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by The_Colonel 540 days ago
> Having said that, the guy got himself into favorable positions multiple times and then was happy to trade-off pieces/repeat moves to get the draw.

According to the engine, he was in a slightly advantageous position, but from the post-game interviews it's clear he didn't realize his advantage.

Often it's also an advantage which only an engine can exploit (by a series of difficult to find engine moves).

2 comments

This is so important, and people who watch games with engine eval or with commentators who use it don't realise it at all. Often in a chess game you're looking at a position and going "am I even ahead here?"...and when I do an analysis of my own games I'll often find that my own sense of the position doesn't at all agree with an engine evaluation. Clearly the situation is going to be much harder at the elite level where the edges are smaller and doubly so in this particular world championship where the positions were generally extremely complex and double-edged.
But I think that just comes back to his mental game/lack of match prep. The Ding of 5 years ago that pushed even Magnus Carlsen wouldn't have been out of prep 5-8 moves into every game and could've afforded himself more time in the mid-game to find the advantage.

It's basically what allowed Gukesh to do exactly that throughout the match. His opening prep was impressive and because he allowed himself time to think outside of the opening he at least tried to push on most games.