Live commentators also have the advantage of looking smart by saying something like, “Bb3 is the best move here,” knowing that the computer that told them this is more likely to be right than the world championship contenders themselves.
The sport has become more lucrative, as well, at least at the top. The winner of the match will get $1.2 million and the loser $800,000. In contrast, Fischer and Spassky played for a total of $150,000. Carlsen has also built a $100 million business, Play Magnus, that has online play and teaching.
The normally dignified sport had a brief contretemps at the time of the opening game this year. The flag displayed by Nepomniachtchi, who is also 31, read, “Chess Federation of Russia.” But the World Anti-Doping Agency stepped in and insisted that because of the two-year ban on Russia for state-sanctioned athletic doping, the word “Russia” could not appear. The flag was changed to read “CFR” instead.
The initial 14 games of this match are played at the stately pace associated with chess: Players get two hours for the first 40 moves. The preponderance of draws makes it quite possible the match will end with 14 of them. Carlsen has been critical of the long format, urging quicker games, while Nepomniachtchi was more supportive of it.
Asked about the format on Tuesday, Carlsen said, “There’s a saying that if you don’t have anything nice to say you shouldn’t say anything at all, so I’m going to invoke that particular saying right here.”
Should each player wind up with an equal number of wins — or if all 14 games end in a draw — the match will proceed to faster games, which are much more likely to end with someone winning.
First, they will play four games of 25 minutes each. If still tied, they will move on to five-minute games.