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Chessable Masters Final · chess24.com INT · 27 June 2020

Carlsen, Magnus vs Caruana, Fabiano, Chessable Masters Final

Carlsen, Magnus 1–0 Caruana, Fabiano
Carlsen, Magnus vs Caruana, Fabiano
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Chessable Masters Final, 27 June 2020

Game 1.22 of the 2020 Chessable Masters Final (June 27) was won by Carlsen as White. The opening was the Italian Game, a Carlsen specialty that he used heavily in his 2018-2020 white repertoire. The quiet positional system produced a small structural edge by move 20, which Carlsen converted through the kind of slow technical play that characterised his career.

The win contributed to Carlsen’s overall victory in the Chessable Masters Final match. The pandemic online tour was Carlsen’s commercial brainchild — he had been a co-founder of Chessable and Play Magnus Group, and the Masters event was held under the company’s banner.

The 2020 online event series also helped accelerate the broader “chess boom” that began during the pandemic. The Netflix series “The Queen’s Gambit” — released in October 2020 — brought millions of new viewers to online chess platforms. Combined with the existing online elite tour, the period 2020-2021 saw chess audiences expand at unprecedented rates. Carlsen’s online events were the elite-level capstone of that growth.

The Italian Game’s role as Carlsen’s primary 1.e4 weapon during this period also influenced opening theory. Carlsen’s preference for slow positional structures (Italian, Catalan, English) over sharper sicilian or Spanish lines reflected his style and elevated those openings’ status in elite preparation. Younger elite players including Gukesh Dommaraju have since adopted similar repertoires.