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The Guardian - UK
The Guardian - UK
Sport
Leonard Barden

Magnus Carlsen sets early pace as stars collide at Norway Chess

Magnus Carlsen (left) against Gukesh Dommaraju
Magnus Carlsen (left) in his opening round encounter against Gukesh Dommaraju. Photograph: Carina Johansen/AP

Magnus Carlsen arrived in vintage form at the start of the Norway Chess tournament. The encounter began inconclusively with the six stars – in ranking order Carlsen, Hikaru Nakamura, Fabiano Caruana, Arjun Erigaisi, Gukesh Dommaraju and Wei Yi – all launching a win or two. Gukesh, who celebrated his 19th birthday on Thursday, won in round three against Nakamura.

Carlsen’s version of one of Bobby Fischer’s favourite openings set the tone last week for another clean sweep of the No 1 of the global elite. Carlsen’s comprehensive victory in the chess.com Speed Championship, which this year also acted as a qualifier for the Esports World Cup, included mini-match victories over three important rivals.

His win against France’s Maxime Vachier-Lagrave was a rare venture into a classical Sicilian Defence with Bc4, like Fischer used to play in his pomp. The individual twists were 6 h3 and 14 Ba4!, but the offbeat strategy was classic Bobby, with a brutal attack against Black’s light squares.

White: Carlsen. Black: Vachier-Lagrave. Opening: Sicilian Defence.

1 e4 c5 2 Nf3 d6 3 Nc3 Nf6 4 h3 Nc6 5 d4 cxd4 6 Nxd4 e5 7 Nf3 h6 8 Bc4 Be6 9 Bb3 Be7 10 0-0 0-0 11 Re1 Rc8 12 Nd5 Bxd5 13 exd5 Na5 14 Ba4! Improving on an earlier Carlsen game where 14 c3 was fine for Black. 14…Nd7 15 c3 f5 16 Bc2 Qb6 17 Rb1 Rf7 18 a4 Qc7 19 g4! Opening up the king’s side 19…fxg4 20 hxg4 Rcf8 21 Qd3! Rxf3 22 Qh7+ Kf7 23 Bg6+ Kf6 24 Bh5! 1-0

After four rounds of the 12 in the double-round Stavanger tournament, Carlsen (Norway) leads with 8pts over Caruana (US) with 7, then Nakamura (US) on 5.5, Erigaisi and Gukesh (India) both on 4.5 and Wei (China) on 4. Norway’s special scoring system is three points for a win, one for a draw and zero for a replay loss. Draws are played under Armageddon rules which allow for replayed games.

After two frustrating days where his skills were tested, Carlsen finally got back on track with his second win of the event, a hard-fought marathon against Erigaisi which was technically easier than it looked. Carlsen’s king gradually infiltrated into the central squares to support the Norwegian’s passed pawn in a queen and pawn ending. Queen and pawn against queen would probably be the epitome of Carlsen’s trademark grinding style.

After Friday’s rest day, the top pairing for the tournament on Saturday will be Caruana v Carlsen, a 2018 world title rematch and also a meeting of the top two at Stavanger.

The England and British Championships, World Rapid and Blitz Team Championships are all coming up in the next few weeks, so it will be an important time for young English talents. The soundest approach is the most stable: to aim for consistent results and high percentages rather than conjuring up dreams of instant glory.

A 2300 rating is one of the most reliable landmarks displaying how a player acts under pressure and whether he or she can handle constant competition.

3974 1 Qb3+! and 2 c4! surprisingly traps Black’s queen.

• This article was amended on 30 May 2025. An earlier version featured several errors in the chess puzzle, which affected all of the question, solution and the chessboard graphic itself. On the board, the Black rook on a6 was erroneously replaced by a Black knight, while g7 was originally blank and should have featured a Black bishop. The h2 White pawn should have been on h3. The year the game in question took place is 2015 rather than the earlier stated 2016. An erroneous reference to White’s queen was also amended in the solution – this should have been Black’s queen.

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