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Chess News - Magnus Carlsen: ‘I just want to win one more tournament!’

I don't know about that. People often lament opening theory and how well you have to know all the branches, but then along comes Kasparov to breathe life into the Scotch during a WC match, or Carlsen to revive 6.Qd3 in the Najdorf, or even AlphaZero to prove that the Evans Gambit still has new ideas.

As for the dearth of decisive games in the classical games of the last two cycles, I think that is at least in part BECAUSE of the inclusion of rapidplay tiebreaks. Both players go with super-solid lines and take few risks to push for an advantage, and 12 games is simply not enough to expect much accumulated advantage for either player. Both are COUNTING on the tiebreak, and to me that's a crappy way to determine the classical world champion... particularly when Rapid and Blitz already have their own championship cycle.
We will see. If there are that many draws in the next cycle too, they will think of ways to improve it. I guess everybody agrees that it should be more games. 12 is too short.
World Chess Champion Magnus Carlsen hasn’t won a tournament since Altibox Norway Chess in mid-October, and even then a last-round loss to Levon Aronian took some of the gloss off the win. In the aftermath of losing the final of the Opera Euro Rapid to Wesley So, Magnus talked to Ilya Levitov about his motivation, how he feels the World Championship should be decided, and much more. Magnus explained that when he was young he was “spooked” when he played Russians since he thought they knew everything!

Q1) Are interviews harder than playing?

Magnus Carlsen: Well, these days playing is very hard for me, but yeah, it’s not so easy just to talk and talk and talk.

Q2) Are you tired after playing online?

No, I wouldn’t necessarily say that. Obviously, any tournament that ends the way that it ended for me, with a disappointment, you have the feeling it was very close and there could have been more, but I would say recently I haven’t been playing well at all. I haven’t been feeling that things are breaking through, so looking back I’m still feeling like the last tournament was a step in the right direction. Yes, there were still lots of things that I could do better, but I still feel like I played some good games and I could actually be a little bit creative even sometimes, so it wasn’t that bad.

Q3) Do you still get as upset at losing as 10-15 years ago?

I think it’s still the same feeling, to be honest. I think it’s about how you deal with it in retrospect, after the tournament, but certainly right in the moment

Q4) Do you miss regular off-line chess life?

I certainly miss playing regular tournaments, yes. I was very grateful to have the opportunity to play in Wijk aan Zee and I would love to do more of that. I think it’s been great to have the opportunity to play online, to play high-quality chess there, but it doesn’t mean that I don’t want to play over-the-board anymore, so whatever opportunities I can have for that this year I will be very happy to have.

Q5) Is playing offline and online the same for you?

I think it’s quite similar. The feeling that I have, the thoughts that I have - they’re not that different. As you said, the main difference is time control, and I simply think that people don’t have the patience to sit at home and play classical games online, but I think apart from that the difference is not that great. I think at the start I feel like I saw the board a bit differently online, maybe there are some geometries and so on that, you can feel better when you’re playing over the board, but I feel with an experience that difference is not so big now.

Q6) As World Champion are you concerned about the lack of opportunities for 2500 players?

I think there are certainly new opportunities online for people who want to make a living from chess, but purely from playing of course it’s getting very difficult. Also, one thing is in a longer perspective I’m not sure that it’s great that you educate younger players to become only rapid and blitz players online, so I think in that sense it’s not fully a positive thing that so many things are online now, but yes, it’s just a very, very difficult question and I think in general what you need to do is adapt.

If you used to make a living playing open tournaments and traveling around Europe, for instance, and this is not a possibility anymore, then yes, that’s bad, but you have to adapt, otherwise, you won’t get by. But certainly, it’s not been easy for everybody. I know also Norway a lot of young players who have very few opportunities now.

Q6) What’s your ideal World Championship format? You previously suggested playing 4 rapid games a day instead of 1 classical game.

It depends on what you want to see. I think what happens now is that when you play 12 or 14 games it’s a pretty short distance and I really think that the value of a mistake is very high, and against any of the top players it’s really hard to get back if you’ve lost an early game, so I think the format is not great for deciding who the best player is.

I think it’s only good in the sense that the matches are almost certainly going to be very tight and there’s going to be intrigued about who is going to win until the very end, but I think as a system for determining the best player it’s not very good.

Q7) Would you switch to rapid games for the whole World Championship cycle?

