Greatest chess player of all time | Magnus Carlsen and Lex Fridman

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  • čas přidán 27. 08. 2022
  • Lex Fridman Podcast full episode: • Magnus Carlsen: Greate...
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    Magnus Carlsen is the highest-rated chess player in history and widely considered to be the greatest chess player of all time.
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Komentáře • 586

  • @LexClips
    @LexClips  Před rokem +100

    Full conversation with Magnus Carlsen: czcams.com/video/0ZO28NtkwwQ/video.html
    Quick note from Lex: The camera on Magnus died 20 minutes in. Most folks still just listen to audio-only version, but here on CZcams we did our best to still make it interesting to watch & listen by adding image overlays. I mess things up sometimes, like in this case, and it hits me hard when I do. I'm sorry for this. I'm always working hard to improve. I hope you understand. Thank you for your patience and support along the way. I love you all.

    • @SharkdYGO
      @SharkdYGO Před rokem +1

      You would mess up with the Goat Magnus Carlsen 💔

    • @VantaBlackSheep
      @VantaBlackSheep Před rokem

      I thought it was a joke on both being robotic 😂 this whole time.

    • @mikem6009
      @mikem6009 Před rokem +2

      Oh OK. I was wondering what was going on with the video. Thank you for taking the extra time to edit in some infographics and the such. Do you have an interesting take on a lot of things. Much respect. I’m out hiking on the Appalachian Trail right now. Halfway done I started February 13 in Georgia and I am now in West Virginia headed to the finish point in Maine. Happy trails.

  • @Kbcqw
    @Kbcqw Před rokem +676

    “For hikaru nakamura… just kidding” brutal 😂

    • @studywithmir1994
      @studywithmir1994 Před rokem +24

      I felt that, and I am not a Hikaru guy

    • @djwalker6608
      @djwalker6608 Před rokem +7

      I felt that too, and I am not a Hikaru guy too lol

    • @smwg4187
      @smwg4187 Před rokem +24

      How would he be anywhere near that discussion in a serious manner anyway lol? He's never even been the number one for a single moment nor the world champion

    • @artw3
      @artw3 Před rokem +7

      @@smwg4187 Yes, but he is competing against Magnus. If I lasted 15 moves against Magnus, I would consider myself the greatest chess mind of all times, even if I lose the game. 😃

    • @smwg4187
      @smwg4187 Před rokem +4

      @@artw3 yeah but the same is true of anyone who is like 2650 or higher. Even guys like Saric, Naiditsch can give Magnus a hard time. Of course every top player is very capable of competing against or even beating him on a good day. So that is not in any way specific to Naka

  • @thedecodinglifeproject803
    @thedecodinglifeproject803 Před rokem +145

    "I've been World No. 1 for 11 years..." - one of the hardest flexes of all time; delivered so calmly.

  • @ravivaradhan4956
    @ravivaradhan4956 Před rokem +385

    "The energy and dynamism in the play of the young Kasparov is something that appeals to me because I cannot do it" I love such a candid admission. Only a player of supreme caliber can have such candor.

    • @mohammedmalik7992
      @mohammedmalik7992 Před rokem +17

      Supreme caliber and supreme confidence. The guy knows his position as a great is cemented. No insecurity

    • @blankplanet
      @blankplanet Před rokem +7

      Im a player with no caliber at all and can say that generally things i cant do well impress me as well. This remark is kinda dumb👌

    • @aravindkrishnan7498
      @aravindkrishnan7498 Před rokem +4

      Yeah!! Even as mighty as his accomplishments are, the ability to be aware of his vulnerability is amazing

    • @zugzwang7088
      @zugzwang7088 Před rokem +15

      @@blankplanet ?? lol. It's precisely because you don't have a caliber that being impressed is normal for you. Admitting that you can't do any better than someone while being regarded as possibly the greatest is a whole different topic, it's very tempting to just say no one is above you in any aspect when people put you in a pedestal.

    • @EMFObserver
      @EMFObserver Před rokem

      @@blankplanet lmfao low IQ comment

  • @Mukki.Berlin
    @Mukki.Berlin Před rokem +584

    I really like the way Magnus speaks about himself. He's very humble and yet has a healthy amount of confidence about the acheivements of his career. Such a nice person.

    • @cmc2110
      @cmc2110 Před rokem +28

      I won’t say humble but honest

    • @matthewgrasso7167
      @matthewgrasso7167 Před rokem +49

      I wouldn't say he's humble but he's as humble as one can be at credibly describing him/herself as the best ever.

    • @The_Jim
      @The_Jim Před rokem +11

      @@cmc2110 He was as humble as one can be when they are the best and have to explain why

    • @michaelfellner9822
      @michaelfellner9822 Před rokem +2

      @@cmc2110 well just becomes someone is honest doesnt mean hes not humble. ofc he knows that he is one of the greatest ever and maybe the greatest ever, hes making arguements for himself because he got asked for it but he didnt say he thinks hes the best. he immidiatly shuts off questions like that and hes right: i have not a lot of clue about chess but for example about football and in football i also hate "the best ever" debates. every player is different in their own thinking in their own style. you cant even compare a defender to a striker and lets not even talk about goalies. also the generationial differences. who can say if pele wouldnt have performed even better then messi if he had played in his generation? also, the older generations like in chess fisher, kasparov etc laid foundations for carlsen etc. you can compare those things so dont even try to debate "goat" questions because theyre pointless, just enjoy the show.

    • @lawlietriver8869
      @lawlietriver8869 Před rokem +1

      Must suck to be asked that kind of question unless your ego is utterly out of control. If you are too eager in your answer people will think: What a boasting prick. And if he doesn't acknowledge that he is among to very top of all time people will go: False humility, what a prick.

  • @mohammedmalik7992
    @mohammedmalik7992 Před rokem +218

    What I find interesting is how grounded Magnus sounds. Most players would probably come off as arrogant if they placed themselves in the GOAT conversation but Magnus just comes across as matter of fact. The honesty and clarity is refreshing

    • @douggieharrison6913
      @douggieharrison6913 Před rokem

      Magnus is one of the cockiest players in the chess world at his level by far, not even close to the most humble chess player.
      Dudes like Ding, Nepo, Fabi, Levon, are extremely humble. Top level players are often extremely respectful and humble.
      Magnus is not humble, but he is humorous, so that's why people still love him. He doesn't put down his opponents, he just speaks highly of himself via jokes. Is he great and awesome personality? For sure. Are super GMs often cocky when being interviewed? Not really.

    • @cmc2110
      @cmc2110 Před rokem +8

      But him downplaying that is going to be awkward… he is a very honest guy and for the goat it’s clear we only have Magnus, Garry, Capa and Morphy. Anyone of them can have a true claim to being a goat and maybe Fisher but his case doesn’t hold much because of how short his dominance was, his peak was great though. One year in chess is like 3 months in other sports

    • @dickidsrip5262
      @dickidsrip5262 Před rokem +1

      He's also Norwegian. Scandinavians or nordics are told growing up not to ever think they are special.

