Get all your news in one place.
100’s of premium titles.
One app.
Start reading
The Hindu
The Hindu
Sport
P.K. Ajith Kumar

I think Anand is among the five great chess players of all time, says Alexander Grischuk

When Alexander Grischuk made his first visit to India, he was 17. He had arrived as the 46th seed for the World chess championship. The Russian caused a sensation, reaching the semifinal. He, however, went down to Alexei Shirov (who would then lose in the final to Viswanathan Anand).

It took Grischuk another 23 years to return to India, for the Tata Steel Chess India tournament in Kolkata. By that time, he had picked three World blitz titles, had been the World No. 3 and had become only the eighth player in history to cross 2800 Elo points.

He had also created a huge fan-base not just for his fascinating style of play but for his sense of humour as well. He didn’t speak much in Kolkata, but when he did, he made people laugh.

At the press conference, when he was asked about the chances of R. Praggnanandhaa becoming the World champion, he also took the names of D. Gukesh and Nodirbek Abdusattorov of Uzbekistan. But he added, “There is also some weird guy called Magnus (Carlsen).”

Praggnanandhaa, who was sitting next to him, broke into a big smile. Grischuk may not have smiled as much, but he had every reason to, last Saturday evening at Kolkata’s National Library, where he won the blitz title of the Tata Steel tournament. At 39, he was the oldest player and he pushed behind him some of the world’s best young players.

“I hate losing, and that is the main factor that keeps me still going,” Grischuk told The Hindu. “I would rather stop playing completely than just be losing game after game.”

He isn’t surprised by India’s young talents taking the world by storm.

“Because India has so many people and it is also the leading country in computers”Alexander Grischuk

“I am more surprised by the emergence of Uzbekistan as a major force in world chess.”

He has great regard for Anand. “I think Vishy is among the five great players of all time (Garry Kasparov, Carlsen, Bobby Fischer and Anatoly Karpov the others),” he said.

Looking back to the World Championship in Delhi, he said he had come with no expectations.

“I was more surprised with myself than anybody else,” he said. “Among the things I remember from that tour is my visit to the Taj Mahal. It was incredible, grandiose.”

Sign up to read this article
Read news from 100’s of titles, curated specifically for you.
Already a member? Sign in here
Related Stories
Top stories on inkl right now
Our Picks
Fourteen days free
Download the app
One app. One membership.
100+ trusted global sources.