I don’t know. I think classical chess still has a place. I just don’t know if it should be the no. 1 priority if it should be the most prestigious. I don’t think people should stop playing, I think it has some value that there’s a cycle, but certainly...

I would prefer the Championship to be rapid.

Q8) Why is the 2 million euro prize fund lower in Dubai lower than for some of the Karpov-Kasparov matches despite the recent chess boom?

I don’t know. Still, I think the prize fund is up from what it was last time, so that’s an improvement. I don’t know, to be honest…

Q) Are you ok with that?

I don’t think it’s a great development, clearly. There have been matches with more money and more prestige in the past, but I understand it’s not an easy job.

Q9) After PlayMagnus bought New in Chess are you building a chess empire? What’s the plan? Or is that a question to the suits and ties?

Yes, I think it’s mainly a question for them. I think we’re just trying to bring something to everybody and to have different platforms, but I’m not the one making these decisions. That’s not my expertise at all.

Q10) You don’t participate in the business?

I’m certainly kept informed about it, this I can say, but I don’t think I should make a decision on whether the company should buy this or that, because there are more qualified people there. I’m more giving advice like what we should do about the Champions Chess Tour, the format and all of that.

Q11) What was your first and maybe the most memorable experience of the Russian Champions, before Garry?

I certainly read a lot about Russian and Soviet chess, and for me, it was always something very special. I actually remember thinking as a young player, the first time that I beat a Russian that will be something special for me, and the first tournament that I played, I played the European Under 12 Championship in 2002, and my only thought there was who are the Russians, how strong are they?
...and as far as I can remember I scored 6/9, and the four games that I didn’t win were against the Russians. I lost to Ian and I lost to Andreikin as well, and then I made draws with Khairullin and with Potapov, so I’m trying to think what was the first time I actually beat a Russian, and I cannot even remember.

Q12) Did you study with any Russian grandmasters before Garry?

No, I don’t think so. The only thing is Grandmaster Alexander Baburin came to Oslo once, he had a training session with me and one other, that was the only thing, but he was already Irish at that point, but still part of the Russian Chess School, I guess.

Q13) Did you have any particular admiration for the Soviet Champions, Tal or Petrosian or Spassky, or it was all just study material for you?

I read a book on Tal when I was young and I certainly found it impressive, but no, I would not say anything in particular. I would say that maybe my favorite experience from reading about the Soviet Chess School has been more recently. Right now I’m reading about the Soviet Chess Championship, I think from 1921 to 1937, which has recently been released in English, and that’s very interesting.
It’s really fascinating. This shocked me as well. They make some extremely simple mistakes, but the level of ideas for that era is very impressive.

Q14) Once in Moscow I witnessed a conversation where you exchanged a lot of games you remembered with Levon Aronian - I was shocked with the level and quality of your chess memory. Is that something you were born with or trained with?

I think I definitely was born with a great memory. I read a lot when I was young and I saw a lot of games and it’s still sort of sticking and, obviously, speaking to Levon about these things is fascinating, because he’s somebody who has a great knowledge of the past.

Q15) Do you think it’s important for the modern chess players to know the past?

I don’t know if it’s important, I just think it’s very interesting!

Q16) Do you still have the motivation to play at the highest level, and if so, what is the motivation exactly?

Now I just want to win one more tournament!
One more tournament. That’s the first goal. I still want to try and be better, try to learn more, so I think there is nothing that I haven’t won that I can win, but I want to do it again, and I want to learn more, and I can see what I knew about chess even five years ago… I think everything is updating so fast and there is so much more to learn there, so motivation is not a problem.
World Chess Champion Magnus Carlsen hasn’t won a tournament since Altibox Norway Chess in mid-October, and even then a last-round loss to Levon Aronian took some of the gloss off the win. In the aftermath of losing the final of the Opera Euro Rapid to Wesley So, Magnus talked to Ilya Levitov about his motivation, how he feels the World Championship should be decided, and much more. Magnus explained that when he was young he was “spooked” when he played Russians since he thought they knew everything!

Q1) Are interviews harder than playing?

Magnus Carlsen: Well, these days playing is very hard for me, but yeah, it’s not so easy just to talk and talk and talk.

Q2) Are you tired after playing online?

No, I wouldn’t necessarily say that. Obviously, any tournament that ends the way that it ended for me, with a disappointment, you have the feeling it was very close and there could have been more, but I would say recently I haven’t been playing well at all. I haven’t been feeling that things are breaking through, so looking back I’m still feeling like the last tournament was a step in the right direction. Yes, there were still lots of things that I could do better, but I still feel like I played some good games and I could actually be a little bit creative even sometimes, so it wasn’t that bad.

