Carlsen, Magnus vs Caruana, Fabiano, Clutch-ch June
- 1.
- 2.
- 3.
- 4.
- 5.
- 6.
- 7.
- 8.
- 9.
- 10.
- 11.
- 12.
- 13.
- 14.
- 15.
- 16.
- 17.
- 18.
- 19.
- 20.
- 21.
- 22.
- 23.
- 24.
- 25.
- 26.
- 27.
- 28.
- 29.
- 30.
- 31.
- 32.
- 33.
- 34.
- 35.
- 36.
- 37.
- 38.
- 39.
- 40.
- 41.
- 42.
- 43.
- 44.
- 45.
- 46.
- 47.
- 48.
- 49.
- 50.
- 51.
- 52.
- 53.
- 54.
- 55.
- 56.
- 57.
- 58.
- 59.
- 60.
- 61.
- 62.
- 63.
The Carlsen-Caruana game at the Clutch Championship June 2020 (Round 3.8) was a draw. The Clutch Championship was an online tournament series held during the pandemic period when in-person elite chess was suspended. The Clutch series used 5+2 blitz time control with “clutch” games (weighted double for the last games of each match) — a novel format trying to make the final games maximally consequential.
The Carlsen-Caruana matchup was the headline pairing of the June 2020 event. They played a four-game day match (rounds 3.5 through 3.8 in our records), with this final game ending in a draw. The opening was a Closed Catalan, a Carlsen specialty that he had used heavily through the 2019-2020 period.
The pandemic era forced elite chess online for nearly two years. Events like the Clutch Championship, the Magnus Carlsen Invitational, the Chessable Masters Final, and various online Grand Prix series replaced traditional in-person elite chess. The pandemic period also accelerated the growth of online chess platforms — chess24, lichess, chess.com — into major commercial and competitive infrastructures.
Carlsen, who had been positioning himself for over-the-board domination for years, transitioned smoothly into online play and won most of the elite online events of 2020-2021. Caruana, more reliant on long classical preparation, was less successful in the rapid online format but remained competitive in any event where preparation could be applied effectively.