Published February 13, 2021, 1:46 PM
GM Wesley So and GM Magnus Carlsen (Fischer Random / Nick Barton / File Photo)
Grandmaster Wesley So made short work of Azerbaijan’s Teimour Radjabov to set up a title rematch with reigning world champion Magnus Carlsen in the Opera Euro Rapid of the Meltwater Champions Chess Tour Saturday, Feb. 13.
The 27-year-old So, who took the first of two four-match semifinal matches last Friday, 2.5-1.5, needed just three games to eliminate Radjabov, 2-1, and advance to the finals against Carlsen on Sunday.
Carlsen survived an upset-conscious Maxime Vachier-Lagrave of France by winning the deciding Armageddon playoff for the anticipated thrilling showdown with So.
Wesley So stays on top with 5 others in Masters of Champions tourney | Tempo – The Nation s Fastest Growing Newspaper tempo.com.ph - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from tempo.com.ph Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.
Grandmaster Wesley So drew all his four games including one against recent tormentor and fellow United States bet Hikaru Nakamura in the fifth round to keep his grip of the lead with five others and stay in quarterfinal contention in the Airthings Masters of the Champions Chess Tour Monday.
Published December 27, 2020, 12:57 PM
GM Wesley So and GM Magnus Carlsen (Fischer Random / Nick Barton / File Photo)
Grandmaster Wesley So smashed Dutch GM Anish Giri and drew his other three games including one against world champion Magnus Carlsen to grab a piece of the lead with four others after four rounds of the Airthings Masters of the Champions Chess Tour on Sunday.
So, who topped the Skillings Open that served as the season-ushering leg of the tour last month, shared the top spot with United States teammate Hikaru Nakamura, Armenia’s Levon Aronian, Russia’s Daniil Dubov and Azerbaijan’s Teimour Radjabov with 2.5 points apiece.
How a chess grandmaster tried to outwit the computer
When artificial intelligence began beating the world’s greatest players, a chess grandmaster devised his own way to give human ingenuity an upper hand against the machine. The result, however, was not quite what he expected
Thinking that chess had lost much of its spontaneity, American grandmaster Bobby Fischer developed his own variation of the game that is still played today
On Sunday 23rd July 1972, the American grandmaster Bobby Fischer made the first move of the sixth game in the world chess championship shunting his pawn two squares up the board.