There is nothing more exciting for U.S. chess than Gata Kamsky’s run for the World Championship. Later this year, Gata will face former world champion Veselin Topalov of Bulgaria in a match, while current world champion, India’s Viswanathan Anand, defends his title against his predecessor, Vladimir Kramnik of Russia. Victory against Topalov will mean a title match for Gata in 2009. Read Gata’s own Chess Life annotations from his World Cup win in the March Chess Life Magazine.
This will be Gata’s third attempt to climb the Olympus of chess. In 1993, the rival organisations FIDE and PCA each held Interzonal tournaments. Kamsky qualified from both, and proceeded to wipe out one top GM after another in the two parallel world championship cycles. As FIDE attempted to establish a successor to the title vacated by the formation of the PCA by Garry Kasparov and Nigel Short, Gata decisively defeated Anand, 6-4 (on the Indian’s home turf!), and two others in matches before finally succumbing to Anatoly Karpov, 7.5-10.5, in their 1996 FIDE World Championship match.
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I like Gata Kamsky, but Anand-Topalov would make a good match. the only match I’d dread is Kramnik-Kamsky. No more K vs. K matches.
I too like Gata Kamsky he is one of my favorite players to watch. I am not sure if he is strong enough to go all the way, but the experience will greatly improve his game.