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En Passant: Bent Larsen

I sadly submit this article about Bent Larsen. I wish I had known him.

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One of the world's best grandmasters of his day, Danish legend Bent Larsen, has died in Buenos Aires, Argentina after a short illness. He was 75.

The six-time Danish Champion and four-time world championship candidate (in 1965, 1968, 1971, and 1977) won three Interzonal tournaments and many, many other international tournaments. His five consecutive first prizes at Havana 1967, Winnipeg 1967, Palma de Mallorca 1967, Sousse 1967 and Monte Carlo 1968 set a record for anyone who was not actually world champion. In 1967 he was also awarded the first Chess Oscar for player of the year.

Larsen was the first player in the western hemisphere to challenge the dominance of Soviet chess after the second world war. In the years leading up to Bobby Fischer's 1972 world title victory, Larsen was often considered a stronger candidate for the championship match than was Fischer.

And indeed when FIDÉ organized a match in 1970 pitting the Soviet Union's best players against the top players from the rest of the world, Larsen protested when Fischer was initially selected for board one. In a rare display of humility Fischer acquiesced, allowing Larsen the top spot and a match-up with world champion Boris Spassky.

However, in an outstanding career with many highs, his most famous low has to have been his 6-0 loss to Fischer in their 1971 Candidates match - the psychological blow from which many believe signaled the beginning of the end for Larsen's ambitions to become world champion; and indeed, it was often said he was never quite the same player after such a demolition job by Fischer.

Since the early 1970s Larsen has lived in Buenos Aires, with his Argentinian-born wife. One of his lasting legacy's to chess will be his outstanding collection of 50 games published in his book, Larsen's Selected Games of Chess 1948-69 (also known as Bent Larsen: Master of Counter-Attack) - a truly superb book and one that should be in everyone's library.

source: ICC newsletter.

Comments


  • 21 months ago

    Ludde

    To me, this did not come as a great surprise, since I have friends who knew him (myself, I regrettably never met him), and they seemed to be very concerned about the old masters health. Still, it was very, very sad news. Bent Larsen as a chess-writer is probably the single largest reason I became a chessplayer at all. In the 70s and early 80s he wrote in the Swedish magazine "SchackNytt". This magazine was my sole (almost) source of information about chess, and I was extremely inspired by his witty and inspiring style - both in his writing and in his views on chess. From him I have learned probably the majority of my (admittedly few) insights in positional chess and I will tonight go down to my chessboard in the basement, open up his book with 50 selected games, and play through a few games, while reading his notes. This is what I did almost every evening when I was 15,  and tonight, some 30 years later, it feels appropriate to resume that habit. The chess-world should mourn - one of the greatest innovators and independent thinkers has left.

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