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Norway’s Carlsen ends chess game with dramatic draw

Norwegian chess champion Magnus Carlson narrowly missed a win in the first game of the World Chess Championships in London on Friday, after he missed several chances to secure a win.

Norway's Carlsen ends chess game with dramatic draw
Magnus Carlsen in deep concentration early in Friday's game. Photo: Ben Stansall/AFP
The 2018 World Chess Championship kicked off in London on Friday between three-time defending champion Magnus Carlsen and Fabiano Caruana, the first American to compete since the legendary Bobby Fischer in 1972.
   
Hollywood actor Woody Harrelson — star of “Cheers” and “Hunger Games” — was given the ceremonial role of moving the first piece but made an unintentionally comical start, knocking over a king and pushing forward the  wrong pawn. 
   
Once underway, 26-year-old Caruana, playing white, produced some bold early moves and seized a knight, while Norwegian master Carlsen, 27, was more cautious in the opening exchanges.
   
However, by later in the games Carlsen was in a more dominating position. He is seeking to cement his reputation as history's greatest chess player, while Caruana is another young prodigy helping to return mass appeal to the 
highbrow game.
   
The pair will face off 12 times from Friday until November 26 — with the first game starting at 3pm — in the bi-annual contest held in a former London art and design school building.
   
Chess has its own unique scoring system that awards the winner of each game one point, while a draw sees the contenders get half a point each.
 
The title goes to the first person to reach 6.5 points, with a rapid series of tiebreakers played in case the two are level after the first 12 games.
 
'Thor' of chess
 
Carlsen — a superstar at home in Norway who is also a part-time model — excels in such playoffs, as he demonstrated in 2016 in New York against Russia's Sergey Karjakin.
   
Introduced to the game at a young age by his father, he was a “great international master” by 13 — holding Garry Kasparov, the Soviet and Russian legend whose record ranking Carlsen eventually broke, to a draw.
   
“There is no doubt that Carlsen is one of the best chess players ever,” British Chess Magazine editor Milan Dinic told AFP.
 
 
Carlsen, the reigning champion since 2013 and one of the faces of a street-smart Dutch apparel brand, is seen as a nearly flawless chess player who has helped make the game's image more fun.
   
Dubbed “the Thor of chess”, he is credited with having a formidable intuition and a prodigious memory that allow him to have a vast repertoire of moves.
   
Carlsen conceded Thursday he has not been playing at his highest level lately but said he was “confident” he could turn his form around.
 
“Fabiano is a tremendous player, his results this year speak for themselves,” he said. “I know if I continue to play in the same vein I've been playing recently, I will probably not win, so I need to step it up.”
 
New audiences
 
Caruana earned his shot against Carlsen by winning the Candidates Tournament earlier this year in Berlin, and the Italian-American from Miami will take heart from having held his opponent to a draw in August.
   
He has climbed up the FIDE chess federation's rankings in recent years to occupy the number two spot — just three points off Carlsen's total of 2,835. Americans have not had a chess hero since Fischer stunned Soviet champion Boris Spassky in an epic series in 1972 that epitomised the Cold War rivalry between the two superpowers.
   
But any comparison with the US legend would be premature at this stage, Caruana cautioned.
   
“If I become world champion the comparison will be more apt,” he said.
   
With Carlsen's modelling profile and Caruana's appeal in America, tournament organisers World Chess are hoping to conquer new audiences with the match-up and future board battles.
   
Many believe the 1,500-year-old game can adapt well to the digital age, with a plethora of dedicated websites and apps awaiting a bigger audience.
   
“There's a lot of people in the celebrity world, movies and music, who have an interest in chess,” said Caruana. “I think chess is definitely becoming cooler.”
 
 

CHESS

Spanish chessboard maker sees surge in demand thanks to The Queen’s Gambit

Barcelona-based Rechapados Ferrer has been inundated with orders since supplying products to the Netflix series.

Spanish chessboard maker sees surge in demand thanks to The Queen's Gambit
Rechapados Ferrer is the latest firm to find itself impacted by a renewed interest in Chess. Photo: AFP

The company, founded in the 1950s, usually produces only about 20,000 chessboards a year from its factory in La Garriga, near Barcelona.

But since supplying its products to the successful Netflix series The Queen's Gambit, it has received a wave of orders in the past months.

The mini series, an adaptation of a novel by Walter Tevis, has fuelled interest in the game of chess. Since it debuted last autumn, Rechapados Ferrer has received orders for 40,000 boards.

READ ALSO: French series 'Lupin' tops 'Queen's Gambit' views on Netflix

“When the Netflix series came out, it all just went crazy and drove sales of chessboards through the roof,” David Ferrer, who runs the family business, told The Guardian.

It's not the only company to have seen a surge in demand. Ebay also noted a 215% rise in sales of chess boards and accessories since October.

In February last year, the Spanish crisp-maker Bonilla saw a huge increase in online sales after its distinctive tins were featured in Oscar-winning film 'Parasite'.

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