logo
FIDE Grand Swiss Chess: Erigaisi, Gukesh the top two seeds; Vaishali looks to defend women's title

FIDE Grand Swiss Chess: Erigaisi, Gukesh the top two seeds; Vaishali looks to defend women's title

The Hindua day ago
Indian stars Arjun Erigaisi and world champion D. Gukesh will be the top two seeds for the fourth FIDE Grand Swiss chess tournament to be held at Samarkand, Uzbekistan, from September 3 to 16, where an enhanced prize purse and tickets to the prestigious Candidates tournament will be at stake.
As per regulations, the top two in both the Open and the Women's competition will qualify for the Candidates 2026, which will decide the challenger for the World Championship.
The rule requiring players to have competed in 30-plus classical rated games between July 2024 and June 2025 has excluded high-profile names such as former world champions Magnus Carlsen and Viswanathan Anand.
Former world champion Ding Liren will not be participating in the event either.
Fabiano Caruana, who played in all three previous Grand Swiss tournaments, will be absent too, having already secured a spot in the Candidates by winning the 2024 FIDE Circuit.
R. Praggnanandhaa is seeded fourth, just behind Nodirbek Abdusattorov. Another star youngster, 22-year-old world number eight Alireza Firouzja, is ranked fifth.
The remainder of the top 10 in the Open section is made up of more seasoned Grandmasters — two-time World Championship challenger Ian Nepomniachtchi, Anish Giri, Shakhriyar Mamedyarov, Levon Aronian, and Vladimir Fedoseev.
Held every two years, the FIDE Grand Swiss is held in a classical 11-round Swiss system tournament. The 2025 edition will feature 172 players — 116 in the Open and 56 in the Women's tournament.
India's Vidit Gujrathi (Open) and R Vaishali (Women) had won the last edition of the tournament.
The Grand Swiss also features a significantly increased prize pool: USD 460,000 to USD 625,000 in the Open section and USD 140,000 to USD 230,000 in the Women's section.
Among 116 players in the Open section, 101 have qualified by rating, with the remaining spots allocated to continental representatives, six FIDE wildcards and five are nominated from the local organiser.
Bolstering the young presence at the event are Hans Niemann (22), Vincent Keymer (20), Javokhir Sindarov (19), Nihal Sarin (20) and Awonder Liang (22), who are all among the top 20.
Former candidate for the title of world champion Boris Gelfand, as well as former women's world championship challenger Aleksandra Goryachkina, will also play in the Open section after receiving wildcard invitations.
The Women's tournament
In the Women's Grand Swiss, 44 players have qualified by rating. Four additional players will join them from continental spots, four via FIDE wildcards, and another four as nominations from the local organiser.
Former world champion Tan Zhongyi is the top-rated participant in the, followed by seasoned elite world players Koneru Humpy, Anna Muzychuk and Kateryna Lagno.
Defending champion R Vaishali will be among the participants.
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Changes in my game showing results: Grandmaster R Praggnanandhaa
Changes in my game showing results: Grandmaster R Praggnanandhaa

Time of India

time3 hours ago

  • Time of India

Changes in my game showing results: Grandmaster R Praggnanandhaa

CHENNAI: After enduring a lean patch last year, Grandmaster R Praggnanandhaa has stormed back to form with three major titles this year — a run that has propelled him to India No. 1 and World No. Tired of too many ads? go ad free now 4 in the live rankings. It also firmly placed him in contention for a 2026 FIDE Candidates berth. The 19-year-old kicked off the season with a memorable win at Wijk aan Zee, followed it up with a joint-first finish at the Superbet Chess Classic in Romania, and then clinched the UzChess Cup in Tashkent, which put him in pole position on the FIDE Circuit leaderboard with 86.28 points. While the World Cup and Grand Swiss later this year will be decisive, for now, the Chennai youngster is well and truly in the driver's seat. 'This year has been good for me so far and I hope it continues. We made some changes in my game and it's showing results. Last year, things didn't go my way. Ramesh sir and I worked and tried to find things to change…Those were the difficult things. Now there are a lot of tournaments coming up…Candidates, Grand Swiss, I'm trying to focus on all of them and take one at a time,' Pragg said on the sidelines of the 'Chola Chess' academy launch here on Wednesday. When asked if he feels on track for the Candidates seat, Pragg said: 'I'm giving my best and we will see…There are a lot more important tournaments lined up. In the FIDE Circuit, anyone can come up and catch me. For me personally, I will take each tournament separately and I want to give my best for every tournament. Let's see how it goes.' Anand hopeful that Pragg will qualify for Candidates Pragg had qualified for the Candidates last year but finished fifth in the prestigious tournament. Five-time world champion , who has closely tracked Pragg's rise, believes the teenager has got 'extra motivation' to perform better. Tired of too many ads? go ad free now 'He's (Pragg) having a sensational year overall. I think for him, missing out (on winning) the Candidates last year is a reaction this year. He's got that extra motivation. As he himself noted, the most important thing is not to be leading the FIDE Circuit now…It's to be leading when it ends. Hopefully that'll happen. Otherwise, he's still got chances through the Swiss or the World Cup. But his biggest lead is in the FIDE Circuit. And good luck to him. I'm really hopeful he will qualify for the Candidates, but I don't want to jinx anything,' said the 55-year-old. 'Gukesh showing signs of progress' Meanwhile, Gukesh has had an uneven run after being crowned the youngest world champion. And in recent weeks, the Chennai boy had to deal with some jibes from World No. 1 Magnus Carlsen. 'I think he's (Gukesh) showing signs of progress and after all, he's playing all the best players in the world now, constantly. As for the jibes, they come with the territory. You cannot expect to be a world champion and say people will just be nice to me. You have to face that and I don't see anything to be concerned about his game,' said Anand. I'm enjoying chess now: Anand Anand himself finished runner-up at the recent Leon Masters, showing he still has a move or two left. 'More than others, I take it one step at a time. I might play a tournament and not play for some time. But I'm enjoying the stage that I am in…where I'm not playing full-time, but I'm still able to come back and enjoy a bit of chess. I probably won't do it (stop playing) in secret.'