    • @Kichefski
      @Kichefski Před rokem

      I mean its also because it is so obvious that he belongs there. But i still agree, he seems like a pretty cool dude. For a Chess world champion at least lol

    • @mohammedmalik7992
      @mohammedmalik7992 Před rokem

      @@dickidsrip5262 . Interesting. What are you saying ? Are you saying that they teach their kids to be humble ?

  • @36AccountsBlockedRIP
    @36AccountsBlockedRIP Před rokem +582

    In 72 Fisher took out the whole Soviet chess machine with relative ease as a hermit with minimal assistance and without the assistance of chess engines when chess dominance was of the utmost importance to the Soviets for political reasons, being really well funded.

    • @JM-lf1sl
      @JM-lf1sl Před rokem +43

      Exactly, this proves his degree of talent. He did have some help, but nothing remotely like the assistance the main Soviet players had

    • @callisto537
      @callisto537 Před rokem +20

      Soviet’s were always 30 years behind in development. Nothing was funded. Atrocious dark country. The fact that Soviets were number 1 in anything is short of miracle.

    • @patrickgunning6923
      @patrickgunning6923 Před rokem

      Yes but then we must consider Paul Morphy who truly came from obscurity to dominate all of Europe with ease.

    • @suryanshshirbhate5954
      @suryanshshirbhate5954 Před rokem +12

      You say the engine part as if the Soviets had access to them...

    • @ublade82
      @ublade82 Před rokem +26

      "relative ease" of doing nothing but play chess for 20 years and being a freak of nature

  • @Sphere723
    @Sphere723 Před rokem +225

    Fischer-Spassky Game 6 of the 1972 World Championship is rather mind-blowing when you go through it with an engine on. Fischer gets so far ahead in a way which is almost impossible for a human to recognize. Material is basically equal the whole game (Spassky is even a pawn up for the last handful of moves) and yet Spassky is in a resignable position during the entire second half of the game and doesn't seem to notice. It's the game that illustrates the gap between Fischer and everyone else in the world.
    That being said, Morphy should probably be in this conversation as well. It's hard though, because was playing "modern" chess in era when nobody else was. Undoubtedly a genius, but the lack of competition makes it hard to place him.

    • @vadimfedenko
      @vadimfedenko Před rokem +1

      yeah that's amazing it. just checked it. fischer played all of the stockfish moves and spassky kinda looked lost in the mid game

    • @navinthehouse4710
      @navinthehouse4710 Před rokem +5

      Morphy was the goat of his time, he quit and died young or else you never know

    • @hliang4
      @hliang4 Před rokem

      Mikhail Tael was something else too

    • @kuzt3789
      @kuzt3789 Před rokem +5

      @@hliang4 tal is not near the league of these 3 im sorry. He is a very romanticised player cuz of his style of play

    • @madra000
      @madra000 Před rokem

      I don't understand it's like saying a lion has no predators so he can't be claimed to be as equal to someone who has 'eye test'

  • @75dobs
    @75dobs Před rokem +79

    "It probably appeals to me a lot, because these are the things I cannot do as well. = "we love in others what we cannot do ourselves"

    • @ikarusxv
      @ikarusxv Před rokem +11

      It's true because Carlsen's style resembles more Karpov

  • @JEZZE4322
    @JEZZE4322 Před rokem +54

    Carlsen is too humble. What he’s done in this era is fucking unbelievable. We won’t ever see it again

    • @htownali
      @htownali Před rokem +19

      Maybe true. Truly a great. But history has shown there will be another great, maybe already born.

    • @NathanHedglin
      @NathanHedglin Před rokem +1

      @@htownali hope so!

    • @nickbh15
      @nickbh15 Před rokem +3

      He’s not better than me

    • @dannygjk
      @dannygjk Před rokem

      You are speaking a logical fallacy. There is no GOAT when you look at all the players objectively with engines. All chess players ever born made/make serious mistakes.

    • @dad4378
      @dad4378 Před 11 měsíci

      ​@@htownaliI'm on my way.

  • @MindfulAttraction2.0
    @MindfulAttraction2.0 Před rokem +1

    I think measuring the gap between yourself and your competition is the key marker to comparing errors and who's the greatest. That coefficient of the gap between you and your competition is key

    • @Wtahc
      @Wtahc Před rokem +2

      yes but its hard to normalize that measurement, what do we do? elo gap? that fails because of the era/level changes, etc.

    • @donkbonktj5773
      @donkbonktj5773 Před rokem

      For me the most important factors are domination, influence and longevity in that order for players skill and greatness.

  • @romeyjclark
    @romeyjclark Před rokem +28

    Gotta love how Magnus pulled a Bobby Fischer and turned off the cameras when Lex was busy!

  • @christinemurray1444
    @christinemurray1444 Před rokem +6

    He's right that for these three guys the argument can be made. Other than that maybe Morphy but that was earlier than official world champions.

  • @bonkyabeans
    @bonkyabeans Před rokem +8

    Lexington fries knows the right questions to ask. Good interviewer for magnus

  • @photopro28
    @photopro28 Před 9 měsíci +8

    Its also important to take into account Fischer and Kasparov were at the top of their games before strong computer engines came along. In the world championship candidate matches during 1970-71, Fischer won 20 consecutive games; winning so many games with black is unheard of and has never been equaled. For the last 10 years chess engines have been a huge part of professional chess players training.

    • @billj4525
      @billj4525 Před 6 měsíci

      Yeah, but all players have the luxury of having engines, so it equals everything out. They don't have an extra advantage over their competition.

    • @vercot7000
      @vercot7000 Před 3 dny

      @@billj4525 Ok? The exact same logic applies to people in the past lol. They didn't have engines, so who knows how strong they would have been? This is like saying Newton

  • @fqproductions
    @fqproductions Před rokem +28

    Wow. Just started watching some chess videos and now it’s all over my feed, and then lex comes out with this.

    • @ryantwitter343
      @ryantwitter343 Před rokem +3

      It’s going through a major resurgence and many popular Grand Masters stream on twitch.

  • @Scottie-gd7bo
    @Scottie-gd7bo Před 9 měsíci +4

    His assessment is refreshingly objective and honest (and accurate imo).

  • @NoName-zm1ks
    @NoName-zm1ks Před rokem +19

    How about Morphy, Capablanca? Sad that these & other superstars ruled in different times & Nature has deemed impossible tournaments where Fischer, Morphy, Kasparov, Carlson et al take part.

    • @alexu297
      @alexu297 Před rokem

      Capablanca was way too lazy, he relied quite a lot on his massive talent and made no serious opening preparation against others, which in modern chess would definitely be a handicap. He would never win against someone as hardworking and talented as Kasparov or Ivanchuck.
      I don't really know about Morphy regarding how serious he was at studying chess, but he played a lot of dynamic chess, which is a style preferred by modern AI such as AlphaZero...

