inside. When I lose, I can't imagine anyone in the world who loses as badly as I do inside. So you think you're the worst at losing? At least that I know of. And a couple of years ago, I know people will say, but how are you such a good loser? And I'd say I'm not a good loser, I'm a good actor. I know how to stay composed in public. I can even pretend for five minutes, but I can only do it for five minutes because I know that once the press conference is over, once I can finish talking to you, I can go back to my room and hit my head against the wall because that's what I'm longing to do now. And in fact, it's gotten even worse because as you get on, you think, I should have known that, I should have known that, I should have known not to do that. What is the point of doing this a thousand times and not learning anything? You get angry with yourself much more. So I hate losing much more even than before, I think. There's an interview with Magnus on YouTube and they asked him to rate your sanity on a scale of one to 10. I don't know if you've seen this and he gives you a 10. Is he wrong? No, he's completely right. He's completely right. I think sanity is being able to show the world that you are sane, even when you're insane. And therefore I'm 11. Overall, how happy a lot do you think top chess players are? Say top 20 players. I think they're very happy. They understand that they're able to be chess players and that they can have a pretty good life doing so. So just like anybody who finds that they're doing what they wanted to do, what they would be doing anyway, even in under worse circumstances, but they're able to do it in a pretty nice way and challenging way. Then we understand we're privileged. In fact, the funny thing is how many chess players are happy even not being top players? Because they, just as again, one of these callings, you find yourself in it and you really enjoyed it. It's very quite hard for a chess player to quit and switch to something else. They always have this gap, this time lag. I was quite surprised to see when Kenneth Rogoff... Became an economist as I did, yeah. Well, he became an economist, but recently, maybe seven, eight years ago, somebody asked him, so what's it like thinking about chess again because he had come to a chess tournament? He said, but I never stopped thinking about it. And for me, that was strange because I would assume that after five years, it drops way below. But apparently he kept at it all the time. He would think about chess every day. When I see him, he and I talk chess. Maybe you have the same things. Now economics. Ah, right. Well, there's the answer. He doesn't want to talk economics with me. If you had to boil down your cognitive ability or abilities into as small a number of dimensions as possible, what's the cognitive ability you have that makes you special? I think the ability, well, is it cognitive? The ability to pull out details from a mass of information that I've seen. So in chess, we may see a thousand games from this. And then at the board, I may be able to distill the right idea from all that. So being able to extract useful ideas from a lot of information. Also good visual intelligence in chess. The only skill which a top chess player has to have really is the sense that something is going wrong. And that's a visual thing because with very few details, you suddenly think now, I feel uncomfortable. There's something wrong here. That's one of the most important skills you can have in chess. And besides, probably just the usual mix, a bit of memory, good memory, at least for things that I'm interested in. Ability to focus on one thing and then keep at it. And is there some other area where you have also a remarkable ability? So Magnus seems to be great at fantasy football. Some chess players are great at bridge. I'm sort of good in games and lots of these games you play just for fun. Immediately I find that I started an acceptable level. So maybe there is some skill there, but I've not thought about it that much. Last two questions. There's so many talented young chess players from Tamil Nadu. Obviously you know them, you play with them. And if you're looking for who will really climb to the top, like Praga, Gukesh, other than just how well they play at the moment, what else do you look for? If they're very young, I want to see a certain amount of fanaticism. I think fanaticism is good in your teens. But quite a few of them have that. I think maturity is maybe the most important thing because Pragananda and Gukesh have taken some horrible blows. But what I've realized is that they're quite strong. In a way that I'm amazed. Maybe because for me losing hurts so much more. I can no longer understand people who are relaxed about losing. And maybe I was once more relaxed, I don't know. But Pragan, Gukesh, both have taken some of the tough times recently quite well and come out of it. Now they're both going gangbusters and that's great. But they've had difficult times as well. And there are things I look for on the chess board, just a sense that they understand a lot of stuff without having to, just like I mentioned earlier, they know where the pieces go. And if I look at their games, I can quickly get a sense of which area they focus in. I mean, some of them have no understanding of chess at all. But they have amazing sporting qualities, which is that they're tenacious, they're able to keep resisting. You can see that they don't have this dip of being annoyed with themselves about the position and therefore their performance goes down. If anything, they're still finding only moves, they're still hanging in there. So some things like this will alert me to some sporting qualities. But the chess qualities I think I look for first. If not, I wonder, well, they don't have this. What could I want? They possibly bring to the table, they compensate for it and then I realize, ah, they have these other sporting qualities, maybe even their fitness, their ability to hang in there. Things like that. Last question. Where's the best place to eat in Chennai? You should go to some of these Udupi homes and we have some places where they serve traditional South Indian breakfast. I think that, and not in the bigger places. Murugan Idli I went to, that was very good. You know it? Yeah, Murugan Idli is very good. There's some nice Udupi joints. There's Matsya, you can try that. We go to the old Dasa chain as well. There used to be something called Dasa Prakash. That's nice. And then you get, well, for me it's almost a childhood thing. Literally that's how we used to snack when we were there. And besides that, some place with the good tali gives you, I think, a good sampling of everything in both South Indian and Indian cuisine. Vishyanand, thank you very much. Thank you, pleasure.