The seventh game of the chess world championship took an unexpectedly dramatic turn when China’s Ding Liren froze under time pressure and lost to Russian Ian Nepomniachtchi from a potentially winning position on Tuesday.
Ding had the initiative with the black pieces but found himself with less than three minutes to make nine moves and reach move 40 when 60 minutes are added to the players’ clocks.
Instead of playing safe to reach the 40th move, Ding waited until he had 45 seconds left to make his move – a blunder that handed Nepomniachtchi a decisive advantage and Ding resigned with 17 seconds left and no chance of turning things around. “In the end I just messed things up,” Ding told a news conference at the halfway point of the best-of-14 match after the fifth decisive (non-draw) game of the event with Nepomniachtchi leading 4-3.
At the world championship players have two hours each to play the first 40 moves, with 60 minutes being added to reach move 60, before 15 minutes are added with a 30-second increment per move being then granted.