    • @Consortiumed
      @Consortiumed Před rokem

      Morphy was ahead of his time, should definitely be in the conversation.

    • @donkbonktj5773
      @donkbonktj5773 Před rokem

      I agree. Morphy and Capablanca reminds me of Ronaldinho.

  • @JohnSmith-oe5kx
    @JohnSmith-oe5kx Před 9 měsíci +9

    Carlsen's argument about his era being more difficult because "engines levelled the field" (true) bolsters the argument for Fischer, who as at a disadvantage to the Soviet machine--but beat them anyway. Fischer would have LOVED to have been on an even playing field with them. Kasparov had an advantage, Carlsen was arguably neutral, and Fischer was at a disadvantage.
    As for childhood development, Carlsen and Kasparov were arguably even--both began receiving instruction from grandmasters at age 10 (Kasparov's teacher was at one time ranked 5th in the world and Carlsen's was ranked 12th), while Fischer is again at a huge disadvantage: his first teacher was Carmine Nigro, an amateur, and the he was mentored by John Collins, who was once the New York State champion. He also formed a relationship with William Lombardy, who was US junior champion and eventually rose to 19th in the world but that was in 1961 when Fischer himself (still 18) was already in the top 10.
    Fischer also was the only one with difficult--even disastrous--home life. So all in all, I will always be more impressed with what Fischer accomplished than the other two players in my top 3.

  • @mitchu9677
    @mitchu9677 Před 5 dny

    Wow, that infographic was very well-made.

  • @Vellan.
    @Vellan. Před rokem +149

    Kasporov, Karpov and Carlson, all of them had and have a team that works to improve them. Bobby Fischer....did it by himself against all odds which makes him the goat imo.

    • @kelvin303
      @kelvin303 Před rokem +20

      Not to mention he even created a variation Ches960 and learned Russian to further his knowledge in chess and his opponents, with limited resources in a limited time frame. Definitely the GOAT.

    • @dachoist
      @dachoist Před rokem +11

      not true, he had a team. It's just that the Russians had a better one...

    • @Vellan.
      @Vellan. Před rokem +9

      @@dachoist Nope he didn't. Anyone who read about him and saw his documentaries will know that he was a lonewolf when he became the world champion

    • @Fr49050
      @Fr49050 Před rokem +23

      Worth adding that Russian players colluded to keep him from winning the championship, but they failed. For example, certain players would intentionally end games in a draw in a bid to have Russians in the #1 and #2 spots, but Fischer broke through and it was probably in that 1970-1972 peak of his brilliance.
      At the time, Fischer complained that the Russians were colluding, but everyone thought he was paranoid. Many years later, it turns out he was right. Look into it, it’s fascinating. Fischer is the GOAT, but it’s a shame how he became an outspoken anti-semite in addition to many other examples of deplorable conduct, all of which taints his legacy.

    • @kelvin303
      @kelvin303 Před rokem +4

      @@Fr49050 Oh wow I didn’t even know of this, going to look into now. Many people really don’t understand how powerful of a player Fischer was, and it’s a shame. He went through so much being a Chess champion and being a lonewolf it’s unfortunate people don’t respect him enough as the greatest to ever play. Real recognize real, when you speak the truth you will be punished in this society, and Fischer always spoke the truth, on how he felt, he had so much depth and character unlike these players now smh. He transformed his personality/character in the game of Chess. Stating he plays to win even with black pieces, studying as much as he can to become the best while people used political tactics to fuck with him. He’s without a doubt the best player to ever touch Chess.

  • @nedmerrill5705
    @nedmerrill5705 Před 6 měsíci +2

    The "best" argument comes down to "Peak" vs. "Area under the curve". I credit this idea to Bill James in his discussion of baseball players. Magnus argues for Fischer as a Peak GOAT, and Kasparov as an AUC GOAT.

    • @billj4525
      @billj4525 Před 5 měsíci +1

      Magnus has said Garry is the GOAT, but from what I have heard he puts himself and Kasparov above Fischer. He doesn't think as highly of Fischer as others do.

  • @edwardlee9845
    @edwardlee9845 Před rokem +145

    We r witnessing the greatest chess genius of all time and he talks back. What a treat magnus is

    • @nationalsocialism3504
      @nationalsocialism3504 Před rokem +10

      You spelled Fischer wrong...

    • @sunset1394
      @sunset1394 Před rokem

      @@nationalsocialism3504 you heard his arguments right,they are true in all sense

    • @nationalsocialism3504
      @nationalsocialism3504 Před rokem +2

      @@sunset1394 i did... it's just bullshit like Fischer used to say bringing up Morphy when he was questioned similarly. Karposov isn't even in the equation... there's only two possibilities, Fischer or Magnus (Morphy gets his own seperate title since the game of chess is so outside comparison.) I personally go with Fischer cause he would be equally great regardless of either time period he would be slotted in... Magnus would be just as amazing in Fischer time but struggle in Morphy time (whereas Morphy would be okay in Fischer time & wouldn't have anything to do with chess in the modern era.)

    • @ghoulbby
      @ghoulbby Před rokem +7

      @@nationalsocialism3504 I'm confused. Could you elaborate on why you think Magnus would struggle in Chess during that time period? Do you mean if he was born in that period? Because as far as I know you're always building on the ideas of old so not only would he not struggle, but he'd also dominate.

    • @nationalsocialism3504
      @nationalsocialism3504 Před rokem +3

      @@ghoulbby because what makes Magnus the best now is ill suited to then... just like why Morphy wouldn't even a Master level chess player today cause he wouldn't learn "theory." Magnus end game brilliances are predicated upon his deep "theory" basis... Fischer got to the absolute peak & saw what was coming, which drove him to quit cause he had no interest in what he unveiled. I'm saying that different types of thinking/brains shine in different conditions... by all accounts Morphy was essentially playing bullet games from his side in games without time limits

  • @TheDreday1993
    @TheDreday1993 Před rokem +4

    I love how people always go "hurr durr engines bla bla bla",like its only magnus that has the engines and other top players dont

  • @jjsansano
    @jjsansano Před rokem +88

    Love the respect he has to his mentor.

    • @nudelsuppe2090
      @nudelsuppe2090 Před rokem +1

      Kasparov his mentor??

    • @FalconJudah
      @FalconJudah Před rokem +4

      @@nudelsuppe2090 yuppp, he trained under Gary.

    • @kimaboe
      @kimaboe Před rokem +20

      @@FalconJudah Part time for a few months when he was already the world number 1 rated player. They had two or three training camps in 2009, but Magnus didn't do the homework he was assigned between them.
      Garry and Magnus worked together for about six months. Calling him "his mentor" is a huge stretch.
      Carlsen's formative years were spent studying with Torbjørn Ringdal and Simen Agdestein.

    • @davidcopson5800
      @davidcopson5800 Před rokem

      @@kimaboe At the time Kasparov worked with Carlsen (2004/5) he was certainly not the number one player in the world, he was a few years away from that.

