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Magnus Carlsen takes on Gukesh at the Grand Chess Tour (PHOTO: Lennart Ootes via Grand Chess Tour)
The final battle between world champion Gukesh and world no 1 Magnus Carlsen ended in a 14-move draw at the SuperUnited Rapid and Blitz Croatia. It was a battle that lasted barely a minute and five seconds. In their first clash at the Zagreb tournament, played in the rapid format, Gukesh had defied expectations off him and handed a defeat to the five-time world champion. Not just that, the youngest classical world champion in history had risen to the top of the leaderboard after the end of the three-day-long rapid section. But since the blitz portion of the event started in the tournament, Gukesh has experienced a string of defeats. He lost to Carlsen in their first blitz clash on Saturday.
But on Sunday, the duo played out a quick draw in round 13 of the blitz portion. It was a battle that lasted just one minute and four seconds. When both players agreed to a draw, Gukesh had 5:10 seconds on his clock, more time than he had started the game with while Carlsen had 4:45.
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Before the game, Carlsen said that he was playing in “survival mode” and he was just hustling it. The draw against the Indian teenager was his third of the day out of four games, with his only win coming against Alireza Firouzja. Carlsen also drew with Anish Giri and Fabiano Caruana.
The world champion from India, meanwhile, started the day with back-to-back defeats against Wesley So and Nodirbek Abdusattorov before defeating Jan-Krzysztof Duda, who was ahead of him in the standings.
Magnus Carlsen reacts after resigning against Gukesh in a rapid game at the SuperUnited Rapid and Blitz Croatia 2025 in Zagreb on Thursday. (PHOTO: Grand Chess Tour via Lennart Ootes)
Despite leading the tournament by a handsome margin, Carlsen had said that he was “feeling super shaky” before the Gukesh game.
“I feel super shaky. I feel like my play is not there at all so far. But there results are working out, so that’s good! Now I’m kinda in survival mode. Obviously, the results are working out great in the other games for me. I really cannot get going so far. I’m managing to hustle it,” Carlsen told Take Take Take.
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INTERACTIVE: How Magnus Carlsen and Gukesh played out a 14-move draw
READ MORE | Magnus Carlsen reacts to Gukesh defeat: ‘Poor from me, got soundly punished… but all credit to Gukesh’
The battle started with the world champion from India turning up first to the table and Carlsen being the last player from the 10-player field to arrive at the boards. Gukesh had 16.5 points at this stage while Carlsen was leading the event with 19.5 points.
Gukesh, playing with white pieces, opted for a Ruy Lopez. He pushed his pawn to e4 and Carlsen, opting for his traditional tactics before the game, chose to spent 13 seconds adjusting his pieces, before responding. The game saw an Open Berlin Defense making an appearance. But soon, after a quick exchange of minor pieces, Carlsen’s and Gukesh’s queens did a little sideways shuffle to settle for a draw by threefold repetition.