By playing Open tournaments, which also comprise male players, Divya Deshmukh, the FIDE Women's World Cup winner, is looking to sharpen her game in her quest to become the very best; "Even if she is struggling at times...she's still getting the experience," says Hikaru Nakamura
It was only on the last occasion possible that Gukesh beat his idol Vishy Anand possible at GCL. It was a win that proved decisive in Gukesh's side ending in third position
Charvi Anilkumar has spent the entire year playing in open events against boys and men older than her, going against the norm of girls opting to play in women’s age group events.
Carlsen also explained that besides the two Americans, Nakamura and Caruana, and Pragg, he doesn't think anyone has a real chance of winning the Candidates.
All the top three players of the side – Caruana, Giri, and Pragg – shared jokes during the presentations, a camaraderie that will soon turn into rivalry
Over the last couple of months, Vidit Gujrathi has created at least three chess websites for elite players by ‘vibe coding’ them himself.
India has currently nine challengers—Karthikeyan Murali (2660), Pranav V (26341), Raunak Sadhwani (2638), Pranesh M (2627), Aryan Chopra (2626), Aditya Mittal (2624), Abhimanyu Puranik (2622), SL Narayanan (2616), Leon Luke Mendonca (2615)—fighting it out in the 2600 ratings club with dreams of making the leap to the 2700s some day
American Grandmaster Nakamura, who will be a contender at the Candidates next year, talks about how chess has changed and how 'work smarter, not harder' is his mantra
There were other winners for the Knights team as well, with Leinier Dominguez Perez defeating Praggnanandhaa, and Kateryna Lagno taking down former women’s world champion and current women’s world no 1 Hou Yifan.
At next year's Candidates, Praggnanandhaa will be the only Indian in contention in the open section.
Praggnanandhaa, Anish Giri, and Fabiano Caruana talk about the strange dynamic they share as part of Alpine SG Pipers in the GCL, knowing fully well that they will soon be facing off in the Candidates, where only finishing first matters.
A hectic tournament schedule that takes them around the world several times a year provides no time to rest, but they have no complaints. As Gukesh says: "If I don’t push myself at this age, when am I going to push myself?”
World Champion loses to his mentor in another disappointing result as Ganges Grandmasters beat PBG Alaskan Knights
Arjun Erigaisi admits he took a 10-day break to stay at home, in the company of his mother and his sister, to get over the heartbreak.
This has been Gukesh’s year of woe, with the teenager not winning any tournament since defeating Ding Liren for the crown in Singapore a year ago.
R Praggnanandhaa, who recently secured his spot in the Candidates tournament via the FIDE Circuit route, he’s happy that the sport is now giving players so many opportunities to play and become full-time professionals.
Behind Aronian and Carlsen, Germany's Vincent Keymer claimed third place after defeating Javokhir Sindarov. Fabiano Caruana secured fifth place with a 1.5–0.5 victory over Arjun Erigaisi
The complaint claims that all the three opponents who lost to the three-year-old boy were coaches from the academy where he trains. The boy's father and coach have denied this while stating that the fact that all three opponents were from the same city in MP was a coincidence.
Exactly one year ago, Gukesh became the youngest world champion in chess history. His mentor and chess legend Vishy Anand speaks on the teenager's form over the past year, the added scrutiny on the youngster, pressure of facing him in GCL and more
India's Arjun Erigaisi will face Fabiano Caruana for the fifth place spot and Hans Niemann will face Parham Maghsoodloo in the match for seventh spot.
“When I saw Team Gukesh (at the World Chess Championship), it was a very impressive team of people. To be able to afford and to be able to maintain such a setup, it's just very impressive,” Rapport tells The Indian Express in an interview
Praggnanandhaa secured his spot via the FIDE Circuit route which could have been in some peril if he had not played in London, because the other contender for the spot, Uzbekistan's Nodirbek Abdusattorov, had entered the elite event at London Classic.
When he was asked if he thought he could be World No 1 some day, Gukesh replied: "I know I will give my absolute best for it but whether or not it happens I would be happy with the effort I put in."
After Nakamura secured his spot in the Candidates, five-time world champion Carlsen bashed the way the ratings spot was awarded. Sutovsky took exception to this and said he would move to eliminate the pathway altogether.
In this event, players make their moves on a small chess set placed 110 centimetres deep at the bottom of a swimming pool. After moving, a player surfaces to catch their breath, at which point their opponent must immediately dive to make the next move.