    • @kimaboe
      @kimaboe Před rokem +1

      @@davidcopson5800 They played a few private games in 2004, but their professional partnership started in 2009 and lasted until early 2010. Magnus hit number one for the first time on the January 2010 rating list. When they had their first training camp in June 2009, Magnus was ranked 3rd behind Topalov and Anand.
      In 2004 Kasparov himself was an active player, and definitely not coaching Carlsen or anyone else. He only retired from competition in 2005.

  • @TheErasec
    @TheErasec Před rokem +44

    Carlsen is too humble. He stands in a moment of history where he has the human creative side plus the artificial intelligence studies. The players from the past didn't have much computer help, even just for studies, and the ones from the future will learn mostly from machines. I think Carlsen could remain in history as the strongest player ever.

    • @colamity_5000
      @colamity_5000 Před rokem

      He's certainly the strongest player so far, in that if you take Magnus at his peak he would have the odds on his side in a match against any human player ever. He almost certainly won't remain that way tho, time just keeps ticking on and more and more people drive up the chance that one of them will be even better.

    • @alexb4287
      @alexb4287 Před rokem +2

      ​@@colamity_5000 I think what the OP is saying, is that even tho the players will inevitably get better, it will mostly be through memorising and mimicking the way the computer plays, where as for raw creativity + memorization, magnus is in that sweet spot, that may never be surpassed again due to the nature of computers having solved chess already.

    • @colamity_5000
      @colamity_5000 Před rokem

      @@alexb4287 well thats just not true on any account. First computers haven't solved chess yet, we get better engines every year. Even if they do "solve chess" which I can't imagine ever being theoretically proved but maybe is functionally possible, then it won't make much difference because humans are already bumping up against HUMAN limits on memorization: we can't be engines. We can't mimick the way a computer plays after our prep because the way they play requires a looking at moves with a depth we can't replicate. If you don't know why the computers move is a good one, then it isn't a good one because the quality of a move is heavily dependant on whether you choose the right line after it.
      So regardless if thats what he meant hes still wrong.

    • @alexb4287
      @alexb4287 Před rokem

      @@colamity_5000 I'd say if a computers are at a point, where they can beat any human, in a game designed for humans, then from our point of view they may as well have solved it, if they're looking magnitudes further into a game than we are then they're basically playing a different game at that point. As far as memorisation limits are concerened, how else do you propose people are going to get better at chess ? Magnus can literally compete with a lot of strong chess engines, so how much more intuition can someone really have, bar just being able to remember more games that have already been played. Aswell, as engines get stronger they devise even more advanced openings etc, so I'm pretty sure mimicking they way they play, is a pretty fair way to put it, considering that is literally what is already being done.

    • @colamity_5000
      @colamity_5000 Před rokem

      @@alexb4287 Magnus cant compete with any top engine. He will lose 100/100 games 1000/1000 etc- I don't know what you mean saying he can compete.
      Yes mimicking openings will be/is a thing, but no one is in their prep the whole game, this will continue. As for how much more intution some one can have thats so open ended as to almost unanswerable: but it is almost a statistical inevitebility that the answer is more, someone with more will exist. It is foolish to think that anyone represents the pinnacle of possible human achievement in anything.

  • @snoopythedog3266
    @snoopythedog3266 Před rokem +3

    Great questions, incredibly interesting answers to me who can't play Chess

  • @jonicaushllari
    @jonicaushllari Před rokem +2

    Lex what do you have against Nakamura?

  • @ghassanbarghouti1945
    @ghassanbarghouti1945 Před rokem

    He certainly didn't give a boring answer that could come up as too humble.

  • @jamesaitchison9478
    @jamesaitchison9478 Před rokem +50

    Bobby Fisher was a prodigy, born to play Chess, watching the footage of him as a kid beating a room full of Master Chess players at the same time was mind blowing.
    Gary Kasparov springs to mind when i think of Master Chess players. I grew up watching Gary at his peak, and i remember when he played Deep Blue and Deeper Blue, the Super Computers built to play Chess, he became the first person to beat a Machine at a Human's game, and for that alone he will always be the greatest Chess player in my mind.

    • @mindhunter8772
      @mindhunter8772 Před rokem +5

      Magnus is better though

    • @kelvin303
      @kelvin303 Před rokem +4

      ​@@mindhunter8772 Bobby Fisher is way way better than Magnus. Bobby Fisher Changed Chess forever, and had was always looking for the truth in life and in chess. He was the one who bought up making Chess more complex thus Chess960. Bobby Fisher is the GOAT.

    • @Abcdef12396
      @Abcdef12396 Před rokem +4

      @@kelvin303 Copy paste

    • @mindhunter8772
      @mindhunter8772 Před rokem +2

      @@kelvin303 you can't compare bobby fisher to Magnus. He's an Alien in chess....

    • @ojasa88
      @ojasa88 Před rokem +2

      @@mindhunter8772 Fischer is way better, magnus benefited from studying both Fischer and kasparov, Fischer was a trend setter

  • @shanegill5091
    @shanegill5091 Před rokem +9

    With chess, like sport, you can only be the best of your era.
    Someone will come along in the next generation and improve on your performances - although that doesn't mean that they are better than you.
    ....Standing upon the shoulders of giants.

    • @JulienRoigHerr
      @JulienRoigHerr Před rokem +3

      Indeed. The best player of all time in any discipline is almost always the current best player. Because as you say we are building on what people have figured out before us, but also just because the human population continues to increase. The best out of seven billion people will likely be stronger than the best out of five billion.

  • @alexhendrick8288
    @alexhendrick8288 Před rokem +31

    Bobby Fisher by far the goat

  • @michaels333
    @michaels333 Před 9 měsíci

    We can make the case for Hikaru when it comes to Bullet

  • @chubsteriffic
    @chubsteriffic Před 7 měsíci

    Given the advent of supercomputers and the ability to determine the best move in any board position…I’ve heard Capablanca played better longer.

  • @MorningNapalm
    @MorningNapalm Před 8 měsíci +1

    I like his answers a lot, he cuts through a lot of the crap with his choices.

  • @merlin4real
    @merlin4real Před rokem +8

    Paul Morphy

  • @Batman22222
    @Batman22222 Před 6 měsíci +3

    Carlsen can DEFINITELY continue to be number 1 for many more years and overtake Gary's record..... the only question is whether he wants to stay MOTIVATED for soo long!

    • @billj4525
      @billj4525 Před 5 měsíci

      I think he wants to achieve that, and be the GOAT in his own mind. He believes he needs to do more to catch Garry, and I think he's right. Garry was really a giant, just unbelievable if you go through his career and accomplishments. Magnus may catch him, hard to say for sure. A lot can happen in 5 years, and Magnus gets older and just tired of playing at some level maybe.

