Newly-crowned double World Chess champion Magnus Carlsen says he’s unlikely to defend his title unless he faces French-Iranian prodigy Alireza Firouzja.

“For those who expect me to play the World Championship next time, the chance that they will be disappointed is very great,” the Norwegian said in a podcast interview recorded in Dubai.

The 31-year-old crushed Russian Ian Nepomniachtchi 7.5-3.5 in his fifth straight victorious title match.

“It’s been clear to me for most of the year that this World Championship should be the last. It doesn’t mean as much anymore as it once did,” Carlsen said.

“I haven’t felt that the positive outweighs the negative.”

He said that only Firouzja excites him as a possible challenger.

The 18-year-old won an 11-round 108-payer tournament in Riga in November that decided the eight qualifiers for a candidates competition to who will play off for the right to face Carlsen next year.

Firouzja overtook American Fabiano Caruana as the second-ranked player in the world.

“What happened during... Riga, where Alireza Firouzja won and qualified for the Candidates Tournament... made it realistic that I can meet him next time,” Carlsen said.

“It can be something that motivates me properly. It already helped me with the motivation for the World Championship match now.

“If someone other than Firouzja wins the Candidates Tournament, it is unlikely that I will play the next world championship match,” Carlsen said. “Then I think I can say that I am happy.”

A sixth succesful title match would bring Carlsen level with German Emanuel Lasker, the champion from 1894 to 1921, and Soviet Mikhal Botvinnik.

Botvinnik held the title between 1948 and 1963, although during that time he twice lost and regained the title and his two successful defences came in drawn matches.

Russians Garry Kasparov and Anatoly Karpov also have six world championship victories, but some of them were achieved when two circuits coexisted.

Carlsen ruled out stopping his chess clock.

“I will continue to play chess, it gives me a lot of joy. Already in the middle of the World Championship here in Dubai, I started to look forward to playing the World Rapid and Blitz Championship this Christmas,” he said. “But the World Championship has not been so pleasurable.”

Carlsen’s said he was also wanted to try to breach 2,900 in the chess rating system, named for Hungarian Arpad Elo. Carlsen’s world record is 2,882 and his rating rebounded during the world championship.

“I have never had it as a goal before, because I felt it was difficult,” he said.

“I have raised the rating a bit again now, to 2,865, and it is at least a goal you can set. It does not feel completely impossible,” he said. “There is no room for error. It is something to motivate oneself for.”