Q3) Do you still get as upset at losing as 10-15 years ago?

I think it’s still the same feeling, to be honest. I think it’s about how you deal with it in retrospect, after the tournament, but certainly right in the moment

Q4) Do you miss regular off-line chess life?

I certainly miss playing regular tournaments, yes. I was very grateful to have the opportunity to play in Wijk aan Zee and I would love to do more of that. I think it’s been great to have the opportunity to play online, to play high-quality chess there, but it doesn’t mean that I don’t want to play over-the-board anymore, so whatever opportunities I can have for that this year I will be very happy to have.

Q5) Is playing offline and online the same for you?

I think it’s quite similar. The feeling that I have, the thoughts that I have - they’re not that different. As you said, the main difference is time control, and I simply think that people don’t have the patience to sit at home and play classical games online, but I think apart from that the difference is not that great. I think at the start I feel like I saw the board a bit differently online, maybe there are some geometries and so on that, you can feel better when you’re playing over the board, but I feel with an experience that difference is not so big now.

Q6) As World Champion are you concerned about the lack of opportunities for 2500 players?

I think there are certainly new opportunities online for people who want to make a living from chess, but purely from playing of course it’s getting very difficult. Also, one thing is in a longer perspective I’m not sure that it’s great that you educate younger players to become only rapid and blitz players online, so I think in that sense it’s not fully a positive thing that so many things are online now, but yes, it’s just a very, very difficult question and I think in general what you need to do is adapt.

If you used to make a living playing open tournaments and traveling around Europe, for instance, and this is not a possibility anymore, then yes, that’s bad, but you have to adapt, otherwise, you won’t get by. But certainly, it’s not been easy for everybody. I know also Norway a lot of young players who have very few opportunities now.

Q6) What’s your ideal World Championship format? You previously suggested playing 4 rapid games a day instead of 1 classical game.

It depends on what you want to see. I think what happens now is that when you play 12 or 14 games it’s a pretty short distance and I really think that the value of a mistake is very high, and against any of the top players it’s really hard to get back if you’ve lost an early game, so I think the format is not great for deciding who the best player is.

I think it’s only good in the sense that the matches are almost certainly going to be very tight and there’s going to be intrigued about who is going to win until the very end, but I think as a system for determining the best player it’s not very good.

Q7) Would you switch to rapid games for the whole World Championship cycle?

I don’t know. I think classical chess still has a place. I just don’t know if it should be the no. 1 priority if it should be the most prestigious. I don’t think people should stop playing, I think it has some value that there’s a cycle, but certainly...

I would prefer the Championship to be rapid.

Q8) Why is the 2 million euro prize fund lower in Dubai lower than for some of the Karpov-Kasparov matches despite the recent chess boom?

I don’t know. Still, I think the prize fund is up from what it was last time, so that’s an improvement. I don’t know, to be honest…

Q) Are you ok with that?

I don’t think it’s a great development, clearly. There have been matches with more money and more prestige in the past, but I understand it’s not an easy job.

Q9) After PlayMagnus bought New in Chess are you building a chess empire? What’s the plan? Or is that a question to the suits and ties?

Yes, I think it’s mainly a question for them. I think we’re just trying to bring something to everybody and to have different platforms, but I’m not the one making these decisions. That’s not my expertise at all.

Q10) You don’t participate in the business?

I’m certainly kept informed about it, this I can say, but I don’t think I should make a decision on whether the company should buy this or that, because there are more qualified people there. I’m more giving advice like what we should do about the Champions Chess Tour, the format and all of that.

Q11) What was your first and maybe the most memorable experience of the Russian Champions, before Garry?

I certainly read a lot about Russian and Soviet chess, and for me, it was always something very special. I actually remember thinking as a young player, the first time that I beat a Russian that will be something special for me, and the first tournament that I played, I played the European Under 12 Championship in 2002, and my only thought there was who are the Russians, how strong are they?
...and as far as I can remember I scored 6/9, and the four games that I didn’t win were against the Russians. I lost to Ian and I lost to Andreikin as well, and then I made draws with Khairullin and with Potapov, so I’m trying to think what was the first time I actually beat a Russian, and I cannot even remember.

