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.