The last American to win the world chess championship was a Brooklyn-bred grandmaster who stunned the world champion and took his title.
The next one may be, too.
Beginning this week, Fabiano Caruana, a 26-year-old grandmaster who has spent the last two decades fighting his way up the ranks to reach No. 2 in the world, is expected to lay serious claim to a title that has not been held by an American since Bobby Fischer won it from Boris Spassky in 1972.
Caruana will challenge the world’s best player, Magnus Carlsen of Norway, at the World Chess Championships in London. NBC’s Lucy Kafanov reports on the World Chess Championships for the TODAY Show:
The United States has waited 46 years to crown a world chess champion, but the wait goes on following American Fabiano Caruana's loss Wednesday in London to Norway's reigning champion Magnus Carlsen after a three-week, nail-biting battle. NBC's Lucy Kafanov previews the final game of the World Chess Championships for the TODAY Show, as America searches for its next Bobby Fischer.