You may only post in this thread if your country has a chess player in the world top ten

You may only post in this thread if your country has a chess player in the world top ten.

no one cares nerd

LGTSS
>Anand not even in the top 10

AHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHA

I thought Caruana was Italian

Actually, he's at 2770.0, just like Wesley So.

He switched federations around a year ago, and recently won the 2016 US Championship.

God Bless the young man then

He's at 4.5/5 halfway through the Gashimov Memorial, and appears to be in great form.

>3 top 10

GREATEST SPORTING NATION ON EARTH

I'd say Russia, USA and China have the three strongest national teams, in that order.

are they really american?

Caruana was born in Miami, and has a dual American-Italian citizenship: Yes.
Nakamura was born in Osaka, but while his father was Japanese, his mother was American, and he has been living in the United States for the vast majority of his life: Yes.
Wesley So is form the Philippines, and not an American citizen, but used to study in St. Louis and now plays for USA.

The rest of the American national team is less relevant, but Gata Kamsky used to be a world-class player not long ago, as the picture shows.

Bobby Fischer not elite anymore?

Bobby Fischer is dead, but he was most certainly elite in his day, and I believe that he would be able to hold his own in the elite tournaments of today, should he have been invited by use of a time machine.

The same words apply for Karpov and Kasparov.

NAKAMURA


KING OF STRONG STYLE

>only 17th best
What the fuck he's the only chess player anybody has ever heard of besides the guy he btfo on tv

Your "sport" belongs here

Why are you such a faggot?

If you take a look at the dates of their ratings, you will see that he was much earlier than the other players. A rating that close to 2800, more than 40 years ago, is quite remarkable, as the players of today are stronger.

I'm not, it's you for believing this childish game is even a fucking sport.

>unironically being this retarded

Chessfags are on the same level as video game idiots who believe E-Sports are actual sports.

Did Nakamura get a season ending hand injury?

Chess enjoys a reputation and a history beyond what e-sports will ever attain.
No. He just hasn't been playing any rated games this month.

When is the champions hip?

Carlsen will defend his title against Karjakin in New York in November this year.

In november. It will be between reigning world champ and best player in the world Magnus Carlen and up and literally who Sergey Karjakin

>November
Fuck what am I supposed to do until then?

rating inflation desu

in reality he's a top 10 player all time, though where you place him is debatable.

He's #1 in my heart

Karjakin is hardly a "literally who". He's the only player who ever became a GM before he turned thirteen, and he won the Candidates quite convincingly. The winner of the Candidates will obviously be a deserving challenger, even though I would personally rather have seen Caruana or Aronian win it.
There will be much chess before that time, most notably the Olympiad in Baku, where both Carlsen and Karjakin will play. My favourites are, as mentioned earlier, Russia, USA and China.
Rating inflation is merely a consequence of the players themselves getting better, but 2785 would also be quite sufficient for a top 10 placement today. This is only to Fischer's credit, and his 6-0 performances over Taimanov and Larsen impress me to this day. His victories over Petrosian and Spassky less so, but that is a long story.

Next time you make this thread Norway friend I'm gonna 1v1 you

Very well, but I don't understand what you would achieve by doing so.

You are Carlsen

I'm not nearly as strong as Carlsen. If, by some miracle, my playing strength suddenly increased by a thousand rating points overnight, I would have very real chances in the next World Championship cycle, but as of now, I'm merely an average Norwegian club player.

Though players are "better" nowadays, rating inflation has nothing to do with them being better since rating is determined by how good you are relative to others, ie: if everyone is better then ratings would stay relatively the same. Rating inflation is more to do with chess being more widespread and more people playing in rated tournaments than ever diluting the rating pool.

And I personally don't believe players today are any better than fischer or kasparov were. Maybe more solid theory, but today's game is completely different than it was in their time. Today, major tournaments are like 80% engine prep, 15% calculation and 5% spontaneous creativity, whereas back then there was only book openings and theory for prep and you would go into a game only having the first few moves planned.

Back then it was just about playing better chess. Now that super GM's might have entire lines memorized with the engine's top moves, it's not just about who has better raw calculation and creative strategy, but there's also a sub meta-game of knowing the best engine moves and having "surprise" moves that are less common than others to throw your opponent out of their memorized lines. This is the kind of shit Bobby Fischer saw coming and he hated it and made him come up with all kinds of chess variants to save the game before he quit chess.

was paul morphy actually good or was he just less bad than his peers

...

if he were to enter a time machine and just randomly enter a super GM tournament from today he would get crushed, maybe win one game.

that said he is one of the GOATS because he was the only one who knew how to play chess in a time when everyone was still trying to figure shit out. If you gave him a time machine to today and allowed him a few months prep time he could very well compete with players today.

who's the earliest player that could start to compete with the current GMs without prep time?