  • @kirillzapple
    @kirillzapple Před 5 měsíci

    The more I listen to great people the more I realize that humility is a virtue

  • @letgabeequaltrue9097
    @letgabeequaltrue9097 Před rokem +15

    I couldn't beat the Gary Kasparov chess game on level 1. That made that game way too hard.

  • @javierechezarreta4623
    @javierechezarreta4623 Před 9 měsíci

    Like Messi when someone ask for the n#1.. very humble answer.. they don't care about it and always names others..

  • @adelinaquijano1083
    @adelinaquijano1083 Před rokem

    for me never changes

  • @michalaleskandr3985
    @michalaleskandr3985 Před rokem

    He couldn't play with that question about best games ever played... not even a little bit?!
    He shut that down quick.

  • @nobodysacrifice
    @nobodysacrifice Před rokem +5

    Is it that he isn't interested in talking about style or does he really think it doesn't have as much of effect as other things?

    • @neildutoit5177
      @neildutoit5177 Před rokem +13

      Magnus is the best because he only cares about winning and doesn't care how he does it. Most people who play a game, any game, develop a certain approach to the game that they then identify with, and playing the game becomes about trying to prove that their approach is a good one and can succeed. Maybe it's aggression. Maybe it's psychology. Maybe it's accuracy. Maybe it's perfecting the meta. But Magnus doesn't waste time trying to prove that "his" way of playing is the best way to play. Instead, he just tries to figure out what the best way to play is for each particular game, and then plays that. His one quote he says that "some people think it's okay to lose if your opponent has a beautiful game. I don't think that" and that kinda sums it up. It reminds me of Alpha Go in a way. One of the big things Alpha Go did that humans never did was it took seriously the idea that it doesn't matter how much you win by, it only matters whether or not you win. So AlphaGo would often win by a very narrow margin. Magnus is like that also. Doesn't care whether it looks good doesn't care whether it's beautiful doesn't care if it's "his signature style" or not. Just wants to win. I think it's a great mentality for becoming the best. But I do think he's internalised it a bit too much which might be preventing him from appreciating games as much when he watches them? Because you only need that mindset when you play. Not when you observe. But of course it can be difficult to compartmentalise and switch between modes so... yea

    • @maybeidontexist
      @maybeidontexist Před rokem +2

      ​@@neildutoit5177 nice write up, ty

  • @pihi42
    @pihi42 Před rokem +21

    Isaac Newton is considered by many to be the greatest physicist of all time. Yet he knew much less than the average phd of physics today. As he himself put it "I only saw further standing on shoulders of giants." If we apply the same criteria to chess players, we might perhaps measure their influence, contributions and importance to development of the game. Not just metrics as number of titles, rating, etc. Perhaps Kasparov was the most successful chess competitor, but the giants of old invented most of modern theory and Fischer popularized the game more than anybody else. I personally think Demis Hassabis' contributions to the future of chess will be ranked higher than either Kasparov or Magnus's.

    • @Zenith9132
      @Zenith9132 Před rokem +22

      You were going well until the Demis Hassabis part

    • @ahmadjauhar4562
      @ahmadjauhar4562 Před 9 měsíci +1

      I don't even know who the hell is Demis Dahabis is. And your analogy is flawed since chess is a game, not a real world phenomena. U gonna call some unnamed randos who invented chess to be the GOAT then?

    • @pihi42
      @pihi42 Před 9 měsíci

      @@ahmadjauhar4562 Demis Hassabis is the guy who invented Alpha Zero, the AI that learned to play chess on super-human level in I think a couple of days, just playing with itself. maybe you don't know who he is, but your grand-granddaughter might learn that in school in a couple of decades.

    • @billj4525
      @billj4525 Před 6 měsíci

      Not to chess, but Demis contributions to AI in chess will be ranked higher than maybe anyones. You can't compare him to guys like Kasparov and Magnus. He's just working on different things. Demis also gets a lot of help from other AI scientists when working on these things. Kasparov and Magnus don't work on AI. In terms of actual chess Demis is no where near Magnus, Kasparov, or many top players. Demis played chess professionally as a kid and continued to play in mind games. He did his best and studied chess. Demis just was no where near as talented as top grandmasters. Demis likely couldn't make Grandmaster even if he completely dedicated his life to it, and he's a brilliant guy. That shows you how hard it is to become a Grandmaster.

    • @youtubenightcrawler9571
      @youtubenightcrawler9571 Před 6 měsíci

      I dont know, the specs for Alpha Zero were maxed out and the stockfish seemed like an average computer joe could put together. Impressive they made AI but there is a reason they didnt release Alpha Zero because the hardware they used is not comparable to what average PC's use which SF is made for. Also, AZ had openings wheras SF did not. IMO AZ was over powered against SF. Just business pr imo.

  • @deanmason1564
    @deanmason1564 Před rokem +9

    Hey Lex don't sweat it about the video. Audio only is ok for most of us because we have seen so much of Magnus and are very familiar with his mannerisms and so forth, I think many of us can visualize him speaking as we listen. Just keep doing pods like this. Very educational in many ways. Good job

  • @markarmage3776
    @markarmage3776 Před rokem +17

    Fischer is absolutely the most stylistic and the most mythical figure.

  • @fanda6122
    @fanda6122 Před rokem

    I think part of what makes the three together a very interesting triad is that it's one american, one russian and one european. Of course there have been many in between from a variety of nationalities but the countries of the three goats have greater cold war and modern neoliberal implications.

    • @Falco_tv
      @Falco_tv Před 4 měsíci

      Russia is in Europe....

  • @cous
    @cous Před 5 měsíci +1

    Another argument for Magnus is he’s been the best at classical, rapid and bitz. Very few players perform equally well in all time formats

    • @billj4525
      @billj4525 Před 5 měsíci

      I think a lot of previous world number 1's were the best at all formats. Kasparov and Fischer were 100%, but rapid and blitz rating is not something that was always counted. It was just clear how much better Kasparov and Fischer were than everyone else regardless of time controls. I would venture to think many other world number 1's were as well, despite the ratings not being there.

  • @gustavohernandez6381
    @gustavohernandez6381 Před rokem

    Very honest!

  • @yashiAxen39
    @yashiAxen39 Před rokem +3

    Lex don’t be shy. You can beat Magnus ;)

  • @wallywest9257
    @wallywest9257 Před rokem +2

    Hikaru Nakamura...Just kiding lol

  • @SleepY-lw4rr
    @SleepY-lw4rr Před rokem +10

    Its like in football. Hard do compare eras.
    Fischer = Pele
    Maradona = Kasparov
    Magnus = Messi
    Imo the game evolves so the goats are the recent ones

  • @rockstaryap9189
    @rockstaryap9189 Před měsícem

    Bobby is the Mozart, Murphy is Beethoven, while Gary is the Elvis and Finally Magnus is the Bieber in the chess history. See, the difference when you are already an adult is you are leaning more on your self honest evaluation rather than children hersay bedtime story.

