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Updated May 31, 2026 · 13:45
Sports India News Updated May 31, 2026

Gukesh Defeats Praggnanandhaa; Divya Deshmukh Leads Norway Chess 2026

World Champion D Gukesh defeated Praggnanandhaa Rameshbabu in a tense all-Indian clash at Norway Chess 2026. Wesley So secured a crucial victory over World No. 1 Magnus Carlsen. Alireza Firouzja extended his lead after drawing with Vincent Keymer and winning the Armageddon. Divya Deshmukh took sole lead in the women's section after a classical win over Zhu Jiner.

Gukesh downs Praggnanandhaa as Divya Deshmukh takes sole lead at Norway Chess 2026

Oslo, May 31

World Champion D Gukesh defeated Praggnanandhaa Rameshbabu in a tense all-Indian clash in Round 5 of Norway Chess 2026.

Praggnanandhaa controlled the game for much of the contest and appeared to hold the initiative, but Gukesh capitalised on a critical opportunity in the later stages.

As the pressure mounted and the clock became a factor, Praggnanandhaa was unable to maintain his advantage, allowing the reigning World Champion to turn the tables and convert his edge into a hard-fought victory. Wesley So secured a crucial victory over World No. 1 Magnus Carlsen in a hard-fought encounter. The game evolved into a prolonged strategic battle, with So patiently outmanoeuvring his opponent to gain a decisive edge in the endgame.

Despite Carlsen's trademark resilience and determined defence, the American grandmaster remained in control, converting his advantage with precision to claim a valuable classical win.

The remaining classical game between tournament leader Alireza Firouzja and Vincent Keymer ended in a hard-fought draw. Firouzja then emerged victorious in the Armageddon decider, securing the extra point and further consolidating his lead at the top of the standings.

Norway Chess Women produced another thrilling round in Oslo, featuring one decisive classical result and two matches that required Armageddon tiebreaks. The day's only classical victory was secured by Indian star Divya Deshmukh, who overcame Zhu Jiner in a marathon endgame battle.

The contest remained finely balanced for much of the evening, but Divya capitalised on her chance during the time scramble, demonstrating impressive composure and precision to convert her advantage and claim a vital win.

Bibisara Assaubayeva and Anna Muzychuk battled to a hard-fought draw in their classical game. Muzychuk held the upper hand for much of the middlegame and applied sustained pressure, but Assaubayeva defended resiliently to hold the balance and force a draw.

The Ukrainian grandmaster, however, bounced back in the Armageddon tiebreak, converting her chances to secure the valuable extra point.

Meanwhile, reigning Women's World Champion Ju Wenjun and Humpy Koneru also ended in a draw after a tense strategic battle.

Deshmukh's classical victory moves her into sole first place in the standings heading into the second half of the tournament.

— ANI

Reader Comments

Divya L

Divya Deshmukh is an absolute star! Taking sole lead in a such a strong field – we need more coverage of women's chess in India. She's making us all proud. 👏

Suresh O

Sad for Pragg but Gukesh was clinical. But I wish the article gave more detail on how Pragg lost – it says he "couldn't maintain advantage" but what exactly happened? Need better chess journalism. 🤔

Rohit P

Amazing to see two Indians in top form at Norway Chess! Gukesh vs Pragg is becoming a classic rivalry. And Divya Deshmukh leading the women's section – what a time for Indian chess! 🇮🇳♟️

Varun X

Wesley So beating Magnus is huge! And Deshmukh's endgame play against Zhu Jiner was simply world-class. She's been so consistent lately. Hope our chess federation supports her more. 🙏

Isha Y

While I'm thrilled for Gukesh and Divya, can we talk about how Firouzja keeps winning Armageddons? He's turning into a tiebreak specialist! But yes, Indian chess is absolutely dominating right now. 😍♟️

K Karthik V Imagine telling We welcome thoughtful discussions from our readers. Please keep comments respectful and on-topic.

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