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The contest was dubbed "Magnus Carlsen vs. The World," and began April 4. It was a freestyle game of chess, meaning every piece except pawns are randomly positioned on the board.
Magnus Carlsen, the chess grandmaster who has become the public face of the game, was forced into a draw after an intense game played over 6 1/2 weeks — and it only took some 143,000 opponents ...
Norwegian chess grandmaster Magnus Carlsen was forced into a draw Monday by more than 143,000 people worldwide playing against him in a single, record-setting game. Skip to content.
See Carlsen's reaction. Magnus Carlsen, the No. 1-ranked chess player in the world, suffered a defeat to current world champion Gukesh Dommaraju. Sports newsletter 🏈's best, via 📧 Studio IX ...
BERLIN (AP) — Norwegian chess grandmaster Magnus Carlsen was forced into a draw Monday by more than 143,000 people worldwide playing against him in a single, record-setting game.
Magnus Carlsen's Team Liquid welcomes the young Indian chess prodigy, R Praggnanandhaa, ahead of the Esports World Cup in ...
Chess grandmaster Magnus Carlsen explained a viral fist-slamming incident in an interview with Barstool Sports and talked about how much losing weighs on him. Fox News Media Fox Business ...
Dubbed Magnus vs The World, the game hosted by Chess.com started 46 days ago, on April 4, and concluded 32 moves later. The website stated Carlsen, 34, would almost definitely beat the World and ...
BERLIN (AP) — Norwegian grandmaster Magnus Carlsen is playing a single game of chess against 140,000 people worldwide in a mega-match that could overturn expectations by ending in a draw in the ...
Magnus Carlsen, 34, is one of the greatest sportsmen of our times, a beacon of chess. Never in the 1,500-year history of this game was a grandmaster as famous as the Norwegian.
Berlin — Norwegian chess grandmaster Magnus Carlsen was forced into a draw Monday by more than 143,000 people worldwide playing against him in a single, record-setting game. Billed as "Magnus ...
Norwegian chess grandmaster Magnus Carlsen was forced into a draw Monday by more than 143,000 people worldwide playing against him in a single, record-setting game. Skip to content.