Q12) Did you study with any Russian grandmasters before Garry?

No, I don’t think so. The only thing is Grandmaster Alexander Baburin came to Oslo once, he had a training session with me and one other, that was the only thing, but he was already Irish at that point, but still part of the Russian Chess School, I guess.

Q13) Did you have any particular admiration for the Soviet Champions, Tal or Petrosian or Spassky, or it was all just study material for you?

I read a book on Tal when I was young and I certainly found it impressive, but no, I would not say anything in particular. I would say that maybe my favorite experience from reading about the Soviet Chess School has been more recently. Right now I’m reading about the Soviet Chess Championship, I think from 1921 to 1937, which has recently been released in English, and that’s very interesting.
It’s really fascinating. This shocked me as well. They make some extremely simple mistakes, but the level of ideas for that era is very impressive.

Q14) Once in Moscow I witnessed a conversation where you exchanged a lot of games you remembered with Levon Aronian - I was shocked with the level and quality of your chess memory. Is that something you were born with or trained with?

I think I definitely was born with a great memory. I read a lot when I was young and I saw a lot of games and it’s still sort of sticking and, obviously, speaking to Levon about these things is fascinating, because he’s somebody who has a great knowledge of the past.

Q15) Do you think it’s important for the modern chess players to know the past?

I don’t know if it’s important, I just think it’s very interesting!

Q16) Do you still have the motivation to play at the highest level, and if so, what is the motivation exactly?

Now I just want to win one more tournament!
World Chess Champion Magnus Carlsen hasn’t won a tournament since Altibox Norway Chess in mid-October, and even then a last-round loss to Levon Aronian took some of the gloss off the win. In the aftermath of losing the final of the Opera Euro Rapid to Wesley So, Magnus talked to Ilya Levitov about his motivation, how he feels the World Championship should be decided, and much more. Magnus explained that when he was young he was “spooked” when he played Russians since he thought they knew everything!

Q1) Are interviews harder than playing?

Magnus Carlsen: Well, these days playing is very hard for me, but yeah, it’s not so easy just to talk and talk and talk.

Q2) Are you tired after playing online?

No, I wouldn’t necessarily say that. Obviously, any tournament that ends the way that it ended for me, with a disappointment, you have the feeling it was very close and there could have been more, but I would say recently I haven’t been playing well at all. I haven’t been feeling that things are breaking through, so looking back I’m still feeling like the last tournament was a step in the right direction. Yes, there were still lots of things that I could do better, but I still feel like I played some good games and I could actually be a little bit creative even sometimes, so it wasn’t that bad.

Q3) Do you still get as upset at losing as 10-15 years ago?

I think it’s still the same feeling, to be honest. I think it’s about how you deal with it in retrospect, after the tournament, but certainly right in the moment

Q4) Do you miss regular off-line chess life?

I certainly miss playing regular tournaments, yes. I was very grateful to have the opportunity to play in Wijk aan Zee and I would love to do more of that. I think it’s been great to have the opportunity to play online, to play high-quality chess there, but it doesn’t mean that I don’t want to play over-the-board anymore, so whatever opportunities I can have for that this year I will be very happy to have.

Q5) Is playing offline and online the same for you?

I think it’s quite similar. The feeling that I have, the thoughts that I have - they’re not that different. As you said, the main difference is time control, and I simply think that people don’t have the patience to sit at home and play classical games online, but I think apart from that the difference is not that great. I think at the start I feel like I saw the board a bit differently online, maybe there are some geometries and so on that, you can feel better when you’re playing over the board, but I feel with an experience that difference is not so big now.

Q6) As World Champion are you concerned about the lack of opportunities for 2500 players?

I think there are certainly new opportunities online for people who want to make a living from chess, but purely from playing of course it’s getting very difficult. Also, one thing is in a longer perspective I’m not sure that it’s great that you educate younger players to become only rapid and blitz players online, so I think in that sense it’s not fully a positive thing that so many things are online now, but yes, it’s just a very, very difficult question and I think in general what you need to do is adapt.

If you used to make a living playing open tournaments and traveling around Europe, for instance, and this is not a possibility anymore, then yes, that’s bad, but you have to adapt, otherwise, you won’t get by. But certainly, it’s not been easy for everybody. I know also Norway a lot of young players who have very few opportunities now.

Q6) What’s your ideal World Championship format? You previously suggested playing 4 rapid games a day instead of 1 classical game.

