Magnus Carlsen stunned by 17-year-old super talent Abdusattorov Nodirbek | World Rapid chess 2021

preview_player
Показать описание
After many twists and turns on day three of the World Rapid Chess Championship, 17-year-old Uzbek GM Nodirbek Abdusattorov won the event with 9.5/13 in the Swiss tournament, after winning the second tiebreak blitz game against GM Ian Nepomniachtchi. Notably defeating GM Magnus Carlsen in the first round of the day, at 17-years-old, he is the youngest world rapid champion to date. Nepomniachtchi finished in second and Carlsen finished in third, despite each having 9.5 points as well, based on tiebreak scores. Despite being the fourth player with 9.5 points, GM Fabiano Caruana did not finish in the top three due to the tiebreak system in this event.

And the most important game of thi tournament is waiting for you here.

---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------

You can subscribe to our channels you like to see more content from those channels. You can find a Subscribe button under any YouTube video or on a channel's page. Once you subscribe to a channel, any new videos it publishes will show up in your Subscriptions feed.

Thank you,
Рекомендации по теме
Комментарии
Автор

Is not the first time this kid has given Magnus so much trouble, this time he won instead of a draw. Amazing talent

theAdilaryan
Автор

at 18:19 just after magnus separates king from pawn, why not white king takes black pawn? am I missing something?

mavmoolson
Автор

Why did he resign at that point? Was there an inevitable check mate coming or did he just give up?

simonanderson
Автор

I'm not good at chess and don't know a lot, but how it Magnus move legal at 17:59 when king moves into the attack site of Pond

benmack
Автор

After talking a lot (which is fine, analysis is what it's about) you suddenly make multiple moves within a second, which is hard to follow. There's no need for that sort of rush ... space the moves out a little--no faster than it would take to make them during play--to let viewers absorb them.

JimBalter