Norwegian 22-year-old clinches chess world title
Magnus Carlsen crowned world champion after defeating incumbent Viswanathan Anand of India

The world of chess has a new king, and it’s a 22-year-old who is as much at home posing for fashion shoots as he is pushing pawns.
Magnus Carlsen of Norway won the Chess World Championship on Friday, becoming the first Western player since Bobby Fischer to hold the title.
Carlsen, a former child prodigy who has already been on a list of the world’s sexiest men and has moonlighted as a model, defeated defending champion Viswanathan Anand of India in a title match that was the game’s most highly-anticipated in decades.
A draw in Game 10 gave Carlsen the necessary six-and-a-half points to clinch the win, having won three of the previous games with no losses.
The victory confirmed the lofty expectations that have been placed on Carlsen since he became a grandmaster at the age of 13 – the second youngest in history at the time.
What remains to be seen is whether the Norwegian – who has been referred to as the “Justin Bieber of chess” – can fulfil an even bigger hope among fans: to bring the cerebral game back into the mainstream.