3D Picture of Great Viswanathan Anand and in front of Chess set created by me (Manash Kundu) |
Viswanathan
Anand:
Viswanathan
Anand (born 11 December 1969) is an Indian chess Grandmaster and the current
World Chess Champion. Anand has won the World Chess Championship five times
(2000, 2007, 2008, 2010, 2012), and has been the undisputed World Champion
since 2007.
Viswanathan Anand thinking about his next move |
He held
the FIDE World Chess Championship from 2000 to 2002, at a time when the world
title was split. He became the undisputed World Champion in 2007 and defended
his title against Vladimir Kramnik in 2008. He then successfully defended his
title in the World Chess Championship 2010 against Veselin Topalov and in the
World Chess Championship 2012 against Boris Gelfand.
As the reigning champion, he will face the winner of the upcoming Candidates Tournament for the World Chess Championship 2013.
Israel's Boris Gelfand and Viswanathan Anand |
As the reigning champion, he will face the winner of the upcoming Candidates Tournament for the World Chess Championship 2013.
Anand is
one of six players in history to break the 2800 mark on the FIDE rating list,
and in April 2007 at the age of 37, he became the world number one for the
first time. He was at the top of the world rankings five out of six times, from
April 2007 to July 2008, holding the number-one ranking for a total of 15
months. In October 2008, he dropped out of the world top three ranking for the
first time since July 1996. Anand regained the world number one ranking in 1
November 2010, having defeated the reigning world No. 1 Magnus Carlsen in the
Bilbao Masters, but had to concede the top spot back to Carlsen in July 2011.
Viswanathan Anand with his Black Pawn Move |
Anand
became India's first grandmaster in 1988. He was also the first recipient of
the Rajiv Gandhi Khel Ratna Award in 1991–92, India's highest sporting honour.
In 2007, he was awarded India's second highest civilian award, the Padma
Vibhushan, making him the first sportsperson to receive the award in Indian
history.
Viswanathan Anand with his White Pawn Move |
In an
interview in 2011, Vladimir Kramnik (ex-World Champion 2000 to 2007) said about
Anand: "I always considered him to be a colossal talent, one of the
greatest in the whole history of chess"; and "I think that in terms
of play Anand is in no way weaker than Kasparov but he's simply a little lazy,
relaxed and only focuses on matches. In the last 5–6 years he's made a
qualitative leap that's made it possible to consider him one of the great chess
players".
how are
world class champions like Vishy born? For that, ask his mother Sushila. In
1974, when he was five, she first opened a chessboard and taught him the game.
She was also his first opponent in the game. Anand was her youngest child.
For many
of us chess is a very complex game. But it is interesting that most champions
often start playing chess in their childhood. Luckily, Anand was living in
Madras (now Chennai), which was known as the chess capital of India.
Madras
had produced India's first International Master, Manuel Aaron in 1961.
Seventeen years later, in 1978, Madras produced India's second International
Master, V. Ravi Kumar. Anand too started playing in local tournaments.
In the
same year the boy's life took a new turn. His father, who worked with the
Indian Railways, was sent to the Phillippines for a project. Anand and his
mother also went with him. Anand left chess-crazy Madras to go to a chess-crazy
country - the Philippines! Asia's first Grandmaster, Eugene Torre, was a
Filipino. Florencio Campomanes, who was the President of the world chess
organisation, FIDE, at that time was also a Filipino.
Young Viswanathan Anand and his Passion for Chess game |
And the
famous world chess championship match between Soviet Grandmaster Anatoly Karpov
and Victor Korchnoi, also took place in Philippines' capital Manila in 1978.
Chess was the biggest sport in Philippines. It seemed as if Anand had reached
paradise.
There were daily chess
programmes on television. Unlike children of his age, he preferred chess
programmes to cartoons, and chess magazines to comics! And if ever the postman
delivered his magazine during lunch time, Anand would leave the food untouched,
and bury his nose inside the book.
For Anand
the best part of the magazine was the chess puzzle given at the end of each
programme. He would solve it and send back the answer. Most often he was right.
He won so many prizes that the programme officials finally decided to keep a
limit to the answers he could send!
His first
important world championship was in Paris, in 1983. He finished third despite
being unwell. His mother was his most important support; she helped him cope
with the pressure of the big match. She often accompanied him on his tours.
