
India’s D Gukesh just made chess history. In Round 6 of Norway Chess 2025, the 19-year-old stunned former world number one Magnus Carlsen, grabbing his first-ever classical win against the Norwegian legend. Even more dramatic than the win? Carlsen’s reaction—he slammed the table in frustration, sending chess pieces flying.
But Gukesh? Cool as ever.

And Gukesh just showed he’s got both the moves and the mindset.
“I’ve banged tables too,” says Gukesh
Speaking after the game, Gukesh told Chess.com,
“Not the way I wanted it to be, but okay, I will take it… I have also banged a lot of tables in my career.”
Respectful, honest, and humble. In one line, Gukesh showed both maturity and empathy—while reminding us that even champions throw tantrums.
From lost to legend
Here’s the kicker: Carlsen was dominating most of the game. But as the pressure rose and the clock ticked down, Gukesh didn’t give up. His coach Vishnu Prasanna put it best:
“He was dead lost for so long, yet he kept kicking. The lower the time, the more chances he had.”
It wasn’t luck. It was grit.
The numbers: standings shake-up
With this win, D Gukesh moved to third in the standings with 8.5 points—just behind Carlsen and Fabiano Caruana. This victory puts him right in the title race at Norway Chess 2025.
And here’s a fun fact: Gukesh is now only the second Indian ever to beat Carlsen in this tournament, after Praggnanandhaa.
That moment when World Champion @DGukesh won his game against World no.1 Magnus Carlsen!
Video: @adityasurroy21/ ChessBase India#chess #chessbaseindia #norwaychess #gukesh pic.twitter.com/9YQhHYlia0
— ChessBase India (@ChessbaseIndia) June 1, 2025
Carlsen’s frustration spills over
After the match ended, Carlsen did shake hands and give Gukesh a pat. But before that, cameras caught him banging the table hard, knocking pieces onto the floor. That moment, now viral on the official Norway Chess X handle, shows the raw pressure top players face—even legends crack.
Still, the kid handled it better.
A shift in chess’s balance of power?
Carlsen may still be a giant. But Gukesh is the future—and he’s not waiting around.
In May, Carlsen beat Gukesh in Round 1 using a classic “king hunt.” But this time, the teenager struck back. Their rivalry now feels real—and it’s personal.
When a 19-year-old beats a legend and still says, “Not the way I wanted it,” that’s not luck talking. That’s the mindset of a world champion.
And if Carlsen’s table slam was a sign of the times, here’s the message:
India’s new chess generation isn’t just here to play. They’re here to win.
Also Read Carlsen’s Honest Admission: ‘India’s Chess Surge is Making Me Work Harder’