Meltwater Champions Chess Tour Finals 2022: Magnus Carlsen Racked Up His Seventh Straight Win in San Francisco

The World chess champion Norwegian Magnus Carlsen put on another sparkling display in Round 4 of 7 as he thrashed Dutch No.1 Anish Giri 3-0 to march on towards victory in the USD1.6 million Tour's end-of-season hybrid event.

Magnus Carlsen (Credit: Twitter)

San Francisco, Nov 19: Norwegian Magnus Carlsen racked up his seventh straight rapid game win to snatch the sole lead at the halfway point of the Meltwater Champions Chess Tour Finals in San Francisco. The World chess champion put on another sparkling display in Round 4 of 7 as he thrashed Dutch No.1 Anish Giri 3-0 to march on towards victory in the USD1.6 million Tour's end-of-season hybrid event. Meanwhile, Jan-Krzysztof Duda, Carlsen's biggest rival in this tournament and throughout the 2022 Tour, lost a catastrophic match to Vietnam's Liem Quang Le that puts a huge hole in his hopes. Duda and Liem played out two long draws before Liem broke through to win in 46 moves in the third. On-screen, Duda looked devastated. Liem then turned the screw with 29 and e5! in the fourth to win 3-1. He climbs to the third position with seven points, behind Carlsen on 12/15 and Duda on 9. Fans Will Have to Pay Rs 17 Lakh to Drink Alcohol Inside Stadiums at FIFA World Cup 2022 Games in Qatar

Carlsen's opening game saw him play now rare at the top level of French Defence. It was a risk and quickly the newly-installed 2022 Tour Champion found himself in what he thought was a losing position. Carlsen admitted after: "I'd just missed his a4 move in the opening - after that, I think I'm pretty busted!" Giri didn't spot the chance to blow open the champion's center, though. The Dutchman sacrificed a bishop but it didn't work and Carlsen took over. A wild game ended with Carlsen in front. Amateur Avani Prashanth Wins 15th Leg of Women’s Pro Golf Tour by a Massive 13-Shot Margin

Game 2 went worse for Giri. The Dutchman collapsed in the middlegame as he allowed Carlsen to activate his bishop pair. Carlsen pinned Giri's rook and the game ended in short order. It was Carlsen's sixth rapid win in a row. Elsewhere, Indian teen Arjun Erigaisi got off the mark with three points and USD7,500 as he beat Azerbaijan's No.1 Shakhriyar Mamedyarov. Erigaisi had gone 11 games without a win in the event, but broke that run in the second and went on to take the fourth too for a 3-1 score. Finally, the US star Wesley So won his second match in a row with a 2.5-1.5 victory over Rameshbabu Praggnanandhaa. Both players, who were expected to challenge at the top, have failed to live up to expectations in this event so far. With three rounds to go, Carlsen remains the hot favorite. Yet he still has to play Duda on the final day.

(The above story first appeared on LatestLY on Nov 19, 2022 12:08 PM IST. For more news and updates on politics, world, sports, entertainment and lifestyle, log on to our website latestly.com).

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