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CARLSEN WINS 3RD WORLD CHESS CROWN

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NEW YORK — Norwegian Magnus Carlsen extended his dominance over the chess world on Wednesday by winning the World Chess Championsh­ip for the third consecutiv­e time on Wednesday, beating his Russian challenger Sergei Karyakin in a tie breaker.

The win puts Carlsen closer to the status of chess legends such as Garry Kasparov, who dominated the game for 15 years.

Although Karyakin foiled prediction­s by tying Carlsen in 12 regular rounds, the Norwegian champion beat him in the final phase of four quick-fire extra games.

The battle for the world chess crown ended up in the dramatic tie breaker on Wednesday after a win apiece and nine draws.

So the young stars — both aged just 26 — headed into the chess equivalent of extra time in soccer.

Unlike the earlier rounds, which lasted an average of six hours, the rapid-play rules meant the players had just 25 minutes each, so each game was over in an hour.

The accelerate­d games left plenty of opportunit­y for harried mistakes, and while prediction­s were difficult, Carlsen — a king of the blitz format and world number one since 2010 — had remained favorite.

The Norwegian, who turned 26 on Wednesday, has played several blitz tournament­s this year, beating US grandmaste­r Hikaru Nakamura in one in October.

But he has occasional­ly shown flashes of losing his cool, as when he slammed the door of the press room after defeat in the eighth round, earning a fine of five percent of his prize money.

‘CAPABLE OF UPSET’

Carlsen won the championsh­ip — organized by the Internatio­nal Chess Federation, FIDE — in 2013 and 2014, beating Indian Viswanatha­n Anand.

Karyakin, a child prodigy who became the youngest ever chess grandmaste­r at the age of 12, has known Carlsen for years and had little to lose, with no one even having expected him to reach the final.

“Sergei has impressed everyone with his tenacity these last few weeks so he is perfectly capable of pulling an upset,” said Wesley So, who traveled to New York from Minnesota to watch the clash.

Much has been made of the clash as a reprise of the great Cold War chess battles of the 1970s, but Karyakin, who is from Crimea and supported Russia’s 2014 annexation of the peninsula, has played down political overtones.

The last Russian to claim the title was Vladimir Kramnik in 2007.

In a sign of the final’s significan­ce to Moscow, President Vladimir Putin’s spokesman Dimitry Peskov was in New York to see the start of the head-to-head.

The competitio­n initially offered prize money of €600,000 ($637,000) for the winner, and €400,000 for the losers, but that was changed to €550,000 and €450,000 respective­ly because the battle went into extra time. —

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