Pimp Daddy Ivanhoe....Oh that kind of "Player"....
Tal, although he never wore a hat.
Any great Russian GM in the past.
When i look at their games in books my mouth waters. If i had to go to tournament during the summer i would assemble all my study games on them. That would assure i go deep into the tournament. I feel like sometimes when i play out some of those games like they hate their opponent. Like they want to shame them. Sending a message that you are not on my level. The wins i saw are so brutal.
The worse part about when they won was when they got ahead in material even a pawn the mistakes were coming and worse as the game went along. I wonder how did Fischer get out alive after he went over to Russia and overnight put a whuppin on all those chess players. They had to wake up the leader as he was crushing them. I would have let them win some games. Common sense right. They win a few equal i live.
Nicolai Ryumin a relatively unknown Russian player (I believe from Moscow) is an honorable mention favorite of mine.
A plant, the first in a series. Armstrong is the latest.
But really, this is vacuous ... how can any of us say that someone we have never met is our favourite Russian? I have met one Russian in my life; that makes him my favourite due to lack of competition.
Touche. Thank you for presenting us with an interesting philosophical question to consider:
Do we require personal acquaintanceship, or do external resources and our own judgement suffice in determining whether we can come to know an individual or an entity?
I haven't met Karpov, but I am fond of his playing style.
Steve, do you have a favorite hockey team? Or a favorite tennis player? How about a favorite actor on TV?
Btw, I'm slightly surprised you've only met one Russian in your life. If you play tournament chess, you will find plenty of Russians at most large tournaments.
I will say that I had the chance to chat with Peter Svidler and found him to be one of the nicest and humblest players I've ever met. But man, when we started analysing a position he tore it apart. He's an amazing chess player!
No, no, and no. I played tournament chess in Canada 2-3 decades ago, when Russians weren't as free to roam the world as they are now (just one high-rank chess player in Canada at the time comes to mind, Igor Ivanov, but I didn't meet him personally). The one I know is a mathematician, or I almost certainly would not have met him.
If Kasparov is considered Russian, i choose him. I was about 13 when he became world champ, so he will always leave a good impression on me.
I find it interesting that there are very few russians leaving comments.
i would think that russians play on russian servers.
Kasparov wasnt russian and Kosteniuk i believe is also not russian though, even though i cant recall Kosteniuk being world champion. But i guess Khalifman was russian though
Interesting, Kasparov is said to be Russian on wikipedia... is this a mistake?
Kosteniuk won the Women's World Chess Championship 2008. Do you mean this does not count as a world championship title?
Kasparov wasnt russian and Kosteniuk i believe is also not russian though, even though i cant recall Kosteniuk being world champion. But i guess Khalifman was russian though
Interesting, Kasparov is said to be Russian on wikipedia... is this a mistake?
Kosteniuk won the Women's World Chess Championship 2008. Do you mean this does not count as a world championship title?
no im probably wrong i thought he was half armenian and half from azerbaijan but my memory always seems to trick me.
for me it doesnt count, unless there is a biological reason why could be champion without beating the strongest man.
Tolstoy. I am sure that he played chess!