Fischer was a master of clarity and a king of artful positioning. His opponents would see where he was going but were powerless to stop him.
If you are reading this instead of viewing a chess puzzle or game, then you must enable JavaScript on this website.
[Event "rated untimed match"] [Site "Bath"] [Date "1973.??.??"] [Round "?"] [White "Hug"] [Black "Spasski"] [Result "0-1"] [Annotator "David Hayes"] [BlackElo "0"] [FEN "r2r2k1/1pq2ppb/4p2p/p1N1n3/P3P3/2P2BP1/1B2QP1P/R3R1K1 b - - 0 1"] [SetUp "1"] [TimeControl "0"] [WhiteElo "0"] 1... Rd2 2. Qe3 ( { White can try: } 2. Qxd2 Nxf3+ 3. Kg2 Nxd2 { Black wins with a large material advantage. } ) 2... Nc4 3. Qf4 e5 4. Qh4 Qxc5 5. Re2 Rxe2 6. Bxe2 Nxb2 { Black wins with a large material advantage. } 0-1