Vantika Agrawal beats former women's world champion Anna Ushenina to take 1-0 lead at FIDE Women's World Cup
Vantika Agrawal beats former women's world champion Anna Ushenina to take 1-0 lead at FIDE Women's World Cup

Indian Express

time3 hours ago

  • Indian Express

Vantika Agrawal beats former women's world champion Anna Ushenina to take 1-0 lead at FIDE Women's World Cup

Vantika Agrawal, who is currently an International Master with a rating of 2377, handed former women's world champion Anna Ushenina (rating of 2413) a defeat with the white pieces in the first game of a two-game second round match at the ongoing FIDE Women's World Cup in the Georgian city of Batumi. Both players will be back with colours reversed to play in the second game of the match tomorrow. The Ukrainian Ushenina had ascended to the women's throne in 2012 and wore the crown till 2013. She's crossed the 2500 rating threshold a few times over the course of her long career while young Vantika's peak rating so far has been 2435. Vantika was one of the stars of the Indian women's team which won the Chess Olympiad team gold last year in Budapest with Vantika claiming a individual gold as well for board 4 in the women's event. Meanwhile, another former women's world champion Alexandra Kosteniuk (who now represents Switzerland) was held to a draw by India's Padmini Rout in a remarkable result. The day brought plenty of good news for other Indian players in action: Koneru Humpy (versus Khamdamova Afruza of Uzbekistan), Vaishali Rameshbabu (vs Ouellet Maili-Jade of Canada) and Divya Deshmukh (vs Mgeladze Kesaria of Georgia) all secured wins in the first game. Meanwhile, the all Indian clash between Harika Dronavalli and Nandhidhaa PV ended in a draw while Priyanka K also held Kulon Klaudia of Poland to a draw. The FIDE Women's World Cup offers three spots to the prestigious 2026 FIDE Women's Candidates Tournament, a tournament which will decide the challenger to compete against world champion Ju Wenjun. The Indian forced her opponent to resign in 36 moves. When the resignation came, the Ukrainian was up a pawn and a knight, and Vantika had just offered up her queen for a trade. But continuing the game was futile because had Ushenina captured Vantika's queen, Vantika would have recaptured with a pawn, which would have then been free to reach the endzone and promote. 'It's an amazing feeling (beating a former women's world champion),' beamed the Indian in an interview with FIDE's official handle. The top players at a FIDE World Cup get a bye in the first round. Agrawal, though, had to play the first round of the event, where she had prevailed over Lala Shohradova after being held to a draw in the first game and then gaining victory in the second. Asked if playing in the first round had given her an advantage in the second, Vantika said: 'Yeah, for sure. Practice, you know, there's so much of pressure and a different atmosphere. Playing the first round gives more confidence and motivation to play better in the next rounds.' This is Vantika's first big FIDE event ever since her heroics at the Olympiad. 'Since then, I've played a lot of more open tournaments, strong tournaments. Played with many strong players. I think I've learned a lot and I hope I can use that experience here,' Vantika said.

Chola Chess launched in Chennai
Chola Chess launched in Chennai

The Hindu

time6 hours ago

  • The Hindu

Chola Chess launched in Chennai

After he won the Uzchess Cup Masters by the end of last month, R. Praggnanandhaa became the World No. 4 (Elo 2779) in the live ratings and is consequently the highest-ranked Indian now. It was his third title of the year, after wins at the Tata Steel Chess Tournament in Wijk aan Zee and the Superbet Chess Classic in Bucharest. The latter was his maiden Grand Chess Tour (GCT) title. 'This year has been good for me so far. And I hope it continues. We (him and his coach R.B. Ramesh) made some changes in my game, for sure. I think that's showing the results. Last year, things didn't go my way. Ramesh and I, we were working, trying to find things to change. And we made some changes. I think those were critical,' said the 19-year-old at the launch of Chola Chess, a CSR initiative from the Cholamandalam Investment and Finance Company Limited, in collaboration with Chess Gurukul, on Wednesday. Praggnanandhaa, who's atop the FIDE Circuit leaderboard now, was wary that the other players might catch up and stressed the importance of finishing as the leader to qualify for the Candidates. 'So, he was joint-first in four tournaments, out of which he didn't win one. He won the other three. But joint-first in four is already a great start. He's having a sensational year overall. I think, for him, this year is a reaction to missing out on (winning) the Candidates last year. He's got that extra motivation,' said Indian chess legend and five-time World champion Viswanathan Anand. When asked about World No. 1 Magnus Carlsen's recent jibes at reigning World champion D. Gukesh, Anand said: 'They come with the territory. You cannot expect to be World champion and say people will just be nice to me. You have to just face that.'

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store