With the questionable move 26…e6, Ding Liren just opened himself to deadly tactics by Gukesh Dommaraju. (After Magnus Carlsen declined to defend his title, Ding Liren won the World Championship, a title he’s now defending.)
With the questionable move 26…e6, Ding Liren just opened himself to deadly tactics by Gukesh Dommaraju. (After Magnus Carlsen declined to defend his title, Ding Liren won the World Championship, a title he’s now defending.)
I believe this makes it 2–1, not counting draws, with three games to go. If the score is tied, they have a tiebreak of rapid games, and, if necessary, blitz games.
World Chess Championship:
With the questionable move 26…e6, Ding Liren just opened himself to deadly tactics by Gukesh Dommaraju. (After Magnus Carlsen declined to defend his title, Ding Liren won the World Championship, a title he’s now defending.)
https://analysis.sesse.net/
Gukesh finally breaks through and wins Game 11.
I believe this makes it 2–1, not counting draws, with three games to go. If the score is tied, they have a tiebreak of rapid games, and, if necessary, blitz games.