logo
Impressive Pranav holds Arjun; Keymer still on top

Impressive Pranav holds Arjun; Keymer still on top

The Hindu4 hours ago
German Vincent Keymer played out a draw against Vidit Gujrathi in the fifth round of the Masters section in the Quantbox Chennai Grandmasters chess tournament 2025, and remain ahead of the field, here on Monday.
Local lad V. Pranav, the current World junior champion, played a solid game to hold top seed Arjun Erigaisi in 78 moves which allowed Keymer to retain his advantage.
It was another creditable result for the 18-year-old, who had drawn with Vidit and Anish Giri in the previous rounds.
'I was preparing a lot for d4. I did not have a lot of time to prepare for e4. This line, which I played today, I had originally planned for Anish Giri a few days back. I thought it would be a good plan against Arjun, too,' said Pranav.
The 20-year-old German Keymer, who has an one-point lead in the standings, faces Arjun with white pieces in the sixth round in a battle between the top two.
Nihal Sarin and American Awonder Liang played out a quick 29-move draw while the Anish Giri-Karthikeyan Murali encounter too ended in a stalemate.
Dutchman Jorden van Foreest scored the only win of the day in the Masters section, putting it across American Ray Robson
Abhimanyu still in lead
In the Challengers section, Abhimanyu Puranik outwitted D. Harika in 39 moves in an English Opening game for his fourth straight victory and maintain his one-point lead at the top of the table.
His meeting with M. Pranesh in the sixth round could have a bearing on how their fortunes pan out for the rest of the tournament.
Pranesh and Leon Luke Mendonca settled for a draw in their game.
The results (fifth round): Masters: Karthikeyan Murali (2.5) drew with Anish Giri (Ned, 2.5), Vincent Keymer (Ger, 4) drew with Vidit Gujrathi (2.5), V. Pranav (2) drew with Arjun Erigaisi (3), Nihal Sarin (2) drew with Awonder Liang (USA, 2.5), Jorden van Foreest (Ned, 2) bt Ray Robson (USA, 2).
Challengers: R. Vaishali (1) lost to G.B. Harshavardhan (1.5), D. Harika (0.5) lost to Abhimanyu Puranik (4.5), M. Pranesh (3.5) drew with Leon Luke Mendonca (3.5), Aryan Chopra (1.5) drew with B. Adhiban (2.5), Diptayan Ghosh (3.5) drew with Pa. Iniyan (3).
Sixth round pairings: Masters: Anish vs. Karthikeyan, Vidit vs. Keymer, Arjun vs. Pranav, Liang vs. Nihal, van Foreest vs. Robson.
Challengers: Harshavardhan vs. Iniyan, Adhiban vs. Diptayan, Mendonca vs. Aryan, Abhimanyu vs. Pranesh, Vaishali vs. Harika.
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Chennai Grand Masters 2025: Vincent Keymer remains ahead of Arjun Erigaisi despite being held to second consecutive draw
Chennai Grand Masters 2025: Vincent Keymer remains ahead of Arjun Erigaisi despite being held to second consecutive draw

First Post

timean hour ago

  • First Post

Chennai Grand Masters 2025: Vincent Keymer remains ahead of Arjun Erigaisi despite being held to second consecutive draw

Both Vincent Keymer and Arjun Erigaisi, who currently occupy the first and second positions respectively in the Masters' section, were held to draws in Round 5 of the 2025 Chennai Grand Masters event with the latter playing as white. read more Grandmasters Vincent Keymer and Arjun Erigaisi are set for a top of the table clash in the sixth round of the 2025 Chennai Grand Masters. Image credit: Freestyle Chess German Grandmaster Vincent Keymer remained a point clear of pre-tournament favourite GM Arjun Erigaisi to remain top of the Chennai Grand Masters standings despite being held to a second consecutive draw, this time by GM Vidit Gujrathi in Round 5 on Monday. Erigaisi, who had suffered a surprise defeat at the hands of GM Nihal Sarin in the previous round, missed out on the chance to narrow the gap with Keymer as he was held to a 78-move draw by Pranav V despite playing with white pieces. STORY CONTINUES BELOW THIS AD Keymer and Gujrathi, on the other hand, decided to shake hands after 40 moves with the latter playing as white and game developing from an Indian Game opening. Erigaisi, who had reached the semi-finals of Freestyle Chess Las Vegas as well as the chess event at the Esports World Cup, was off to a strong start earlier in the tournament, beating American GMs Awonder Liang and Ray Robson and playing out a draw against Dutch GM Jorden van Foreest in the first three rounds. The defeat against Sarin, who had also participated at the Esports World Cup, has since threatened to deny Erigaisi the Chennai title for the third consecutive time. The 21-year-old chess star had finished in the joint-lead in each of the last two editions, only to miss out on the trophy by a whisker, and is hoping to finish on the right side of the result this year. Masters Standings – Round 5 Recap Five rounds in, and the leaderboard is tighter than ever. Every result is shifting the balance, and the pressure is at its peak. 🔥 The road to the title is narrowing stay tuned! Who's your frontrunner after Round 6? 👇@chess24com @QBResearch… — Quantbox Chennai Grand Masters (@Chennai_GM) August 11, 2025 STORY CONTINUES BELOW THIS AD Sarin held Liang to a draw while Dutch GM Anish Giri split a point with Indian GM Murali Karthikeyan. Van Foreest registered the only decisive result in the Masters' section in the fifth round, registering a hard-fought win over Robson in 82 moves while playing as white. Erigaisi and Keymer face off in a highly-anticipated sixth-round showdown on Tuesday that could decide the title. The winner of the third edition of the what is India's strongest Classical tournament will pocket Rs 25 lakh of the total prize money of Rs 1 crore along with 24.5 FIDE Circuit points that will count towards Candidates 2026 qualification. Masters: Round 5 Results: Anish Giri (½) drew Murali Karthikeyan (½); Vidit Gujrathi (½) drew Vincent Keymer (½); Arjun Erigaisi (½) drew Pranav V (½); Liang Awonder (½) drew Nihal Sarin; Jorden van Foreest (1) def. Ray Robson (0). STORY CONTINUES BELOW THIS AD Challengers: Round 5 Results: Vaishali Rameshbabu (0) lost to Harshavardhan GB (1); Harika Dronavalli (0) lost to Abhimanyu Puranik (1); M Pranesh (½) drew Leon Luke Mendonca (½); Aryan Chopra (½) drew Adhiban B (½); Diptayan Ghosh (½) drew Pa Iniyan (½. Masters Standings after Day 5 1. Vincent Keymer – 4 2. Arjun Erigaisi –3 3-6. Anish Giri, Vidit Gujrathi, Murali Karthikeyan, Awonder Liang – 2.5 7-10. Nihal Sarin, Pranav V, Ray Robson, Jorden van Foreest – 2 Challengers Standings after Day 5. 1. Abhimanyu Puranik – 4 2-4. Pranesh M, Diptayan Ghosh, Leon Luke Mendonca – 3.5 5. Iniyan Pa – 3 6. Adhiban Baskaran – 2.5 7-8. Aryan Chopra, Harshavardhan GB – 1.5 9. Vaishali Rameshbabu – 1 10. Harika Dronavalli – 0.5

