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The Chess Title No One Had to Win: How Karpov Became Champion by Default

March 28, 2026 · 4 min read

The Fact

Anatoly Karpov was awarded the World Chess Championship in 1975 by default when Bobby Fischer refused to defend his title.

The Champion Who Never Competed for the Crown

In most sports, a world championship is won on the field, the court, or the board. You compete, you win, and the title is yours. In 1975, chess produced one of the most anomalous outcomes in the history of any sport: Anatoly Karpov of the Soviet Union was declared World Chess Champion despite never playing a match to claim it. The title came to him not through victory but through the refusal of the man he was supposed to face — Bobby Fischer, the mercurial American genius who had dethroned Boris Spassky in the iconic 1972 match that had captivated the world.

Fischer had won the championship in Reykjavik in 1972 in a match so dramatic it was treated as a proxy Cold War battle. But between 1972 and 1975, he played no public games and conducted increasingly contentious negotiations with FIDE, the international chess federation, over the conditions for the defense of his title.

Fischer's Demands and FIDE's Decision

Fischer's list of demands for the 1975 championship match was extensive and, from FIDE's perspective, unreasonable. He insisted on a match played to ten wins rather than the standard twenty-four game format, with draws not counting toward the total. He also demanded that the champion retain the title in the event of a 9-9 tie — effectively giving the champion the ability to draw the match and keep the title. FIDE agreed to most of these conditions but refused the final point: the clause allowing a tie to favor the champion.

Fischer's position was that these terms protected both players' interests and created a more decisive outcome. FIDE's position was that a champion who could retain the title by simply preventing a challenger from reaching ten wins held an unfair structural advantage. Negotiations broke down completely. FIDE set a deadline; Fischer missed it. In April 1975, FIDE declared the title vacant and awarded it to Karpov as the challenger who had earned the right to compete in the match.

Karpov's Complicated Legacy from an Uncommon Coronation

Karpov himself expressed deep ambivalence about the circumstances. In public statements, he said he had prepared intensively for the match and believed he could have defeated Fischer, but acknowledged that becoming champion without playing for the title was unsatisfying. Chess history would have been different — perhaps dramatically so — if the match had taken place. Whether Karpov, a positional genius who would go on to prove himself one of the greatest players of his era, could have beaten Fischer at the peak of his powers is a question that chess fans still debate.

What is certain is that Karpov did not coast on the title he received by default. He went on to defend the World Championship successfully through the late 1970s and into the 1980s, including marathon title matches against Garry Kasparov that rank among the most grueling competitions in chess history. His 1984-85 match against Kasparov was abandoned after five months of play with Karpov leading but showing signs of physical exhaustion. Karpov held or contested the world title for the better part of two decades.

Fischer's Disappearance and the Question That Remained

Fischer's refusal to play left one of chess's greatest what-ifs permanently unanswered. He had been, by any measure, the strongest player in the world through the early 1970s. His 1971 Candidates cycle, in which he scored 18.5 out of 22 points and demolished opponents 6-0 in two consecutive matches, was considered one of the most dominant performances in chess history. His refusal to compete again after 1972 — he made a brief public comeback in 1992, playing Spassky again in a match that was legally controversial — deprived the chess world of what might have been years of extraordinary competition.

For Karpov, the legacy of 1975 is a permanent asterisk — not on his talent, which was genuine and immense, but on the specific circumstances of how he initially received a title that most champions had to fight to earn.

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FactOTD Editorial Team

Published March 28, 2026 · 4 min read

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