During
those times when she was in Madras, Anand would often call her at the most
difficult moment of his match. He would speak to her and get his confidence
back.
In 1985,
Anand became an Asian champion. He was also India's youngest International
Master. Two years later, in 1987, he won the world junior championship, in the
Philippines. He was the first Asian to achieve this feat. The same year he
became India's first Grandmaster. He had just turned 18.
Marriage
Life:
Three
days after her wedding, Aruna Anand found herself in Dortmund, Germany,
watching her husband compete in a major chess championship. She didn’t know
anyone from the close-knit chess world, she didn’t understand the game and she
could n’t for the life of her make out if he was winning or losing.
So she
chose a less nerve-wracking alternative: “I started waiting in the toilet while
he was playing,” she says laughing. “He would come and call me when he had
finished, and I’d just keep looking at his face for a sign on how he’d done. He
teases me saying that he’d never seen such a blank face in his life!”
Not quite
your typical honeymoon. But then her husband isn’t your typical guy. For
Grandmaster and current undisputed World Chess Champion Viswanathan Anand,
travelling six to seven months in a year to tournaments and spending several
hours a day intensely focused on a 64-square board in training or in
competition is perfectly normal.
And after
12 years of marriage, it’s all par for the course for Aruna too. They sit down
for the interview in their cheerful Chennai flat with just two hours to go for
a flight to Delhi (for Anand to receive the Padma Vibhushan), but they’re both
relaxed and there’s plenty of good-humoured laughter as they chat about what
makes them work as a couple.
“I think
it’s her sense of humour that keeps us going,” says Anand candidly. “I’m in
another world during tournaments, and her ability to laugh off the things I do
makes life a lot easier.”
According
to Aruna, he has a knack of simplifying the situation and putting things in
perspective, which is great, for example, when a flight gets cancelled and
she’s getting all paranoid. But sometimes, all that calm logic can be
maddening. “After a wedding one night, I was terrified I hadn’t put all my
jewels back in the locker,” she says. “Anand says, ‘well, if you left them out,
the next guy has taken them. If not, they’ll be there tomorrow,’ and turns over
and falls asleep.”
“A moment
later I realised that was probably not a good thing to have said,” says Anand
ruefully.
Over a
period of time, a division of responsibilities evolved between them where Aruna
handles everyday tasks from packing for travel to scheduling his media
engagements, while he focuses on the chess. “It was just practical, because he
trains such long hours and is often thinking sub-consciously about the game,”
she says, adding jokingly, “I realised the marriage would just last longer this
way.”
She still
doesn’t know much about the game, but they do share a common love for travel
and food. Anand rattles off a long list of cuisines they’ve tried — Korean,
Japanese, Vietnamese, Lebanese, Sri Lankan, Mexican, Italian, French, Spanish —
but pre-emptively rejects the title ‘foodie’. “It suggests a certain lack of
control,” he says with characteristic dry wit.
They try
and fit in short vacations in between tournaments, such as a city-break in
Berlin and trips within Mexico or Brazil. One of their best experiences in
recent times was at the Victoria Falls in South Africa (though they did lose a
camera to the spray), and Anand would love to go back to Iceland, which he
calls a ‘unique earthscape’ of volcanoes and geysers.
But they
always make it back to Chennai for two or three months annually; unfortunately,
it’s usually during the hottest time of the year. “Every year I tell myself
I’ll come at another time, and every year April-May ends up being when I’m
free,” Anand says.
So
where’s home? It’s a question they find hard to answer. “I suppose whichever
hotel room you’ve thrown your clothes about in becomes home temporarily,” says
Aruna. They do have a home in the idyllic little Spanish town of Collado
Mediano though, which they use as a base. “There are only about 5000 people in
that town; it’s a completely different experience from living in Chennai,” says
Anand. The town in turn has taken to the couple completely, and Anand is
treated like an adopted son. “They have pictures of him in every shop; the
vegetable shop even has one of him buying tomatoes,” says Aruna laughing.
It’s easy
to see why they’re so taken with this down-to-earth pair. The relationship that
began with a honeymoon at Dortmund has matured, and like fine wine, it just
seems to have gotten better with the passing years.