I have no idea. I would say someone from the early to mid 1900's, but exactly who I'm not sure.

So chess matches just come down to who forgets what the computer says they should do?

capablanca?

Your arguments are valid and well thought out. I agree that opening theory stands for much of the difference between the players of today and the players of yesterday. However, middlegame plans and patterns, as well as specific endgames that are common knowledge today, were once discovered by someone, and all later players can use this to their benefit, provided they have the time and ability to learn. You could compare it to Newton's words about standing on the shoulders of giants, and I myself know more about physics than Newton did, but I would never consider myself to be anywhere close to him as a physicist.

About openings, you only follow main lines for as long as both players decide to follow main lines, and getting a good game from a less theory-heavy opening is not as difficult as you think. Take, for example, the game betwen Carlsen and Tomashevsky from earlier this year.

He was perhaps the first player who played at GM strength, though I personally favour Wilhelm Steinitz as to that title. Today, he would probably be a strong IM or even a GM, which is much better than anyone of us will ever be, but nowhere near the world elite.
As said, Morphy or Steinitz. Which one was earlier is debatable, as Steinitz was one year older, but peaked later. Emanuel Lasker would definitely have been a contender, to an even higher degree.

Care to open a Sup Forums lichess league?!

>Carlshit
Wei Yi is coming for him

No, but he has finally managed to get above 2700 in the live ratings again. Let's see if he's still above 2700 when the Asian Championship is over.

post

>0 games
>Rated 7th in the world
I don't think this semen slurping sport is for me

It only shows the number of games since the last rating list. You lose your rating after a year of inactivity.

>tfw not even in the top 50

Feels good actually. I was worried someone from here was wasting their time on chess LOL

Will USA ever again have a player that's actually American?

Also, Kasparov still GOAT

>not even in the top 50

If that was the whole story, you could have been quite content with that, but this is embarrassing.

This. That guy didn't need to read about theory and lines, he managed to find them himself.

he actually has dual citizenship so he has to be considered also italian.

...

Caruana is American.
He is also Italian, but represents the United States.
Capablanca was very good, even by modern standards, but he wasn't vastly superior to Lasker. Kramnik is on record saying that Lasker was the first player of 2700 strength.

>embarrassing that no one in this country gives a shit about a board game

Yes how embarrassing for me and my people

There are people in your country who do care about the game, but they're simply not good enough to compete against the civilized world.

Then all 3 of them should feel bad

It's not exactly the way you're saying.

Engine prep only applies to the openings and only those that have a very theoretical nature (meaning that if you don't follow the best line of play, you're just going to end up in a hopeless position).

There are plenty of openings out there with many viable moves for both sides and the accurate memorization of them all is beyond anyone's ability.

Also, even if a super-GM forgets some prep, he can still often deduce the best line of playing based on some logic and calculation.

The actual point of competitive chess was always calculating as far as possible while including the strategical ideas that may arise X moves down the line - so nothing has really changed there.

And Bobby Fischer was straight-up crazy, so no point of bringing up his opinions here.

>It's 'Australian shitposter attacks' episode

Thanks, Jan-Krzysztof. You have a good grasp on what chess is about.

Based aronian

We have a few lads there, good for them

>And Bobby Fischer was straight-up crazy, so no point of bringing up his opinions here.

i agree with the point you defend in your post but saying this is downright retarded.

I met Ruben Felgaer at the 2013 World Cup. He was knocked out early, but seemed like a nice guy.

Anyone has some good chess book to recommend? I finished Tal vs Botvinik 1960 (Tal) and Play the Nimzo-Indian defence (Gligorić), Bobby Fisher teaches chess (Fisher). Something with openings or famous chess games would be great.

...

If you liked Tal vs Botvinnik 1960, you should give "The life and games of Mikhail Tal" a chance. It's good as both a collection of annotated games as well as an autobiography.

I like Tal so I'll give it a chance, thanks.

Do esports players make more than chess players yet?

do chess players make millions? If not then yes

Some LOL players in China make much more.

You're talking about the guy who was happy about 9/11 and said that USA has to be wiped out from the face of Earth.

His chess was awesome, but most of his opinions have to be taken with a grain of salt.

Top chess players (like 30-40 best in the world) do make millions.

However, I'm pretty sure some of the most popular E-Sports are comparable in terms of earnings.

IQ much?
If weightlifting is a sport than using your brain at capacity is also a sport.

>Top chess players (like 30-40 best in the world) do make millions.

No way. Carlsen earned about about 4-5 milions the year he won his first world title, with publicity and such.

Top40 players can live pretty well but they don't make milions.