Interesting Take On Chess

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1800's isn't good, it is incredible. You cannot achieve that without a lot of study or without having been taught chess when you were really young and your brain is a sponge. I cannot get good at it and while tempted to get better, i want it to remain fun and an escape from work, rather than become actual work
 
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1800's isn't good, it is incredible. You cannot achieve that without a lot of study or without having been taught chess when you were really young and your brain is a sponge. I cannot get good at it and while tempted to get better, i want it to remain fun and an escape from work, rather than become actual work

Even at 1800, there are guys that just toy with me... it's all relative.
 
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Is Fischer the best ever

Like anything else, it depends on how you define "best ever." Are you meaning peak performance over one's whole career, or peak performance at the top of their career?
And, it's hard to compare players from different eras as well...

Fischer does have the highest rating over one year's span: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Comparison_of_top_chess_players_throughout_history

Fischer is my favorite player, being an American... though it's tough not to pick Kasparov as best ever, accomplishing what he did over a 20 year period.

Bobby was a victim of his own mental illness as well.
 

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https://fivethirtyeight.com/feature...e-world-chess-championship/?ex_cid=538twitter

An American Will Play For The World Chess Championship

For the first time since Bobby Fischer captivated the country, a U.S. grandmaster has a shot at becoming the undisputed world chess champion.[SUP]1[/SUP] Fabiano Caruana, the current world No. 3 and the top American chess grandmaster, won the right today to play for the game’s most coveted prize. He’ll face the reigning world champion, Magnus Carlsen of Norway, in a 12-game, one-on-one match in London in November. It won’t be easy. Carlsen, the current world No. 1, has been champion since 2013 and became a grandmaster when he was 13 years old. He most recently defended his titlein 2016 in New York City.
Caruana earned his challenge bid by winning the Candidates Tournament, a 14-game tournament featuring eight of the world’s top players, held over the past three weeks in Berlin. For much of the Candidates, Caruana seemed like he might cruise to a relatively painless victory. He notched some early victories and fended off other top rivals with exacting draws. But he stumbled in Game 12, losing to the Russian grandmaster Sergey Karjakin in 48 moves. That created a formidable and complex thicket at the top of the standings — going into the tournament’s final day, four of the eight grandmasters had a chance to win. But in the 14th and final game, held today, Caruana fought Alexander Grischuk of Russia for 69 moves and over six hours, winning the game and securing the tournament.
Caruana has been to the world championships before — but only as a spectator. While Carlsen was winning his championship in New York in 2016, Caruana could be found playing speed chess amid throngs of onlookers at a New York chess club. He told me at the time that he was staying up late at night analyzing the championship games. Now he’ll have a chance to put his analysis to use.
It’s been a long road to the championship for Caruana. His family moved to Brooklyn from Miami when he was 4 years old, and he began playing chessat age 5 at a synagogue’s after-school program. Within a few months, he was playing in tournaments around the city. Fischer, whose own family moved to Brooklyn when he was young, learned the game 50 years earlier in an apartment about a mile away from the synagogue.
Despite these roots in the U.S., Caruana is one of a couple super-strong players who have transferred to the American team from other countries’ teams. Caruana had been a member of the Italian team, having moved to Europe to take advantage of its strong coaches and tournaments. He rejoined the American team in 2015.
But there’s still one steep hill to climb. Caruana and Carlsen have played 31 times before in the lengthy sort of games that will be played at the world championship, according to Chessgames.com, a website that collects top players’ games. Carlsen leads their series 9 wins to 5, and there have been 17 draws. A simple simulation of the match[SUP]2[/SUP] using the players’ current Elo ratings puts Caruana’s chances of upending Carlsen’s reign — and claiming the first American title since Fischer — at about 30 percent.
 

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Not as much as Id like but yeah, sometimes. Playoffs!
 

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