  • @duellinksneta7389
    @duellinksneta7389 Před rokem +2

    Damn lex really hates nakamura😂

  • @meliocurie1809
    @meliocurie1809 Před rokem

    Bobby, Magnus then Kasparov

  • @fabiancarre2417
    @fabiancarre2417 Před rokem +3

    FIDE rating 1972: 1 Fischer 2785 2 Spassky 2660.

  • @FiryaFYI
    @FiryaFYI Před rokem +1

    Bobby fisher was a douch. BUT the reason he is the goat for me, is because he was his own teacher.
    Everybody else got help, but he demolished others all on his own.

  • @matthewviramontes3131
    @matthewviramontes3131 Před rokem +15

    Could Magnus at his peak defeat Deep Blue as Kasparov did in 1996? And will Magnus still be playing at top level tournaments in his 50s like Kasparov?

  • @christinemurray1444
    @christinemurray1444 Před rokem

    He's pretty much spot on.

  • @ROBERTORRRR1
    @ROBERTORRRR1 Před rokem +2

    For now Kasparov. Then if Magnus will be able at 60 to beat the USA champion we can reconsider

    • @billj4525
      @billj4525 Před 5 měsíci

      He doesn't need to beat one player one game at 60 to prove anything lol, that's silly. Sample size matters in chess, not a few games. If he's still world number 1 in 6 years then he surpassed Kasparov. He doesn't need to play at 60 at all, it's his choice.

    • @ROBERTORRRR1
      @ROBERTORRRR1 Před 5 měsíci

      @@billj4525 your reply is silly

  • @angelmatos9143
    @angelmatos9143 Před 26 dny

    In the 'Reason Why I Play' category? Mikhail Tal. In the capturing my imagination category? Mikhail Tal. In the most important 'Chess will never be boring to me' category? Mikhail Tal. 😂

  • @zippo_muk9254
    @zippo_muk9254 Před rokem +2

    *I believe Bobby Fisher is the greatest player of all time for any one specific period.* E.g. the best Fisher vs. the best Magnus, I believe Fisher would win. In terms of longevity, yes Magnus and then Kasparov.
    Fisher also had so much more pressure on him, regarding the US vs. Soviet Union, the media, the public figure, the fact he actively called out globalist elites and refused to be silent about such agendas - he was also called a conspiracy theorist, but he was always right. People in the chess world are very intelligent, and regardless of whether they liked the truth that Fisher was speaking, they respected him because he was correct and had a phenomenal mind.

    • @J.c410
      @J.c410 Před rokem

      You need a reality check. Mgnus would absolutely destroy fisher. Modern way of training with computer etc makes the level 100times higher

    • @MrSupernova111
      @MrSupernova111 Před 11 měsíci +1

      @@J.c410 . You said it yourself. "Modern way of training with computer." Give Fischer the same tools and let's see what happens. You won't be standing so confidently anymore.

    • @billj4525
      @billj4525 Před 5 měsíci

      @@J.c410 Well he means Fischer was the most dominant for a short period of time. In terms of how good he was against his competition he was the best for a couple years.

    • @-yeme-
      @-yeme- Před 18 dny

      If Fischer was the GOAT, he never proved it. People will confidently state that he would beat Magnus given the same advantages but he never showed that he could actually do it. In fact, when it came down to it, he gave every indication that he couldn't. Not because it was beyond his ability, but because he didn't want to learn opening theory deeply enough. He might have had the pure intellect for it, but he didn't have the determination and mindset for it. Sure, you could give Fischer the same tools as Magnus, but if you did, I don't think he would use them. He didn't even fully use the resources he had available in his own time because of his stupid objection to it, because the game wasn't played precisely how he thought it should be. Well, tough, the game is what it is and the world wants to know who's best at it, not who's best at Bobby Fischer's invented and idealised version of it.
      Mental strength, discipline and relentless self-application are a big a part of the equation at the top level of any game and all that was Fischer's biggest flaw, proven by the trajectory of his career and his life. In 20 years time, Magnus isn't going to be a wild-looking recluse from the game and the world, rambling on about how awful chess is, he's going to be a respected elder statesman.

    • @vercot7000
      @vercot7000 Před 3 dny

      @@J.c410 This is nonsense lol. Have you actually checked fisher's games? He was accurate most of the time

  • @kaks1870
    @kaks1870 Před rokem

    Disagree on the style point. At the end of the day they’re entertainers - to win with style is obv ‘better’ than to win without style!

  • @ThePrinceraj88
    @ThePrinceraj88 Před rokem +1

    Fischer was the greatest his gap versus everybody else was insane 🏆🏆♟

  • @michaeld7974
    @michaeld7974 Před rokem +4

    The question is what if Bobby Fischer and a young Kasparov had to use of today's chess engines back then. you could argue that today's chess players have an advantage because of that it's easy to put a position in an engine sit back and let it run all the possible lines and variations the older generation of chess players used to have to do that all by themselves that's why I'd say they were better just my opinion though

  • @jsj297
    @jsj297 Před rokem +2

    You can insert any of the 3 and it’s ok to me. I preferred Bobby due to his greatest feat of winning the 72 WCC, is an all time great, no doubt there. I think Kasp in his prime would smoke Magnus. No offense. 1.BF 2.GK 3.Capa 4. MC

  • @matthewgrasso7167
    @matthewgrasso7167 Před rokem +3

    Can't compare eras, can only compare how one does against their piers. No one dominated their piers the way Fischer did for a short period of time but Magnus is certainly in the conversation of best ever. He has clearly been #1 for the past decade, in five World Championships he's only had three losses total. He destroyed Nepo in the most recent one and Nepo once again won the Candidates so Nepo has displayed dominance against piers not named Magnus and Magnus has dominated Nepo.

    • @pigs6486
      @pigs6486 Před rokem

      "Can't compare eras"...Garry can.

  • @chillingcapybara8528
    @chillingcapybara8528 Před 4 měsíci

    It's like questioning who knew more about physics, Newton or Einstein? You cannot compare because Einstein had calculus and Newtonian mechanics at his disposal but Newton had to invent it from scratch!
    The big problem of comparing different era players is that chess is accumulated knowledge and Magnus is the heir of this knowledge. He is the greatest of all time for sure, but also will be the world champion 50 years from now.

  • @sleong
    @sleong Před rokem +2

    I will say Lasker, Morphy, Kasparov, or Carlsen.

    • @donkbonktj5773
      @donkbonktj5773 Před rokem +1

      It's true Lasker was wc for 27 years, but he could chose who and when he would play. I think the top 5 are Morphy, Fischer, Carlsen, Kasparov and Capablanca.

  • @eric_meira
    @eric_meira Před rokem +2

    Great

  • @motoputz3201
    @motoputz3201 Před rokem +1

    magnus is human after all!

