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8 votes
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Magnus Carlsen leads Gukesh Dommaraju by half a point going into the final round of Norway Chess 2025 after both stars won their classical games in round nine
7 votes -
With wins in round seven classical games of Norway Chess 2025, Fabiano Caruana takes pole position while Gukesh Dommaraju follows a point behind
4 votes -
World Champion Gukesh Dommaraju pounced on a blunder in round six of Norway Chess 2025 to get his first classical win against Magnus Carlsen
7 votes -
Arjun Erigaisi joins Hikaru Nakamura in the Norway Chess 2025 lead after handing a second loss in a row to Gukesh Dommaraju in round two
8 votes -
Magnus Carlsen won a spectacular king hunt in round one of Norway Chess 2025 to beat Gukesh Dommaraju – their first classical game since Gukesh became World Chess Champion
7 votes -
Thirteenth edition of Norway Chess will see the first classical meeting between Gukesh Dommaraju and Magnus Carlsen since the Indian claimed the World Champion title in Singapore
9 votes -
World Chess Championship 2024 - Ding Liren vs Gukesh Dommaraju
The World Chess Championship started today between reigning champion, China's Ding Liren (2728 Elo, 32 y/o) and India's young prodigy Gukesh D. (2783 Elo, 18 y/o). It's taking place in Singapore...
The World Chess Championship started today between reigning champion, China's Ding Liren (2728 Elo, 32 y/o) and India's young prodigy Gukesh D. (2783 Elo, 18 y/o). It's taking place in Singapore with games starting at 5PM local time (10AM CET, 4AM EST). Commentated coverage can be found at Chess.com or FIDE as well as numerous smaller channels.
Coming into the match, Ding is far more experienced, but has been displaying terrible form since becoming World Champion. Meanwhile Gukesh has looked far stronger and has the chance to become the youngest World Champion ever, beating out the likes of Magnus Carlsen and Garry Kasparov by several years. Former World Champion Magnus Carlsen is still ranked as the #1 player in the world, but has declined to participate, just like last year.
The match is 14 games from November 23 to December 13, with potential rapid chess tiebreaks if the score is even after 14 games. The players will have a rest day after every 3 game days.
15 votes -
17-year-old Gukesh Dommaraju wins the Candidates, becomes youngest ever Chess World Championship challenger
20 votes