15 January 2025

21 World Champions at a Glance

The previous post, World Championship Posters (January 2025; alternate title: 'Of Posts and Posters'), started,
I discovered a photo of historical interest among others from game 10: [see link to photo; (Photo credit: FIDE / Eng Chin An)] Posters in the background told a couple of important stories.

Along with the posters featured in that post, was a poster with a unique prespective on the official World Champions. It is shown below.


The World Champions
(can be expanded)

The historical path starts with Steinitz in the upper left corner, shows the five non-FIDE World Champions, then drops to Botvinnik in the middle of the second row, who was the first FIDE World Champion, no.6 in the accepted sequence of numbering the World Champions. He is flanked by the two players who beat him in a title match (then lost a rematch), after which the path moves to Petrosian (no.9). The path then runs sequentially through Kasparov (no.13).

After Kasparov, the path resembles spaghetti. Kasparov is succeeded by Karpov and Kramnik (no.14). Karpov is succeeded by Khalifman then the other three FIDE Knockout (KO) World Champions plus Topalov. The Bulgarian is succeeded by Kramnik then Anand (no.15). The Indian is succeeded by Carlsen then Ding Liren (no.17). The current World Champion, Gukesh (no.18), is not shown.

The total of 17 numbered World Champions plus five FIDE World Champions makes 22 faces. Who's missing? No one, because Anand sits on two paths, as the second KO champion and for beating Kramnik in 2006. Karpov's win as the first KO champion in 1997/-98 is not shown, probably because he succeeded himself.

The colors used for the arrows could have been better chosen, but that's a detail. All in all, it's an informative chart with tons of info and good photos packed into a small space. Kudos to its designer. For more clarity on the spaghetti portion of the chart (ten faces), see the main page of my World Chess Championship (m-w.com) site.

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