    • @chungboislim2061
      @chungboislim2061 Před rokem +1

      What style do you like?
      "Not interesting."
      ....Sure sounds like a socially unaware robot to me

  • @denniswong1438
    @denniswong1438 Před rokem +14

    AI chess has changed the skill set needed to be a the top. So MC is the first in the establish era of AI chess. It is impossible to compare past generations which was without AI. We may still be in transition if we transition to less time limits as more reflective of "human chess" as classical becomes pure memory/prep then different skills will be more important for top players.

    • @Wtahc
      @Wtahc Před rokem +1

      the thing is that ai should make the gap smaller but magnus' gap is huge

    • @MrSupernova111
      @MrSupernova111 Před 11 měsíci

      @@Wtahc . The point is that there is an argument to be made that the best GMs are the ones that know how to use today's engines, databases, and AI the best as opposed to players of the past that had to rely on their own analysis and magazine/newspaper clips. Even so, today in 2023, Fischer's elo peak is still the 21 highest elo rating ever. Let that sink in for a while.

    • @Wtahc
      @Wtahc Před 11 měsíci

      @@MrSupernova111 no, thats not the point. yes: gms know how to use the resources better. thats why magnus' literal elo is higher than fischer's. but when you're talking about an actual _gap_, between the #1 and his contemporaries, you're comparing him to other people who also use the resources. ergo, no asymmetrical advantage.

    • @MrSupernova111
      @MrSupernova111 Před 11 měsíci

      @@Wtahc . You completely ignored my comment. AI is just a tool like shovel or a hammer. The one that uses it best gets best results. There is no reason to believe that chess players won't continue getting stronger at various rates which leads to rating gaps.

    • @Wtahc
      @Wtahc Před 11 měsíci

      ​@@MrSupernova111 you're not being clear. what are you saying, that magnus is just that much better at using the engine than the other top players? well you're wrong, sorry. im assuming you dont know a lot about the game, magnus has never been the best prepared player and his main strengths are endurance, consistency and his nettlesome wizardry in the endgame, literally the three things least influenced by engines. the players of today are not just better than fischer: they are more impressive, even considering their circumstances. magnus would make short work of a fischer born in the modern era, as would nakamura if the time control were blitz or shorter. conversely, a magnus or hikaru born in fischers era would put up a real battle, if not totally steamroll him. this is a universal truth of all popular games: everything improves over time. more generally, humans improve over time. the people stuck masturbating on the past are just lost, or extremely disingenuous. the pre-supercomputer era of chess is not worth romanticizing - i was there for it, it had just as many problems as the current one, and the problems it didnt have stemmed from the fact that no one was interested or good enough to discover them. fischer is a god and one of the greatest players of all time, but he is a step down from kasparov, who is a step down from magnus and hikaru. a more appropriate comparison for fischer would be someone like caruana, and even then i dont know if he holds up. its easy to armchair criticize the top players of today but once youve seriously tried to play the game at a high level you will realize how amazing they really are.

  • @IssaFram
    @IssaFram Před rokem +1

    It's Kasparov and it isn't even close

    • @papachacalon2097
      @papachacalon2097 Před rokem +1

      The guy that was beaten by a 7 year old magnus carlsen reading comics?

  • @zakariyaal-tararwah8186
    @zakariyaal-tararwah8186 Před rokem +29

    Bobby fischer is the 🐐 of chess

  • @Devin14747
    @Devin14747 Před rokem +3

    You should have asked him how he ranks fisher random compared to ches

    • @flamboyant91
      @flamboyant91 Před rokem +3

      They did talk about it, just watch the full thing

    • @kelvin303
      @kelvin303 Před rokem

      @@flamboyant91 You didn’t get it. Carlson isn’t a champion in chess960, shows he’s bot truly that good. Having a good memory helps in regular chess but in chess960 that’s a different story.

    • @omegacroc2928
      @omegacroc2928 Před rokem

      @@kelvin303 not true, he may have lost to Wesley So 4-0, but he was still 2nd, and is more well rounded and dominant than Wesley by far in regular chess.

    • @kelvin303
      @kelvin303 Před rokem

      @@omegacroc2928 Chess960 requires more skill from pro players. Mangus rely on theory more that’s why he’s very good in regular chess. Regular chess has been dead in pro play so it really doesn’t matter at this point. Chess960 are for the big boys

  • @chubsteriffic
    @chubsteriffic Před 7 měsíci

    Is it not true that Capablanca played better longer than any other GM.

  • @ms-vf4ml
    @ms-vf4ml Před rokem +6

    Bobby Fischer and it’s not close

  • @johncloptop1585
    @johncloptop1585 Před rokem

    Not one mention of Paul morphy?😳

  • @peterhaslund
    @peterhaslund Před rokem +1

    For me Morphy, who basically inventeed modern chess from scratch and had to suffer endless delays. Can you even imagine him in a modern setting playing blitz? Fischer went crazy fast. Garrik is just such a mensch, standing up to Putin way sooner than most of us. Carlsen is a normal Norwegian out of left field, a pop of 5 mil people who do stuff on skis, what were the odds?

  • @kheireddineattala1281
    @kheireddineattala1281 Před rokem +7

    Imagine if MAgnus was like "what do you mean of course I am the greatest player of all time is there any doubt?"

    • @billj4525
      @billj4525 Před 5 měsíci

      I doubt he would say it like that lol.

    • @kheireddineattala1281
      @kheireddineattala1281 Před 5 měsíci

      @@billj4525 All am saying is it would be funny if he did.

  • @DanielCollins419
    @DanielCollins419 Před rokem +2

    For me the greatest chess player has to be lelouch V britannia

  • @ShaShaSha534
    @ShaShaSha534 Před 2 měsíci

    Unlike say, basketball (where Jordan had 2/3 of the conversation over everyone else), chess has 3 men who you can all argue to be the GOAT - Kasparov (combination of rating/longevity, the Kareem of chess), Fischer (so far ahead of everyone at such an early time, like Wilt or Russell), and then Magnus. Magnus is MJ'esque but hasn't had his come back championships yet :)

  • @MrJesseFisher
    @MrJesseFisher Před rokem +8

    Had to get one stab at Nakamura in there

    • @SavantGardeEX
      @SavantGardeEX Před rokem

      It's funny bc he was supposed to get on the podcast but got over last second for an Elon Musk podcast.

  • @sunset1394
    @sunset1394 Před rokem +1

    He just wants to win,no style and things like that,

  • @kzmOP
    @kzmOP Před rokem

    G. O. A. T

  • @ElectroMac74
    @ElectroMac74 Před 25 dny

    KARPOV?

  • @every1wasanoob
    @every1wasanoob Před rokem +1

    Atleast 200iq

  • @ed1pk
    @ed1pk Před rokem +7

    Paul Morphy needs an acknowledgment! He was far and away ahead of everyone like Fischer. If all the great champions started today with the same knowledge, my money would be on Morphy and Fischer.

