The second game of Classical Chess at the Federation Internationale des Echecs (FIDE) World Cup final between Indian grandmaster R Praggnanandhaa and Norway's world number one Magnus Carlsen ended in a draw on Wednesday, with the winner of the tournament set to be decided on Thursday. The co
The second game of Classical Chess at the Federation Internationale des Echecs (FIDE) World Cup final between Indian grandmaster R Praggnanandhaa and Norway's world number one Magnus Carlsen ended in a draw on Wednesday, with the winner of the tournament set to be decided on Thursday. The co
Tsitsipas had to hold his nerve as Jarry dominated the first half of the two-hour, 58-minute match, but a strong second-set tie-break performance proved crucial before the Greek dominated the decider.
Tiafoe, who defeated Wu Yibing on Wednesday to start his campaign, maintained his excellent play to reach the third round for the fifth consecutive major tournament. The American won the final two sets after fending off four set points in a lengthy opening tie-break.
After two hours and eighteen minutes, the 27-year-old defeated Lloyd Harris in a nail-biting three-set match 4-6, 6-3, 7-6(9). Eubanks saved two additional match points in the tie-break of the final set after digging out of a 0/40 deficit while serving at 4-5 in the tiebreaker.
Mukund Sasikumar dominated the World No. 170 Andrew Paulson during his confident 6-1, 6-4 win. India No. 1 Prajnesh Gunneswaran, on the other hand, faced some tough challenges from Zimbabwean Benjamin Lock in the first set, which went into a tie-breaker but managed to keep things under contr
The tie-breaker was applied after the teams were locked 2-2 at the end of regulation time. In the Final, the Delhi side will clash against Classic Football Academy
Medvedev found himself in serious trouble late in the 81-minute opening set after saving six set points at 4-5 despite having led by 40/0 earlier. Medvedev had to rally in his subsequent service game, coming back from 0/40 to demand a tie-break.
After a sluggish start to the Paris evening session, Paul was down a set and a break before breaking Nadal at love to even the match at 2-2. From that point on, the American took control and used his aggressive baseline game to generate three more break chances before winning the set in the