Magnus Carlsen
Ben Mezrich offers fresh details on the Magnus Carlsen and Hans Niemann dispute in his new book Checkmate. The work draws on interviews with those involved in the scandal that rocked modern chess. An ebook version appeared in April with the hardcover set for release in June.
Reportado por IA
Magnus Carlsen claimed the 2026 TePe Sigeman Chess title in Malmo after a classical victory over Yagiz Kaan Erdogmus and a 2-1 blitz tiebreak win against Arjun Erigaisi.
Grandmasters Magnus Carlsen, Vincent Keymer, and Nodirbek Abdusattorov top the field for the Grenke Freestyle Chess Open, set for April 2-6 in Karlsruhe, Germany. The event, part of the Grenke Chess Festival, features 14 players rated over 2700 and a €215,000 prize fund. Carlsen returns as defending champion after his perfect 9/9 score last year.
Reportado por IA
Chess legends Magnus Carlsen and Viswanathan Anand have shared their predictions for the upcoming FIDE Candidates Tournament 2026. They highlighted players like Ding Liren and Alireza Firouzja as strong contenders. The event will determine the challenger for the World Chess Championship.
Arjun leads Carlsen and Erdogmus before final round
terça-feira, 05 de maio de 2026, 13:24hArjun Erigaisi joins Erdogmus in TePe Sigeman lead after round 5
sábado, 25 de abril de 2026, 02:50hCarlsen advances to grand final after beating Lazavik and Duda
terça-feira, 07 de abril de 2026, 21:11hCarlsen and Niemann address chess scandal in Netflix documentary
domingo, 05 de abril de 2026, 17:21hKeymer emerges as sole leader at Grenke Chess Freestyle Open
sábado, 14 de março de 2026, 02:18hNetflix trailer for Carlsen-Niemann documentary draws reactions
quarta-feira, 11 de março de 2026, 17:36hGrenke Chess Festival 2026 surpasses registration records
quarta-feira, 11 de março de 2026, 08:42hNetflix drops trailer for 'Untold: Chess Mates' ahead of April premiere
quarta-feira, 04 de março de 2026, 14:07hMagnus Carlsen returns to classical chess at Sigeman tournament
segunda-feira, 02 de março de 2026, 14:27hMagnus Carlsen debunks deep calculation myth: sees only 2-3 moves ahead