Carlsen shaky in game 5 draw

Defending champion Magnus Carlsen of Norway was on the back foot for the first time in the 2016 World Chess Championship in New York against Sergey Karjakin. Playing white in the fifth game, Carlsen made bad move and then forgot to write down one of the moves.

By :  migrator
Update: 2016-11-18 15:18 GMT
Magnus Carlsen

Chennai

Viswanathan Anand and Garry Kasparov had started their New York PCA World championship with eight consecutive draws; Anatoly Karpov and Viktor Korchnoi started with seven draws in their world title match in 1978; Viswanathan Anand and Boris Gelfand drew their first six in 2012. The fifth draw between Magnus Carlsen and Sergey Karjakin is not a world championship record yet, but two games away.

"Yeah, sure, I was lucky," said Carlsen at the start of the post-match press conference. "I screwed up and I was lucky not to lose." How exactly he had "screwed up" would only be revealed much later.

Even in the body language, Carlsen was different. H had been cheerful and energetic after each of the first four games, but after the fifth the world champion seemed like a different person. He was annoyed, evasive and, despite the rest day, looked tired.

Karjakin was as cheerful as always. "At least I'm happy that today I finally got a good position," he said.

For the record, Carlsen chose a third opening in as many games with white, the Italian this time. The players shook hands after 51 moves in a rook and opposite-coloured bishop ending.

About his play so far, Karjakin said: "I make mistakes almost in every game, but it's because the games are interesting and the pressure is high. I wouldn't say it's normal but it happens."

Carlsen: "I am also not happy about the mistakes I am making," said Carlsen. "But I agree that the games have serious content, so that at least I am happy about."

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