Aruna,
who has been Anand’s full-time manager since the two got married, hasn’t been
travelling with him the past few months. Besides being Anand’s source of
strength, she takes care of his travel schedule, coordinating with his seconds
and taking care of his media commitments.
“She hasn’t
been physically present, but we have been in touch. I may have to get used to
playing tournaments without Aruna around. But again, we will have to see how it
goes. Like I said, the baby is a priority,” Anand said.
Aruna dna
Anand fun facts:
Both Aruna and Anand are fluent in Spanish. Anand speaks German and French as well
Anand
unwinds by doing Sudoku (which Aruna says he’s annoyingly good at). He’s
planning on taking up advanced 3-D Sudoku next.
Anand
listens to a lot of music while working, everything from Queen and Pet Shop
Boys to old Tamil film songs. His Danish trainer Nielsen has become quite a fan
of MGR songs in the process.
Aruna’s
nickname for Anand in the early years of their marriage was ‘Lord of the Rings’
because he kept losing his wedding ring. Her parents replaced it for him three
times until he asked them to stop.
Anand
once bought Aruna a sari because he thought the colour would “look brilliant in
hi-resolution on the computer screen.”
Viswanathan
Anand Indian Ruler of Chess world and Origin of Chess :
real-size resin reproductions of the 12th century Lewis chessmen. The top row shows king, queen, and bishop. The bottom row shows knight, rook, and pawn. |
The
history of chess spans some 1500 years. The earliest predecessors of the game
originated in India, before the 6th century AD. From India, the game spread to
Persia.
When the Arabs conquered Persia, chess was taken up by the Muslim world and subsequently spread to Southern Europe. In Europe, chess evolved into roughly its current form in the 15th century. In the second half of the 19th century, modern chess tournament play began, and the first world Chess Championship was held in 1886. The 20th century saw great leaps forward in chess theory and the establishment of the World Chess Federation (FIDE). Developments in the 21st century include use of computers for analysis, which originated in the 1970s with the first programmed chess games on the market. Online gaming appeared in the mid-1990s.
Persian Chess set |
When the Arabs conquered Persia, chess was taken up by the Muslim world and subsequently spread to Southern Europe. In Europe, chess evolved into roughly its current form in the 15th century. In the second half of the 19th century, modern chess tournament play began, and the first world Chess Championship was held in 1886. The 20th century saw great leaps forward in chess theory and the establishment of the World Chess Federation (FIDE). Developments in the 21st century include use of computers for analysis, which originated in the 1970s with the first programmed chess games on the market. Online gaming appeared in the mid-1990s.
3D Chess Set Created by Me (Manash Kundu) |
Newly-crowned world chess champion Viswanathan
Anand received a gold medal, prize money of $1.4 million (around Rs. 7.9
crores), a memento and a piece of contemporary art displaying him and
challenger Boris Gelfand, for his achievement at a ceremony on Thursday.
3D Picture of Great Viswanathan Anand and in front of Chess set created by me (Manash Kundu) |
Stating
that his connection with Russia has been very deep, Anand said, "I
benefitted a lot from playing chess in Russian Cultural center in Chennai and
my second Grandmaster norm was also made at the Cultural center in New Delhi.
The connection with Russia is quite deep, as I also played a lot of tournaments
here while growing up."
Anand,
who won in a nail-biting finish in rapid tiebreak games, wished Gelfand good
luck during the prize giving and mentioned that Gelfand always warmly greeted
him before each game, ensuring that the match was played in right spirit.
Viswanathan Anand thinking his next move against Israel's Boris Gelfand |
Anand
also thanked the sponsors and FIDE for organising the world championship and
also acknowledge the support of his wife (Aruna) and his team at the State
Tretyakov Gallery.
The
speculation about Anand's team also ended as it remained the same as it was
four years back with Peter Hiene Nielsen, Rustam Kasimdzhanov, Radek Wojtajsek
and Surya Shekhar Ganguly as his seconds for this match too.
Before
the final ceremony the world champion also met Russian president Vladimir
Putin, who had invited him for tea at his residence.
Anand
mentioned to Putin about learning chess in a Russian cultural center in his
home town to which the President replied, "So we brought this on
ourselves"!
"I
really enjoyed it, the President was fully aware about the match, was very warm
and friendly. For me it was an honour," Anand said on his meeting with
Putin.
Picture of a game against Boris Gelfand by Viswanathan Anand |
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