Facebook Pixel 'There Is Great Depth In India's Young Chess Talent' | Outlook - News - Bu hikayeyi Magzter.com'da okuyun

Denemek ALTIN - Özgür

'There Is Great Depth In India's Young Chess Talent'

Outlook

|

December 30, 2019

In individual sport, Viswanathan Anand is probably India’s greatest; the grandmaster has gone where no Indian has ever been before. In his book Mind Master: Winning Lessons from a Champion’s Life—part autobiography, part about the lessons he has learnt from chess—the fivetime World Champion unveils his battles over 64 squares. In this interview to G.C. Shekhar he discusses the book, his game, being the nice guy and the future of Indian chess.

- G.C. Shekhar

'There Is Great Depth In India's Young Chess Talent'

A memoir or autobiography usually happens when one hangs up the boots. You are still an active player, ranked in the top ten. Why did you write it at this stage in your career?

My 50th birthday (on December 11) provided a convenient timeline. The project has been around for some time. Since the book is about my life lessons it doesn’t matter if I choose to play a few years more.

Is it easier for a chess player to discuss tactics, preparations and post-match analysis and draw wisdom from them than, say, a tennis player? Many of your conclusions can actually be applied in company board rooms or in management courses or simply in real-life situations?

I have done a fair amount of public speaking; it flows from that also. Certainly, chess teaches you lessons that you relate to, especially in the context of learning and artificial intelligence.

Do chess players need to keep reinventing themselves since their last game is recorded, analyzed and stored for future reference? Like when you surprised Kramnik with a Queen Pawn opening in Bonn?

Whether you take your existing repertoire and tweak it or you take a radically new area—both happen all the time. You cannot always have a new repertoire for every tournament and you try something new. So in chess, you go back and forth.

Elizbar Ubilava (Anand’s trainer) urged that you have to go beyond being India’s and Asia’s first and pursue the World Championship. Any tennis player would want to win the Grand Slam. Your book says you did not have the thrust. Did you lack that fire early on?

Outlook'den DAHA FAZLA HİKAYE

Outlook

Outlook

The Spectacle of the Woman Accused

Media narratives—especially when women are involved—can end up amplifying suspicion and weaponising gender

time to read

7 mins

March 11, 2026

Outlook

Outlook

The Stink of Epstein

Why are the rich and powerful of the world scared of what lies buried in the Jeffrey Epstein files?

time to read

6 mins

March 11, 2026

Outlook

Outlook

Passing the Watermelon

Narendra Modi's presence in Israel is being read not just as a bilateral engagement, but as an endorsement of Israeli action in Gaza and the West Bank

time to read

5 mins

March 11, 2026

Outlook

Outlook

For Phoolan, Who Wasn't a Devi

“Whether or not it is the Truth is no longer relevant. The point is that it will, (if it hasn’t already) - become the Truth. Phoolan Devi, the woman has ceased to be important. (Yes of course she exists. She has eyes, ears, limbs, hair etc. Even an address now) But she is suffering from a case of Legenditis. She’s only a version of herself. There are other versions of her that are jostling for attention. Particularly Shekhar Kapur’s “Truthful” one, which we are currently being bludgeoned into believing.”–Arundhati Roy in ‘The Great Indian Rape-Trick I’, on the film Bandit Queen by Shekhar Kapur based on Phoolan, whom he never met because he didn’t think he needed to meet her. The film was based on journalist Mala Sen’s book India’s Bandit Queen: The True Story of Phoolan Devi.

time to read

5 mins

March 11, 2026

Outlook

Outlook

The Chic Cartel

Women are not just victims or side characters in recent crime-and-power OTT dramas. They are complex forces-capable of empathy, strategy and ruthlessness-whose narratives demand both recognition and reckoning

time to read

5 mins

March 11, 2026

Outlook

Outlook

The Hierarchy of Sympathy

In crimes against women, justice is shaped not only in courtrooms but in newsrooms where narrative determines whose suffering becomes national conscience and whose fades into procedural silence

time to read

5 mins

March 11, 2026

Outlook

Outlook

Dasyu Sundari

Media accounts simultaneously cast her as victim and avenger, until a life shaped by caste violence and gendered oppression was repackaged into a consumable myth of dishonour and revenge

time to read

8 mins

March 11, 2026

Outlook

Outlook

Prince Pervert

Are rumours of the death of the rule of law vastly exaggerated?

time to read

4 mins

March 11, 2026

Outlook

Together, Apart

Poonam Saxena's translations of Mannu Bhandari and Rajendra Yadav's memoirs present a portrait of the trailblazing Hindi writer-couple's marriage and of newly independent India

time to read

3 mins

March 11, 2026

Outlook

Outlook

The Great Indian Rape Trick'

The trope of transforming sexual violence against women into a springboard for rage that can only be channelled through counter-violence has long served as a popular framework in cinema, both globally and in India

time to read

6 mins

March 11, 2026

Translate

Share

-
+

Change font size