 
 Biography
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Anand's rise in the Indian chess world was meteoric. National level    success came early for him when he won the National Sub-Junior Chess    Championship with a score of 9/9 in 1983 at the age of fourteen. He    became the youngest Indian to win the International Master's Title at    the age of fifteen, in 1984. At the age of sixteen he became the    National Champion and won that title two more times. He played games at    blitz speed, earning him the nickname "Lightning Kid" ("Blitz chess" is    known in India as "Lightning chess"). In 1987, he became the first    Indian to win the World Junior Chess Championship. In 1988, at the age    of eighteen, he became India's First Grandmaster.
"Vishy", as he is sometimes called, burst upon the upper echelons of the    chess scene in the early 1990s, winning such tournaments as Reggio    Emilia 1991 (ahead of Garry Kasparov and Anatoly Karpov). Playing at    such a high level did not slow him down either, and he continued to play    games at blitz speed. In 1991, he lost in a tie-breaker to Anatoly    Karpov in the quarter finals of the FIDE Knockout World Chess    Championship.
Viswanathan Anand qualified for the Professional Chess Association World Chess    Championship final by winning the candidates matches against Michael    Adams and Gata Kamsky. In 1995, he played a title match against Kasparov    in New York City's World Trade Center. After an opening run of eight    draws (a record for the opening of a world championship match), Anand    won game nine using a splendid sacrifice on the queen side, but then    lost four of the next five. He lost the match 10.5 - 7.5.
Anand won three consecutive Advanced Chess tournaments in Leon, Spain    after Garry Kasparov introduced this form of chess in 1998, and is    widely recognized as the world's best Advanced Chess player, where    humans may consult a computer to aid in their calculation of variations.
Viswanathan Anand's recent tournament successes include the prestigious Corus chess    tournament in years 2003 and 2004 and Dortmund in 2004. He has won the    annually held Monaco Amber Blindfold and Rapid Chess Championships in    years 1994, 1997, 2003 and 2005.
Anand has won the Chess Oscar in 1997, 1998, 2003, and 2004. His four    Oscars ties him with Kasparov for the most ever, one better than    Fischer's three. The Chess Oscar is awarded to the year's best player    according to a world-wide poll of leading chess critics, writers, and    journalists conducted by the Russian chess magazine 64.
Viswanathan Anand's game collection, My Best Games of Chess, was published in the year    1998 and was updated in 2001.
After several near misses, Anand finally won the FIDE World Chess    Championship in 2000 after defeating Alexei Shirov 3.5 - 0.5 in the    final match held at Teheran, thereby becoming the first Indian to win    that title. He lost the title to Ruslan Ponomariov in 2002.
He became shared second in the FIDE World Chess Championship 2005    (together with Peter Svidler) with 8.5 points out of 14 games, lagging    1.5 points behind the winner, Veselin Topalov.
In October 2003, the governing body of chess, FIDE, organized a rapid    time control tournament in Cap d'Agde and billed it as the World Rapid    Chess Championship. Each player had 25 minutes at the start of the game,    with an additional 10 seconds after each move. Anand won this event    ahead of ten of the other top twelve players in the world with Kasparov    being the only missing player. Anand is still deservedly considered to    be the world's finest Rapid Chess player.He has consistently won almost    all rapid events defeating many top players and his main achievements in    this Category are at : Corsica , Leon , Amber events where he dominated    almost all elite players .
If his talent as a rapid chess player is legendary, his records in classical chess have been superlative. In January 2006 he became the only player in the tournament's 70-year history to win the Corus Chess event five times (1989, 1998, 2003, 2004 and 2006).
Anand is one of the most clear-headed chess analysts in the world, and his explications are astonishingly accessible for club players.
More than 8 hours of rare insights into arguably the best brain in chess.
Chess titles
- 1983 National Sub-Junior Chess Champion - age 14
- 1984 International Master - age 15
- 1985 Indian National Champion - age 16
- 1987 World Junior Chess Champion, Grandmaster
- 2000 FIDE World Chess Champion
- 2003 FIDE World Rapid Chess Champion
Awards
- Anand has received many awards.
- Arjuna award for Outstanding Indian Sportsman in Chess in 1985
- Padma Shri, National Citizens Award and Soviet Land Nehru Award in 1987
- The inaugural Rajiv Gandhi Khel Ratna Award, India's highest sporting honour in the year 1991-1992.
- British Chess Federation 'Book of the Year' Award in 1998 for his book My Best Games of Chess
- Chess Oscar (1997, 1998, 2003 and 2004)
 
 
2 comments:
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