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Fischer vs Karpov: the 1975 title match that never happened. Rules disputes, FIDE votes, and how Karpov became champion without a board.
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Fischer vs Karpov: the 1975 title match that never happened. Rules disputes, FIDE votes, and how Karpov became champion without a board.
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One of the greatest potential rivalries in chess history unfolded off the board between 1974 and 1975. Bobby Fischer had stunned the world by beating Boris Spassky in 1972. Anatoly Karpov surged through the Candidates, defeating Polugaevsky, Spassky, and Korchnoi, to earn the right to challenge Fischer. The match everyone expected never took place.
Fischer demanded an unlimited match to 10 wins with draws not counting. He also insisted that at 9–9 the champion would keep the title and split the prize fund. At the 1974 FIDE Congress in Nice, delegates rejected those terms and set a 36-game limit instead. Fischer resigned his FIDE title by cable on 27 June 1974, though FIDE treated the title as still his while negotiations continued.
Manila bid $5 million to host the match. At Bergen in March 1975, FIDE accepted Fischer’s unlimited format but again rejected the 9–9 retention clause. Fischer had until 3 April to confirm. He did not reply. On 3 April 1975, FIDE declared Anatoly Karpov the 12th World Champion, a title Karpov said he was glad to win but wished he could have earned over the board against Fischer.
The episode is a lesson in how match rules shape history. Fischer’s fight for long matches and champion privileges changed how title cycles were negotiated for decades. For study, compare Fischer’s and Karpov’s styles from this era (sharp initiative versus relentless positional pressure) and ask which structures you want in your own repertoire on ChessMo.
Summary based on RuyLopez1000’s Lichess article (Jun 2026).
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