    • @dimitrispap777
      @dimitrispap777 Před rokem +1

      What is it with morphy that appels so much to people? The guy was extremely good for sure, but he faced no real competition. Players of that era were very weak and made the most blunders in the history of chess according to evaluations. We dont know what morphy would have dont if he played today, but he definitely wouldnt be so dominant

    • @donkbonktj5773
      @donkbonktj5773 Před rokem +1

      @@dimitrispap777 The era was weak because Morphy was a genius. He barely studied chess, or he even didn't. Adolf Anderssen was actually a very good player, but Morphy trashed him as well. Morphy could spot pieces and have a blindfold simul while finding engine moves in like his teenage years. Not even Carlsen, or the other greats could do something like that. Sure Carlsen could also have blindfold simuls, but he had to work for it (I think), But anyway, It's almost like saying Archimedes isn't the greatest mathematician of all time because people back then knew very little.

  • @racoon251
    @racoon251 Před rokem

    Morphy, Lasker

  • @Davidjune1970
    @Davidjune1970 Před rokem +1

    You can’t compare people who ruled chess during a time when the only way to play was over the board. No computers to play against that had an engine that was worthwhile. No online play. Their opportunity for playing experience was not even close to what modern players can attain.
    Players in the last two decades have been blessed with the ability to play vs an engine for practice and are also able to play against high caliber players at any time of day by going online.
    It’s like comparing ww1 and ww2 fighter pilots against modern fighter pilots. They didn’t have simulators, top gun, red flag, or the ability to train before a fight like pilots do today.

  • @robertwhitten265
    @robertwhitten265 Před 8 měsíci

    There is a CZcams video by Nakamura where it shows the player with the highest percentage of accuracy to the engine. Here it shows GMs at 55, Kasparov at 69, Magnus at 70 and Fischer at 72. This clearly is very objective, why than is Fischer never considered to be the best ever? Everyone talks about longevity but why does that matter. If someone dominates 100 meter dash for 10 years with the fastest time of 10 seconds and another dominates for 1 year with the fastest time of 9 seconds, I'd say that the one with the 9 seconds is the fastest person ever.

    • @royalty4958
      @royalty4958 Před 5 měsíci

      Yeah but the difference is in a 100m dash your fastest time doesn't have anything to do with your opponents. whereas in chess results are highly dependant on who you are playing which is why the difficulty of the era is an important variable in the discussion. Usain Bolt would've been the best regardless of which era he raced in bc reults in track and field is independant to your competition.

    • @robertwhitten265
      @robertwhitten265 Před 5 měsíci

      @@royalty4958 What are you talking about? The accuracy is measured using today's engine so it has nothing to do with the opponents. It simply looks at the board and compares their moves against the CURRENT engine.

    • @royalty4958
      @royalty4958 Před 5 měsíci

      @@robertwhitten265 Yes but if you're a 2000 rated player playing a 500 rated player you'll have a much higher accuracy than if you were to play a grandmaster. Moves come much easier when you're playing weaker players which is my point. Accuracy is indicative not only of your strength but of the strength of your opponents too

    • @robertwhitten265
      @robertwhitten265 Před 5 měsíci

      @@royalty4958 Nope, even if you play someone int he park, the next best move is just as difficult as the pro. Might even be easier as you have seen it many times before. The next best move according to engine equally difficult in any situation. Finding the next move that is winning is easier with lower ranked player since there will be many but not finding THE best move.

    • @royalty4958
      @royalty4958 Před 5 měsíci

      @@robertwhitten265 I've had many 90% games in my own database, does that make me grandmaster level? no it just means my opponent blundered alot making my next moves easier to spot. This is a common known thing, that the weaker the opponent the, the more likely it is for your overall accuracy to be high. Its been said many times by grandmasters. Either you haven't played a lick of chess or you're misinformed

  • @daruiraikage
    @daruiraikage Před rokem +10

    When two geniuses meet, they forego the primal urge to move and cue non verbals, they just sit still and converse telepathically like in this video.

  • @openomniverse446
    @openomniverse446 Před rokem +14

    With Messi, the fact that he has to execute with his body gives reasons for him to have points for style.

    • @abbabb8369
      @abbabb8369 Před rokem +2

      style means nothing.... Messi had by far better team around him than anyone else.... and fact that during his best he hasn't won international trophy is a joke... to call him goat...

    • @James-ub8hx
      @James-ub8hx Před rokem +1

      @@abbabb8369 I don’t think Messi is the goat, however he did win the Copa America just last year

    • @abbabb8369
      @abbabb8369 Před rokem +1

      @@James-ub8hx I said in his prime... he is not in his prime anymore....

    • @alexanderkononov1862
      @alexanderkononov1862 Před rokem +9

      @@abbabb8369 who do you have as your goat? I agree messi hasnt won a world cup, but as someone who watched more than 15 years regualrly, he is by far the best player i have seen.

    • @abbabb8369
      @abbabb8369 Před rokem +1

      ​@@alexanderkononov1862
      If I had to pick I go with defender like Maldini...

  • @AngelMartinez-tk7nc
    @AngelMartinez-tk7nc Před rokem +5

    I'm not gonna lie. For a sec I was like wtf is Perez Hilton doing in the Lex Fridman podcast!. Shout out to 1 of the best of all time chess player that ever walked this earth. Mr Carlsen.

  • @adelinaquijano1083
    @adelinaquijano1083 Před rokem

    he not mention

  • @Tetratronic
    @Tetratronic Před rokem +1

    Can anyone explain to me why they're dunking on Hikaru here? Idk Chess lore, but he's 8th place, is that bad?

    • @chungboislim2061
      @chungboislim2061 Před rokem +1

      He's just not even in the top 10 of the last few decades, it's ridiculous to call him one of the best ever. I think they are just being playful since he is sort of a meme at this point.

    • @Tetratronic
      @Tetratronic Před rokem

      @@chungboislim2061 But he's literally 6th place on the FIDE leaderboard. Why is he a meme?

    • @GoatLiffy
      @GoatLiffy Před rokem +1

      @@Tetratronic It's just because he's a streamer and his personality is quite different compared to most GMs. There was also a time where he didn't play a single classic match for quite a long time which made people meme on how bad he is on longer time controls, but that doesn't really apply anymore. But, yeah I think in terms of classical chess of the past decades or so, he's nowhere near top 10 average.

  • @SpectreTheFinals
    @SpectreTheFinals Před 8 měsíci

    He’s spot on about Messi

  • @MagnusFAN
    @MagnusFAN Před rokem

    Vishwanathan Anand

  • @sniffableandirresistble
    @sniffableandirresistble Před rokem +5

    DEFEND YOUR TITLE!!!!

    • @chungboislim2061
      @chungboislim2061 Před rokem +2

      He's scared. Little baby Magnus

    • @davidcopson5800
      @davidcopson5800 Před rokem

      Indeed. As far as I know he's a professional chess player, it's his job. No one is asking him to climb the world's 20 highest mountains, they asking him to play chess.

  • @pigs6486
    @pigs6486 Před rokem +2

    Morphy is the GOAT