Great Players of the Past: Bobby Fischer

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Published 2023-03-16
Check out Ben's Chessable courses here! www.chessable.com/author/BenFinegold/ GM Ben Finegold's at his finest with this lecture on Bobby Fischer as part of the "Great Players of the Past" series.

4:44 Robert James Fischer vs. Lhamsuren Myagmarsuren, Sousse Interzonal (1967)
16:31 Robert James Fischer vs. Boris V. Spassky, World Championship, Reykjavik (1972)
27:08 Rene Letelier Martner vs. Robert James Fischer, Leipzig (1960)
36:33 Robert James Fischer vs. Bent Larsen, Portoroz Interzonal (1958)
45:40 Robert James Fischer vs. Efim P. Geller, Bled (1961)

Thanks to Nick Ragone, whose generosity made this video possible!

Recorded at the Chess Club and Scholastic Center of Atlanta on January 23, 2018, and originally posted on the CCSCATL Channel on January 29, 2018. So yes, you've probably seen this one before.

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Intro and concluding music: “Da Jazz Blues,” by Doug Maxwell;    • Da Jazz Blues - Doug Maxwell/Media Ri...  . Thank you Doug!

#chess #GMBenFinegold #GMBobbyFischer

All Comments (21)
  • @Agora0000
    Thanks to Ben for bringing us this forgotten players series, very informative!
  • I'm glad you re-uploaded this video, it's one of my favorite lectures of yours. Not just because it's about Fischer, but also because the banter and the commentary in this particular video are top notch in my opinion
  • Lord knows how much they had to pay Ben for him to cover someone so recognizable. Dozens of dollars at least!
  • @Brusselpicker
    About National Master Ronald Barry Finegold Ron Finegold joined the Michigan Chess Association in the late 1950's. His first major success was equal 2nd in the 1958 Michigan Open with 5.5 out of 7, behind former French champion Stephan Popel's perfect score. He was a National Master for a great number of years and is a Life Master. In 1961, he took clear first with a 5-0 score at the Glass City Open in Toledo, Ohio, where the field of well over 100 players included several masters. Ron was the 2nd Board prize winner at the 1962 Pan-Am Intercollegiate for Wayne State University's chess team, which finished in third place among several dozen teams at the Philadelphia event. Earlier in 1962, he took a trip with other Michigan players to the U.S. Open in San Antonio, Texas. In this tournament, which featured many grandmasters such as Benko, R. Byrne, Lombardy, and Bisguier, as well as grandmasters and IM's from Europe and South America, Ron finished 15th with 8 points out of 12. Coincidentally, he had identical 8-point performances in the other two U.S. Opens in which he participated, Ventura (Calif.) 1971 and Dearborn 1992. Ron played his best-known tournament game at the 1963 Western Open in Bay City. Bobby Fischer, irritated by perceptions of Soviet cheating and poor treatment by international organizers, accepted an invitation to the Western Open. Ron was paired with Bobby in Round Five in what turned out to be Bobby's longest game of the tournament. Fischer finally squeezed out a win in a complex ending. Ron scored first place or equal first in three Motor City Opens. Equal first in the 1971 Flint Open ahead of many masters including Larry Gilden and Eugene Martinovsky. Winner of dozens of USCF-rated tournaments including at least four tournaments in 1980. First place in the Cleveland Open, scoring 5-0 over many masters from Ohio, Michigan and Illinois in the late 60s. Ron is a veteran of many Michigan and national events, including the Michigan Open, the Michigan Speed Championships, the Motor City Open, the World Open and the Chicago Open. In the blitz side event at the 1991 National Open in Chicago, he defeated GM Walter Browne, founder of the World Blitz Chess Association. Later that year, Ron finished in clear 2nd at the Canadian Open blitz tournament in Windsor. He also holds the unique distinction of scoring an undefeated 24 wins and 4 draws in a series of Insanity tournaments that used to be held in Cincinnati, Detroit and Toledo in the 60's and early 70's, making him the Insanity Champion.
  • @kingcarisma
    I love it when he adds a sentence with lower voice... "And in the analysis room..(if you can call it that)" 😄
  • @KvS1248
    Funny and Educational, Great Chess-lecture Ben Finegold-style 😄👍
  • @konsargy9195
    By far the most enjoyabe chess youtube channel. I only study from chess books but Ben makes my chess journey much more enjoyabe. Best wishes mate.
  • Another wonderful episode to the series. I'm a big Fischer fan and I already knew the games. But its nice to hear Finegold's thoughts on the games. Cheers!
  • @itzallai2397
    Steinitz v Von Bardelelaben was the first game I ever memorised. Im so happy I got the referance! 😂
  • @zanti4132
    Although the first game Ben shows is certainly one of Fischer's most famous victories, it does not appear in "My 60 Memorable Games." The only game from the 1967 Interzonal he includes in "My 60 Memorable Games" is his win vs Stein. And, yes, this is the Interzonal where he withdrew while leading.
  • @cheezbomber
    Glad Ben asked the Airplane questions... I wasn't getting many of the chess questions but that was a good ego boost with the audience at a loss... I AM serious, and quit calling me Shirley.
  • You should make new videos about Great Players from the Past series. Fischer, Tal, Capablanca and Lasker would be awesome.
  • LOLOLOL the intro "bit" Ben: "the doctor told me I was special because I fell on my head, right?" Kid: "duhhhhh" Ben: "Yeah he remembers that"