A gold medal and $1.4 million for Viswanathan Anand
Viswanathan Anand received a gold medal, prize money of USD 1.4 million (around Rs. 7.9 crores), a memento and a piece of contemporary art displaying him and challenger Boris Gelfand, for his world chess championship win at a ceremony here on Thursday.
- Press Trust of India
- Updated: May 31, 2012 09:08 pm IST
Viswanathan Anand received a gold medal, prize money of USD 1.4 million (around Rs. 7.9 crores), a memento and a piece of contemporary art displaying him and challenger Boris Gelfand, for his world chess championship win at a ceremony here on Thursday.
Stating that his connection with Russia has been very deep, Anand said, "I benefitted a lot from playing chess in Russian Cultural center in Chennai and my second Grandmaster norm was also made at the Cultural center in New Delhi. The connection with Russia is quite deep, as I also played a lot of tournaments here while growing up."
Anand, who won in a nail-biting finish in rapid tie-break games, wished Gelfand good luck and mentioned that Gelfand always greeted him warmly before each game, ensuring that the match was played in the right spirit.
Anand also thanked the sponsors and FIDE for organising the world championship and also acknowledged the support of his wife (Aruna) and his team here at the State Tretyakov Gallery.
The speculation over Anand's team also ended. It remained the same as it was four years back with Peter Hiene Nielsen, Rustam Kasimdzhanov, Radek Wojtajsek and Surya Shekhar Ganguly as his seconds for this match too.
Speaking about the importance of computers in today's world of chess, Anand noted that they had made a difference but were not complete in themselves.
"Definitely computers have levelled a lot of ground but we still see that those with a structured frame of knowledge in chess make better use of computers than the others, the human interaction is also important, computer itself is not complete," he said.
Before the final ceremony the world champion also met Russian President Vladimir Putin, who had invited him for tea at his residence.
Anand mentioned to Putin about learning chess in a Russian cultural center in his home town to which the President replied, "So we brought this on ourselves"!
"I really enjoyed it, the President was fully aware about the match, was very warm and friendly. For me it was an honour," Anand said on his meeting with Putin.
When asked about the eventual tie-breaker that happened or whether they wanted another rule Anand was clear that tie-break was the perfect solution, "I actually think it's a good idea given that we had 12-games to separate us, also it mirrors other sports as we have tie-break in many other games as well, I think it's just fine instead of giving the title to defending champion in case of a tie which was an old practice, it means a half point lead to the defending champion."
Anand also mentioned he thoroughly enjoyed the atmosphere during the match and said he was not sure where the next match will be.
"This time also there was a bid from India for this match that did not materialise, it's a complicated process," said the world champion.