The
Fischer Chess Spoon StoryThis story is copyright W.
Bednersh 2001
|
CHECK MATE
by Wayne Bednersh
At the last National Spoon Convention in Colorado
Springs, Erwin Goldman convinced me to acquire this unusual spoon and
to write an article about it. Therefore, this article is dedicated to
Erwin Goldman.
The pictured spoon is a heavy 5.75" art deco style sterling spoon
made about 1972. Sterling spoons were not hot collectibles
during that time period so it is rather unusual to have a sterling
spoon commemorating any event. This spoon, however, commemorates
the very famous cold war Chess World Championship between American
chess genius Bobby Fischer and the Russian Grand Master Boris Spassky
which was held in Reykjavik, Iceland. This spoon is probably
part of a limited edition as it is numbered 252 on the back.
At the top of the spoon is a crown with a cross which is similar to
that which is used on the king in chess sets. The king is the
most important but also the least powerful and least mobile piece on
the chessboard. Below the crown is a portrait of the new
champion surrounded by his name "Robert J. Fischer". The stem
says "Chess in Iceland F.I.D.E. (initials for the World Chess
Organization). |
Click on image
 |
The round bowl has the date "1972" in the center with "World
Champion" surrounding the date. The spoon is marked with an
unidentified mark which appears to be a crown above a keyhole above a
pedestal. None of my books identified a manufacturer using this mark.
In addition it says "JENS 925S". I thought that this might refer to
the famous Danish firm of Georg Jensen, Inc. but the books I have did not
show this as one of the variations on their mark, however the spoon is
clearly made in the "Jensen style".
Most
chess grandmasters are very intelligent in more than one field, but Bobby
Fischer who was reputed to have had an IQ of 180 appeared to have no talents
other than in the game of chess where he was the undoubted premier player of
his era. Some people even believe that he was an idiot-savant.
In the chess world, it is quite common for a grand master to
play hundreds of simultaneous games against lesser players. An
interesting story is related by Frank S. Meyer, the late senior editor of
National Review:
"Fischer, on his way to the washroom, briefly paused at my
board - for perhaps five seconds - and then walked on. A few months
later, he visited me at my office, then located at the Marshall Chess
Club. "How did that last round game turn out?" he inquired. I
told him I had won, but with difficulty. "Did you play Q-B5?" he
asked.
I told him quite frankly I couldn't remember what I had
played. He immediately set up the exact position to "help" me
remember, and then demonstrated the variation I should have played to have
secured a much more economical win. The main point is that he did
not simply remember the position, then analyze it in front of me, he
remembered not only the position but also his fleeting analysis as he had
passed my board months previously."
One of the websites which I used described the following
incident which may be a clue as to Fischer’s abilities:
"Perhaps some of the following anecdotes will dispel the
doubts of the unbelieving. Before playing the match with Spassky in
Reykjavik, in 1972, Fischer toured Iceland for a few days to get the feel
of the land.
One morning he telephoned his old friend Frederick Olaffson, Iceland's only grandmaster. Both Olaffson and his wife
were out of the house, and a little girl answered the phone. Fischer
said, "Mr. Olaffson, please." Olaffson's daughter explained, in her
native Icelandic, that both her mother and father were out of the house
and would return in the early evening for dinner. Fischer does not
know a word of Icelandic and had to hang up with an apology.
Later that day, talking to another Icelandic chessplayer
(who did speak English), Fischer remarked that he had tried to reach
Olaffson. "It sounded like a little girl on the phone," he said.
He then repeated every Icelandic word he had heard over the telephone,
imitating the sounds with perfect inflection, so well, as a matter of
fact, that the Icelander translated the message word for word."
I am not going to describe the actual games played, because
I doubt that most spoon lovers would have any interest in that field, but a
few of the events leading to the match are worth repeating.
The games were supposed to begin on July 1, 1972 but did not
actually start until July 11, because Fischer was holding out for more prize
money. Finally an "angel" offered $125,000 in additional prize money
conditioned on the match being televised, but Fischer also objected to the
presence of the TV cameras.
Throughout the entire sequence of twenty games, both sides
displayed many examples of psychological maneuvering designed to make the
opponent lose concentration. Fischer demanded the removal of the TV
cameras and to pacify him this was done for one game, but this dispute
eventually ended with a lawsuit brought by Fox Television against him.
On the other side, the Russian leaders several times indicated that they
wanted Spassky to quit in the middle of the series of games based upon the
general acrimony, but he refused to quit on the grounds that he was a good
sportsman.

This particular world championship win during the height of
the Cold War was especially important because it was the first time in 24
years that any non-Russian was able to beat the best Soviet player.
The political and psychological maneuvering before and during the match
intrigued the entire world and lifted the staid world of chess to the
headlines of television and newspaper reporting.
Of course, the American "win" made Bobby Fischer into an
instant celebrity, but it was also of psychological importance during the
cold war maneuvering for political power.
Return to Spoon Stories
Return to Spoon World
Chess Art,
Fiction and History
|

The
Chessville
Chess Store
Advertisement

The
Chessville
Weekly
Newsletter

Subscribe
Today -
It's Free!!
The
Chessville
Weekly
Archives

Advertise
with
Chessville!!
Advertise to
thousands
of
chess
fans
for
as little
as $25.
Single insert:
$35
x4 insert:
@ $25 each
From the
Chessville
Chess Store



From the
Chessville
Chess Store
|