Culture First Chinese world chess champion crowned - Magnus was absent

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First Chinese world chess champion crowned​

A rollercoaster match ended with Ding Liren winning the title


Chinese grandmaster Ding Liren prevailed over Russia’s Ian Nepomniachtchi on Sunday in a tiebreak to win what has been hailed as perhaps the most exciting world chess championship match in a generation.
With the score deadlocked at a 7-7 tie after 14 grueling classical games – the final of which on Saturday clocked in at six and a half hours – the action shifted to a series of four shorter games to break the tie. Had a winner still not emerged, a series of two ‘blitz’ games would have ensued.
The first three games ended in a draw, with neither player able to muster significant winning chances. In game four, however, Ding managed to seize the initiative with the black pieces. But Nepomniachtchi fought back and double-edged play followed, with the Russian eschewing an opportunity to steer the game toward a clear draw and thus a final ‘blitz’ tiebreak.
When nothing subsequently materialized for Nepomniachtchi, he appeared to choose a perpetual check line, a technique whereby a player repeats a series of checks on the opponent’s king but without being able to make any progress.
With less than two minutes on his clock and a world title on the line, Ding declined the repetition and played an unexpected and brave move that pinned his own rook to his king – but in doing so deprived his opponent of further checks. With two passed pawns as compensation for a less safe king, Ding played with razor-sharp precision and managed to push his pawns while denying Nepomniachtchi counterplay.
After Ding successfully parried one final shot of desperation from Nepomniachtchi, the Russian extended his hand in resignation. A stunned Ding, overcome with emotion, was unable to stand up from the board.

Ding’s journey to becoming China’s first-ever world chess champion and the first new title holder since 2013 was a most improbable one. He only qualified for the Candidates Tournament, the round-robin that determines who takes on the defending champion, after Russian grandmaster Sergey Karjakin was removed. However, because pandemic restrictions in China had left him short of the required number of rated games, he was forced to embark on a punishing schedule of tournaments hastily arranged by the Chinese Chess Federation.
In the Candidates Tournament, meanwhile, Ding finished second – to Nepomniachtchi – and was only catapulted into the championship match when five-time world champion Magnus Carlsen opted not to defend his title.
The absence of Carlsen, who has dominated professional chess for the last decade, was initially seen as diminishing the stature of the match. However, as Ding and Nepomniachtchi traded blow for blow and thrilled viewers with tense and topsy-turvy games, the encounter was increasingly seen as what former world champion Viswanathan Anand called “a match for the ages.”
Nepomniachtchi, who was making his second straight appearance in the world title match after squaring off with Carlsen in Dubai in 2021, saw his bid to join a long list of Soviet and Russian world champions fall agonizingly short. Ding will pocket €1.2 million (more than $1.3 million) for prevailing in the match, while Nepomniachtchi, as runner-up, will take home €800,000.

 
do we know why carlsen refused to play?

"I feel I don’t have a lot to gain, I don’t particularly like [the championship matches], and although I’m sure a match would be interesting for historical reasons and all of that, I don’t have any inclination to play and I will simply not play the match"

his comments in 2022 about this.
 
This is a landmark, as his people are used to playing Chinese Chess in which you're given one king (they refer to it as an "emperor") and 23 pawns (referred to as "peasants", overpopulated into the third row). The rules are quite complex, as your pawns often are sometimes too malnourished to move (decided by D20 roll).

They view their version as culturally superior, so it's no small achievement for Ding Dong to have won such a title in traditional chess.
 
"I feel I don’t have a lot to gain, I don’t particularly like [the championship matches], and although I’m sure a match would be interesting for historical reasons and all of that, I don’t have any inclination to play and I will simply not play the match"

his comments in 2022 about this.

I think he's tired of buck breaking everyone sat in front of him.

IIRC, he said that unless Firouzja (2785, peak 2804 at just 18 years old) was the challenger, he'd drop the title.
sounds arrogant and retarded
he will come to regret this decision
 
This is a landmark, as his people are used to playing Chinese Chess in which you're given one king (they refer to it as an "emperor") and 23 pawns (referred to as "peasants", overpopulated into the third row). The rules are quite complex, as your pawns often are sometimes too malnourished to move (decided by D20 roll).

They view their version as culturally superior, so it's no small achievement for Ding Dong to have won such a title in traditional chess.
I thought chinese chess was the one where you had cannons, that could only hit unit if they were behind another one.


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There was an earlier form of chess where you rolled a dice to see what unit you could move.
1= pawn
2=knight
3 = bishop
4= rook
5 = king or wazir
6 = any one unit

One bad roll and you couldn't move your king away from a check... but they might not get the right one to capitalize on it.

It wasn't until the spanish revamped chess in the honor of isabelle that they changed the vizier/wazir into a queen.
 
I thought chinese chess was the one where you had cannons, that could only hit unit if they were behind another one.
This is the one. Xiangqi.

My personal favorite is Shogi, because of the drops and the names of the pieces. Gold General, Silver General, Incense Chariot, Flying Chariot, Dragon Horse, Dragon King.
 
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