Bodhana Sivanandan becomes youngest female chess player to defeat a Grandmaster
Bodhana Sivanandan becomes youngest female chess player to defeat a Grandmaster

The Hindu

time2 hours ago

  • The Hindu

Bodhana Sivanandan becomes youngest female chess player to defeat a Grandmaster

British chess player Bodhana Sivanandan became the youngest female player to defeat a Grandmaster at the British Chess Championships in Liverpool on Sunday. Sivanandan defeated 60-year-old Grandmaster Peter Wells to achieve the feat. The youngster, who is a Women's FIDE Master, was ten years, five months, and one day when she broke the record. 🇬🇧♟👏 British sensation Bodhana Sivanandan has made history by becoming the youngest female chess player ever to beat a grandmaster! The 10-year-old, from Harrow, pulled off the win on Sunday against 60-year-old Grandmaster Peter Wells in the last round of the 2025 British… — International Chess Federation (@FIDE_chess) August 11, 2025 She also picked up her first Woman Grand Master (WGM) norm during the competition. Sivanandan claimed the record from American Carissa Yip, who was 10 years, 11 months and 20 days when she set the record in 2019. Victory in the event was also earned her a third norm to secure a Woman International Master (WIM), making her the youngest to do so. Related Topics FIDE

Barcelona-Villarreal LaLiga match in Miami moves closer to reality after Spanish football federation approval
Barcelona-Villarreal LaLiga match in Miami moves closer to reality after Spanish football federation approval

Indian Express

time2 hours ago

  • Indian Express

Barcelona-Villarreal LaLiga match in Miami moves closer to reality after Spanish football federation approval

Spanish football could finally cross the Atlantic after the Royal Spanish Football Federation approved a request for Barcelona and Villarreal to play their December LaLiga match in Miami – a move nearly a decade in the making. The RFEF board gave the green light on Monday for the teams' matchday 17 game to be played at Hard Rock Stadium in Miami on December 20 in the first step towards the competition playing an official match abroad for the first time in its history. The proposal now heads to European soccer's governing body UEFA before requiring final approval from FIFA – the last hurdle in LaLiga President Javier Tebas' American dream. 'At its meeting on 11 August 2025, the RFEF Board of Directors received a request from Villarreal CF and FC Barcelona to play their match on matchday 17 of the first division in the United States,' RFEF said in a statement. '… the Royal Spanish Football Federation will submit the request to UEFA to begin the process for subsequent authorisation by FIFA for the match to be played at Hard Rock Stadium in Miami on 20 December 2025 …' LaLiga has been pursuing their transatlantic vision for almost a decade, emulating the strategy employed by the NFL and NBA to establish themselves in other markets. Tebas' first attempt came in the 2018-19 season with a proposed Girona-Barca match in the U.S. that never materialised. A planned Villarreal-Atletico fixture for 2019-20 also fell through, with the matter ending up in the courts after the RFEF refused authorisation. The courts sided with the Spanish Federation, then under Luis Rubiales, who was sacked in 2023 for kissing team player Jenni Hermoso on the mouth celebrating Spain's women's World Cup victory in Sydney. There was another near-miss last season, with a Barcelona-Atletico match almost proceeding before LaLiga pulled back at the last minute to better structure the project. Now, with regulatory barriers cleared and internal conflicts resolved, the Villarreal-Barca clash appears poised to finally deliver Spanish football's long-awaited American adventure.

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