Anthony
Saidy was born May 16, 1937 in Los Angeles.
He gained the title of International Master
by tying for 2nd in the grandmaster tournament
at Venice, Italy in 1969. He competed in several
U.S. Championships from 1960 to 1974, taking
4th prize in his last and his best result.
He played 3rd board on the 1964 U.S. team at
the Tel-Aviv Olympiad, and took part in four
U.S. student teams, culminating in a U.S. victory
at the World Student Championship at Leningrad
in 1960 (the first American world win since
the emergence of the Soviet chess machine).
Saidy won the American Open Championship in 1967, shortly after a 2nd-place finish
in the Atlanta U.S. Open, and repeated that win in 1992, in a 4-way tie. His
main chess achievement however, is the 1972 book The
Battle of Chess Ideas, a Retiesque appreciation of the greatest living
players, most of whom he had faced over the board. Chess
Canada called it "fuel for the soul." He also co-wrote the 1974
coffee-table book The World of Chess, called
by the late Norman Cousins "a lavish work of art."
In 1972 he was at the storm center of the prelude to Bobby Fischer's historic
journey to Iceland to bring the world crown to U.S. shores. He captained the
U.S. Women's Olympic Team at Buenos Aires in 1978, and was repaid on his return
to the U.S. Championship in 2002, when his only wins were scored against girls.
In 2000, Saidy retired as an L.A. County doctor specializing in tuberculosis.
Twice divorced, he still plans a pretty combination off the chessboard. He is
a prodigious book collector and possesses an enormous library on many subjects,
including one of the largest privately owned collections of chess books in the
United States. While his Elo rating has plummeted from its all-time high of 2532
in 1964, he is agitating for a nonagenarian world championship, which he guarantees
to win.
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