Funny 😅 That being sad Einstein would actually interview Emmanuel Lasker, and vice versa, not for medias nore for the public, but for the only sake of learning from each other.
Mikhail Tal was a master of using tricky, deceptive and intimidating stares as a form of psychological warfare against his chess opponents, including the infamous Stanley Kubrick Stare.
Now, that also explains what we call today, the Magnus effect. It's a magnet like effect that instils fear and intimidation into opponents' hearts. Tal knew this and hence his Fischer example makes total sense
is it a coincidence that this video resurfaced after the game 7 of this year's WCC? Nepo exuded the confidence that might have affected Ding's psyche during the last 15 minutes.
That was some gall for Karpov to accuse anybody of hypnosis. He is the one, if hypnosis were actually a real practice and not pseudoscience garbage myth, who could stare at people with his disturbing glass like googly eyes. Not hypnosis but perhaps psychological intimidation by display of emotion and mannerisms can have basis in science if the one who is trying to intimidate knows that maybe the opponent has anxiety issues.
@@slimshady6242 I'm from Serbia. There will be more Fischer videos for sure. Here is what I have for now: ru-vid.com/video/%D0%B2%D0%B8%D0%B4%D0%B5%D0%BE-bS3WGqjEtLM.html&ab_channel=MisterChess
A small fact- During Botvinik vs Tal world championship matches , Tal and his coach used to play some mind games with Botvinik , he used to disturb him from their room tried to spoil his prep .Slowly it turned out it became useless and it was stopped by Tal
@@frednimzowi9852 The story is very real, and the source is (other) videos by Tal. It is said that Tal's coach Koblenz was a good piano player, so he went close to the quarters of Botvinnik to distract his preparation. The trouble was that Koblenz played really well and his music actually helped Botvinnik to prepare.