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25 years on: Anand-Kasparov at WTC, and a Donald Trump cameo

The 1995 World Chess Championship, held at the New York City Twin Towers from September 11 to October 16 of that year, remains a compelling chapter in Viswanathan Anand’s career

September 18, 2020 / 22:50 IST
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If New York is a chessboard, the Twin Towers were its king and queen. And so it was somewhat fitting that in 1995, one of the buildings hosted the World Chess Championship between India’s Viswanathan Anand, just 25 then, and Gary Kasparov of Russia, 32.

The towers perished in the terrorist strikes on the US on September 11, 2001. Every year on the anniversary of the attacks, many Indians remember Anand vs Kasparov up on the observation deck of the 107th floor of the South Tower. The match was inaugurated by Mayor Rudy Giuliani. The date was September 11.

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Among those at the event, watching the players hunched over the board in a soundproof glass room, was chess coach Raghunandan Gokhale. The Dronacharya Award winner and former player was covering the game for the Indian media.

Kasparov won. But Anand rattled him. The first eight games were drawn, unprecedented in the history of a World Championship. Then Anand won game nine and took a lead against all expectations. Kasparov, brilliant but egoistical, grew restive. He tried to derail Anand with petulant gamesmanship like making faces and slamming the door while leaving the room between moves.