It depends on what you want to see. I think what happens now is that when you play 12 or 14 games it’s a pretty short distance and I really think that the value of a mistake is very high, and against any of the top players it’s really hard to get back if you’ve lost an early game, so I think the format is not great for deciding who the best player is.

I think it’s only good in the sense that the matches are almost certainly going to be very tight and there’s going to be intrigued about who is going to win until the very end, but I think as a system for determining the best player it’s not very good.

Q7) Would you switch to rapid games for the whole World Championship cycle?

I don’t know. I think classical chess still has a place. I just don’t know if it should be the no. 1 priority if it should be the most prestigious. I don’t think people should stop playing, I think it has some value that there’s a cycle, but certainly...

I would prefer the Championship to be rapid.

Q8) Why is the 2 million euro prize fund lower in Dubai lower than for some of the Karpov-Kasparov matches despite the recent chess boom?

I don’t know. Still, I think the prize fund is up from what it was last time, so that’s an improvement. I don’t know, to be honest…

Q) Are you ok with that?

I don’t think it’s a great development, clearly. There have been matches with more money and more prestige in the past, but I understand it’s not an easy job.

Q9) After PlayMagnus bought New in Chess are you building a chess empire? What’s the plan? Or is that a question to the suits and ties?

Yes, I think it’s mainly a question for them. I think we’re just trying to bring something to everybody and to have different platforms, but I’m not the one making these decisions. That’s not my expertise at all.

Q10) You don’t participate in the business?

I’m certainly kept informed about it, this I can say, but I don’t think I should make a decision on whether the company should buy this or that, because there are more qualified people there. I’m more giving advice like what we should do about the Champions Chess Tour, the format and all of that.

Q11) What was your first and maybe the most memorable experience of the Russian Champions, before Garry?

I certainly read a lot about Russian and Soviet chess, and for me, it was always something very special. I actually remember thinking as a young player, the first time that I beat a Russian that will be something special for me, and the first tournament that I played, I played the European Under 12 Championship in 2002, and my only thought there was who are the Russians, how strong are they?
...and as far as I can remember I scored 6/9, and the four games that I didn’t win were against the Russians. I lost to Ian and I lost to Andreikin as well, and then I made draws with Khairullin and with Potapov, so I’m trying to think what was the first time I actually beat a Russian, and I cannot even remember.

Q12) Did you study with any Russian grandmasters before Garry?

No, I don’t think so. The only thing is Grandmaster Alexander Baburin came to Oslo once, he had a training session with me and one other, that was the only thing, but he was already Irish at that point, but still part of the Russian Chess School, I guess.

Q13) Did you have any particular admiration for the Soviet Champions, Tal or Petrosian or Spassky, or it was all just study material for you?

I read a book on Tal when I was young and I certainly found it impressive, but no, I would not say anything in particular. I would say that maybe my favorite experience from reading about the Soviet Chess School has been more recently. Right now I’m reading about the Soviet Chess Championship, I think from 1921 to 1937, which has recently been released in English, and that’s very interesting.
It’s really fascinating. This shocked me as well. They make some extremely simple mistakes, but the level of ideas for that era is very impressive.

Q14) Once in Moscow I witnessed a conversation where you exchanged a lot of games you remembered with Levon Aronian - I was shocked with the level and quality of your chess memory. Is that something you were born with or trained with?

I think I definitely was born with a great memory. I read a lot when I was young and I saw a lot of games and it’s still sort of sticking and, obviously, speaking to Levon about these things is fascinating, because he’s somebody who has a great knowledge of the past.

Q15) Do you think it’s important for the modern chess players to know the past?

I don’t know if it’s important, I just think it’s very interesting!

Q16) Do you still have the motivation to play at the highest level, and if so, what is the motivation exactly?

Now I just want to win one more tournament!
One more tournament. That’s the first goal. I still want to try and be better, try to learn more, so I think there is nothing that I haven’t won that I can win, but I want to do it again, and I want to learn more, and I can see what I knew about chess even five years ago… I think everything is updating so fast and there is so much more to learn there, so motivation is not a problem.
@selfbrain

"chess opening theory is more or less solved"

Say what the hey ?! What does that even MEAN ?!
@ambrooks with this I mean that against every white opening there is a line, or method known, or has been played, where black fully equalizes. The players can usually play these moves quite fast, which leads to the conclusion that we can strip some time.

I am not speaking of "nalimov solved" of course.

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