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CARLSEN

Chess champ Carlsen insists on ‘illness clause’

Norwegian chess sensation Magnus Carlsen has inserted an "illness clause" in his contract to play a world championship match in India giving him the right to take two days off if he falls sick, an official said Monday.

Chess champ Carlsen insists on 'illness clause'
Magnus Carlsen - Club de Ajedrez Linex-Magic
 
Carlsen, ranked world number one, agreed to play the title match against Chennai-based reigning world champion Viswanathan Anand in his home town from November 7 to 28 only after forcing the organisers to agree to the demand.
 
"There is a clause by which a player can take a two-day break if he falls ill," All-India Chess Federation secretary V. Hariharan told AFP in the southern Indian venue. "We told Carlsen that we will provide excellent facilities and make good arrangements, but he must have been worried about the food or weather here and insisted on having this clause in the contract. There was nothing we could do."
 
Hariharan said it was the first time an illness clause had been included for a world championship match.
 
Carlsen, who turns 23 on November 30, had earlier slammed the world body FIDE's decision to grant the title match to Anand's home town without a bidding process.
 
Carlsen, accompanied by his manager and a personal chef, arrived in Chennai on Sunday on his first visit to India to inspect the arrangements being made for the match at a five-star luxury hotel.
 
Carlsen's manager, Espen Agdestein, had been quoted by the Wall Street Journal on June 3 as saying: "We have to be careful to make sure he doesn't risk getting sick."
 
Carlsen was due to speak to the press later on Monday after taking on 20 players, aged between seven and 17, in simultaneous exhibition matches in the southern city.
 
The Norwegian is not expected to meet Anand before he flies out of Chennai later on Monday.

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CHESS

Norway chess champ defeated for first time in two years

World chess champion Magnus Carlsen has suffered his first defeat in more than two years and a record 125 games, while playing a tournament in his native Norway.

Norway chess champ defeated for first time in two years
Magnus Carlsen at the Energy Denmark Champions in Copenhagen in May 2019. Photo: Claus Bech / Ritzau Scanpix / AFP
The world number one resigned after when he was a bishop down in the endgame against Polish grandmaster Jan-Krzysztof Duda, who is ranked a relatively humble number 15 in the world.
   
But on Saturday evening, 22-year-old Duda managed to do what no one — including the world's top 10 players — had managed to do since July 2018.   
 
It was Duda's only win of the tournament in Stavanger so far and, as he told Chess 24 afterwards, “I didn't expect to win this game.”
   
But he was, he said “extremely happy, obviously”.
   
Carlsen, who is often tough on himself in post-game analysis, offered no excuses. “Extremely disappointing”, he said: “Completely unforgivable”.
   
Carlsen's undefeated run stretches all the way back to July 31, 2018, when Azerbaijani grandmaster Shakhriyar Mamedyarov defeated him. During that time, Carlsen scored 44 wins and 81 draws against his opponents.
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