City
Epaper

Carlsen aggressively bangs table, sends chess pieces falling after loss to Gukesh during Norway Chess competition

By ANI | Updated: June 2, 2025 10:53 IST

Stavanger [Norway], June 2 : After the world champion chess star D Gukesh's win during round six of the ...

Open in App

Stavanger [Norway], June 2 : After the world champion chess star D Gukesh's win during round six of the ongoing Norway Chess tournament, the former world number one Magnus Carlsen expressed his frustration with the loss by banging the table aggressively just after the game was concluded.

Gukesh pulled off a stunning victory against the former world number one in Round 6 of the ongoing Norway Chess 2025 tournament, turning the game around from a losing position on Sunday. This marked Gukesh's first-ever classical win over the Norwegian grandmaster. The 19-year-old also became the second Indian player to beat Carlsen in the history of the competition after Rameshbabu Praggnanandhaa.

In the video now posted on the official X handle of Norway Chess, just after the win was sealed by Gukesh, Carlsen let out his emotions by banging the table, sending some pieces on falling on the board and down on the floor too. While he did not forget to shake Gukesh's hand and give him a pat on his back as the Indian star tried collecting himself emotionally after a stunning win, Carlsen's frustration with his own performance was visible.

https://x.com/NorwayChess/status/1929257237190443042

Carlsen had an upper hand over Gukesh for most of the time in the match, but in the end, he couldn't control his nerves, and the teenager turned the tables around and went on to win the match. With this win, D Gukesh jumped to third spot in the Norway Chess 2025 points table with 8.5 points, and now he is just one point behind Carlsen and American Fabiano Caruana.

Earlier on May 27, the marquee clash of Round One at Norway Chess 2025 lived up to expectations as Carlsen launched a classic king hunt to defeat reigning World Champion D Gukesh in a thrilling encounter. This was their first classical match since Gukesh won the world title, and it also marked Carlsen's return to individual classical chess after nearly a year.

Reacting to the upset victory, Gukesh's coach, Grandmaster Vishnu Prasanna, praised the teenager's resilience and fighting spirit.

"We have to give a lot of credit to Gukesh for his stubbornness and for his resourcefulness because I think he was aware that he was dead lost for so long, yet he kept kicking, he kept kicking, and the time went lower, the more chances he had to actually do something with the position. I do not think his intention was to win that, but I am sure he is happy," Vishnu Prasanna said.

Disclaimer: This post has been auto-published from an agency feed without any modifications to the text and has not been reviewed by an editor

Open in App

Related Stories

International"Strike like lightning": Iran's Supreme Leader Mojtaba Khamenei hails Army on Farvardin 29

InternationalOne killed, another injured in Melbourne vehicle incident

EntertainmentSurbhi Jyoti flaunts her baby bump in a flowy printed dress

Aurangabad250 Tonnes of mangoes to be relished in the city today

InternationalSouth Korean President's India visit to mark new phase in bilateral ties

Other Sports Realted Stories

Other SportsIPL 2026: Pat Cummins reaches Hyderabad ahead of SRH's clash with CSK

Other SportsIPL 2026: ‘Pay them money, ask them not to return’ -- Kris Srikkanth’s brutal verdict on Chahar, Shardul’s performances

Other SportsIPL 2026: Delhi Capitals keep Royal Challengers Bengaluru to 175/8 despite Salt’s explosive 63

Other SportsUTT Season 7: Holders U Mumba TT retain title-winning coaching duo, national coach Sourav Chakraborty set for debut

Other Sports90% plus tracks in India are substandard: AFI spokesperson Adille Sumariwalla