Hindustan Times ST (Jaipur)

Game 8 too ends in a stalemate

- New York Times sportsdesk@hindustant­imes.com

: Like tic-tac-toe, fiveday cricket matches and Italian soccer in the 1980s, chess has a lot of draws. But the two grandmaste­rs currently battling for the world title in London, Magnus Carlsen and Fabiano Caruana, may be taking it a little too far. Eight of the 12 games in their world championsh­ip match are over. And every one of them, including Monday’s Game 8, has ended in a draw.

For the past week and a half, Carlsen and Caruana, the two best players in the world, have matched wits, and moves, across a table in an auditorium in hourslong games. It can all feel a bit sterile at times, with the players separated from those watching by one-way glass, and the tension only broken by the occasional scheduled rest day. From that detached vantage point, and even more distance online, the chess news media and fans have watched and analysed the movement of each piece with excitement. And still, no one wins.

Monday’s draw leaves four games to go in this year’s match. If no one wins any of them, on November 28 the players will begin an arduous run of tiebreaker­s in the hope that someone will actually win a game.

First, the players will face off in four games with a rapid time limit of only 25 minutes per player.

Four more draws? They will next play up to 10 more games at the blinding pace of only five minutes per player — so-called blitz games.

Still drawing? It’s time for an Armageddon game. In it, Carlsen and Caruana would play a single game: whoever draws white - and goes first - will get five minutes, while black will get four.

If this game, too, is a draw, then the organizers will simply throw up their hands and declare black the winner of the match.

Really.

LONDON

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