Pragg beats Magnus.. TWICE!!

By GilaChess - June 06, 2026




This is rare that I post any featured games on this blog but here goes...


Praggnanandhaa vs Carlsen — Norway Chess 2026: Two Games That Made History

Round 3 — May 27, 2026 (Pragg with White)

Praggnanandhaa came out swinging with a rare 6.h4 in the Sicilian Najdorf — only the 13th most popular sixth move in that position. The surprise worked immediately: Carlsen spent 28 minutes on move 8 alone, visibly unsettled. Pragg built a controlled advantage through the opening and middlegame, but the game turned into a rollercoaster. Carlsen, as only he can, fought his way back from a losing position and actually seized the advantage around moves 35–36 with the powerful 35...Ne5 and 36...g5, putting Pragg on the ropes.

Then came Norway Chess's notorious time pressure. With no increment until move 41, Carlsen's clock ran dangerously low. On move 39 he played the speculative 39...Nxd6, giving up his rook. The critical error came on move 44 — instead of pushing 44...g2 to promote his passed pawn, he played the passive 44...Kg7. Pragg pounced instantly with 45.c7, and after 46.Rb8 Carlsen resigned. A game he should have won ended in defeat. Pragg's own assessment was characteristically humble:

"In these time scrambles it's basically like tossing a coin."


Round 8 — June 2, 2026 (Pragg with Black)

By Round 8, Carlsen was already in crisis — three classical losses and sitting in fifth place. Pragg arrived with a secret weapon: a French Defense with 5...Nh6, preparation originally developed for the FIDE Candidates Tournament and held in reserve specifically for this moment. It hit Carlsen like a truck. He burned through 30 minutes by move 7 and nearly half his two-hour clock by move 10, while Pragg played quickly and confidently.

Despite the catastrophic time deficit, Carlsen defended superbly and reached what should have been a drawable endgame. Then, with just 14 seconds on his clock, he played 48.Kf4 — stepping his king directly into a forced checkmate net — when 48.Ke2 held the draw. Pragg, with 44 seconds remaining, found the winning line immediately: 48...Qd4+ 49.Kf3 Qd3+ 50.Kf2 Qd2+, and Carlsen resigned. He later admitted:

"It was completely, incredibly talentless that, once I actually saved myself, I just forgot that he could move the bishop that had been pinned for ages."


Why These Two Games Matter

A 19-year historical milestone. Pragg became the first player since Viswanathan Anand at Linares 2007 to beat Carlsen twice in the same classical tournament. That year, Carlsen was 16 years old. The fact that it took nearly two decades for anyone to repeat the feat says everything about Carlsen's dominance — and about what Pragg has become.

The preparation story. Both wins weren't accidents. Round 3's 6.h4 was a deep opening novelty designed to take Carlsen out of his comfort zone. Round 8's French Defense was preparation held back from an entire previous tournament, deployed at precisely the right moment. This is elite-level chess strategy — winning not just at the board, but in the preparation room.

Time pressure as a weapon. Norway Chess's no-increment time control (120 minutes, increment only after move 40) is brutal, and Pragg weaponized it in both games — not by playing fast, but by arriving at the board better prepared, forcing Carlsen to spend time he didn't have. In both games, Carlsen's clock became his worst enemy.

The psychological dimension. Carlsen is, arguably, the greatest player in chess history. His rating of 2840 is unprecedented. Yet Pragg has now beaten him three times in classical chess — and twice in the same event. After the Round 8 win, Pragg said: "It's more important for the tournament that I get this win than thinking that it's Magnus." That sentence alone captures how the new generation has rewired its relationship with the Carlsen aura.

Pragg went on to win the tournament. These two wins weren't just personal milestones — they were the backbone of Pragg's run to become Norway Chess 2026 champion, making him the first Indian player to win the prestigious event. The double over Carlsen gave him the momentum and points to overtake Wesley So in the final rounds.

In short, these two games mark a generational statement: that the era of Carlsen being psychologically untouchable is over, and that Praggnanandhaa — at just 20 years old — is the one making that point loudest.


In this game Pragg is black

in this game Pragg won as White




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