Indian teenager Gukesh Dommaraju survived a scare before escaping with an improbably stress-free draw on Saturday in the fifth game of his world championship match with Ding Liren that left the $2.5m showdown deadlocked at 2½-2½.
After Ding opted for another French Defense (1 e4 e6), which he’d played in Monday’s surprise Game 1 win, Gukesh blitzed into the drawish Exchange Variation (2 d4 d5 3 exd5 exd5). The passive opening was out of step with the challenger’s aggressive reputation, particularly while armed with the favored white pieces.
The queens came off the board early, simplifying the position by the 10th move. Both players probed one another’s defenses, with Gukesh advancing aggressively on the kingside with 17 g4, countered effectively by Ding’s precise maneuvering (17...Nf4 and 19...Bd7).
The middlegame pivoted on Gukesh’s ambitious 22 Ne5, but the follow-up 23 dxe5 was inaccurate. Ding then capitalized with 23...Nd3, establishing strong piece activity and placing his foe in an uncomfortable position. But the champion’s hasty 29…Bc6 released all tension and immediately steered the action toward an endgame featuring an equal pawn structure and active kings. The game concluded with a draw by repetition on move 40 after exactly three hours.
Although a draw with the black pieces is not a poor result, Ding’s inaccuracy while playing quickly cost him the opportunity to turn the screw on his 18-year-old opponent and make him suffer for several hours.
“The results are not ideal because I have some chances in some games to lead by some points, and it’s even,” Ding said. “Also today after some quick check I had some advantage which I didn’t realize, so there is something to improve.”
Ding entered the first defense of his world championship having gone 28 classical games without a win, a dreadful run of form that saw him drop to 23rd in the world rankings and prompted the oddsmakers to install him as roughly a 3-1 longshot in the best-of-14-games match.
But he sprang a major surprise in Monday’s first game by winning as black, dramatically ending the 304-day winless streak. Game 2 on Tuesday was a tame 23-move draw, before Gukesh struck back on Wednesday with a win in Game 3. The fourth game on Friday was another calm draw.
“Considering I was the trailing the match after the first game, it’s nice to be [level after five games],” Gukesh said. “But there are a lot more important games to come. I am just trying to play one game at a time and give my best.”
The fifth-ranked Gukesh, an 18-year-old native of Chennai, is bidding to shatter the record for youngest ever undisputed world champion held by Garry Kasparov, who was 22 when he dethroned Anatoly Karpov in their 1985 rematch in Moscow.
The competition resumes on Saturday with Ding playing as white in Game 6. Whoever reaches seven and a half points first will be declared the champion in the world title match at Resorts World Sentosa, an island resort off Singapore’s southern coast.