
Gukesh back in action in Superbet Classic
Bucharest (Romania):World Champion D Gukesh will be the top seeded player at the Superbet Classic, where the young chess wizard will have the opportunity to cross the 2800 rating mark for the first time in his career.
The tournament, starting Wednesday, is the first event under classical chess in Grand Chess Tour this year. Gukesh, ranked third in the world on ratings, will have his task cut out as all the nine Tour participants compete in the first tournament together.
The wild card has been awarded to Deac Bogdan-Daniel as part of the host country. After a second-place finish at the Tata Steel Masters in January, Gukesh will be seen playing in a Classical event after a little over three months.
The 18-year-old is known to be an expert in Classical chess and all his major successes have come in this format. At 2787 points currently, a good performance can help Gukesh touch the 2800 rating milestone. Besides the World champion, R Praggnanandhaa will be the other Indian in the fray ready to give everyone a run for their money.
Pragg, the winner of Tata Steel Masters tasted decent success in the preceding superbet rapid and blitz at Warsaw in Poland where he finished third. Apart from the two Indians, Fabiano Caruana of United States, Nodirbek Abdusattorov of Uzbekistan and Firouzja Alireza of France are the other main contenders for the title.
Participants
D Gukesh, R Praggnanadhaa (Ind); Fabiano Caruana, Levon Aronian Wesley So (USA); Firouzja Alireza, Maxime Vachier-Lagrave (Fra); Nodirbek Abdusattorov (Uzb); Duda Jan Kryzsztof (Pol); Deac Bogdan Daniel (Rou).

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


Hans India
an hour ago
- Hans India
Global shooting stars gather in Munich as ISSF World Cup kicks off June 10
The global royalty of Rifle/Pistol sport shooting, is set to descend on one of its most hallowed turfs Munich's Olympic Shooting range for the third International Shooting Sport Federation (ISSF) World Cup (Rifle/Pistol) stage, set for June 10-15. A massive 695 athletes, among them a constellation of Olympic and World champions and legends of the sport from 78 countries, will make feature in Munich World Cup. There are 10 finals on the roster and competitions begin on Tuesday. The season began with a double-header in South America where Indian Rifle and Pistol shooters picked up 15 medals, including six gold, helping the team finish a creditable second and third respectively on the standings. The Munich leg will, however, present a much tougher challenge given the much wider presence of the world's best shooters. While many stars like Li would be making their first appearance on the ISSF circuit in Munich after the Paris Olympics last year, India, who have fielded a 22-strong team across the 10 events, including the two mixed team events, will also look forward to a few anticipated comebacks. Prominent among them will be Swapnil Kusale, the Paris bronze medallist in the men's 50m rifle 3 positions (3P), who has fought his way back into the team with some great scores on the domestic circuit. Two-time Olympian Elavenil Valarivan will also be seen in international competitive action for the first time since Paris, although she did make the trip to Buenos Aires and Lima as an RPO shooter. Reigning Asian Games champion Palak in the women's air pistol, also makes it back to the team and a few world cup debuts, like that of newly crowned women's air rifle national champion Ananya Naidu and the two new faces at this level in men's air pistol-Aditya Malra and Nishant Rawat, are also to look forward to, as India look to continue to explore their depth in the two disciplines, ahead of bigger challenges later in the year. Among the constellation of stars, none shines brighter than two Chinese marksmen, the legendary Li Yuehong, reigning Olympic champion and three-time Olympic medalist in the 25m rapid-fire pistol (RFP) and Sheng Lihao, the reigning Olympic, World and Asian champion, world-record holder and a 20-year-old air-rifle sensation. In fact, in his last outing in Munich last year, Sheng set a new finals world record in his pet 10m air rifle and is coming off yet another World Cup win, in Lima. Li would be appearing at this level for the first time after his Paris Olympics gold. The Munich World Cup, set at a time when international shooters are generally nearing their peak and given its legacy and favourable location, like always has attracted the who's who of Rifle and Pistol shooting. Every strong shooting nation has sent its strongest available squads. China, outright winners of the first two legs, besides Li and Sheng, are also bringing their men's air pistol Olympic champion Xie Yu, in what is also a 22-member squad. Sheng, by the way, is also the mixed air rifle Olympic champion but his partner in Paris, Huang Yuting, will be missing in action. Hosts Germany have also fielded a strong 27-member contingent led by their pistol legend and former Olympic and World champion Christian Reitz. Anna Janssen, their women's air rifle qualification world record holder, would also be starting on home soil. Another RFP legend Jean Quiquampoix, part of a 16-member French squad, will help complete the troika of legends who have completely dominated the RFP event over the last decade or so. The Koreans will also be there in full force with 19 shooters, among them two of their three reigning women Olympic champions Yang Jiin (25m pistol) and Oh Yejin (10m air pistol). Reigning mixed team air pistol Paris champions Damir Mikec and Zorana Arunovic will headline a 15-member Serbian squad, while women's 3P exponent Chiara Leone, will complete the line-up of reigning Olympic champions in Munich. She will accompany an equally high-quality 11-member Switzerland team. Among former Olympic champions who have entered to start for their respective nations are Javad Faroughi (Iran-10m air pistol), Nina Christen (Switzerland-women's 3P) and Greek women's pistol legend Anna Korakaki. Several Paris Olympic medallists like the USA's Sagen Maddalena, Italy's Paolo Monna and Danilo Sollazzo and Alexandra Le of Kazakhstan, are also set to start in Munich. The USA's former world champion Alison Weisz also shoots in Munich, highlighting the strong US presence. Other legendary shooters in attendance will include the likes of Ukrainian rifle specialist Serhii Kulish (two-time Olympic medalist), who is part of a 21-member squad, the Czech Republic's Petar Gorsa, Hungary's Istvan Peni and Turkiye's Yusuf Dikec. A group of 25 individual neutral athletes (AIN) are also expected to pose a strong challenge in the 10 events on the schedule.


NDTV
5 hours ago
- NDTV
D Gukesh Asked To Pick 'Favourite Moment' From Norway Chess Event, Magnus Carlsen In Splits
Indian chess grandmaster D Gukesh contested a hard-fought Norway Chess 2025 tournament against World No. 1 Magnus Carlsen, ultimately losing the title to him narrowly. Carlsen had beaten Gukesh in Round 1 of the tournament. However, Gukesh avenged it by defeating Carlsen in Round 6. What followed was an angry reaction from Carlsen, who banged his table after losing. Gukesh has now named the win over Magnus as his most memorable moment from the tournament. When asked what his favourite moment of the tournament was, Gukesh, Carlsen and the crowd burst into laughter. "Beating Magnus," was Gukesh's prompt response. Carlsen had the same sentiment. The video of him banging the table after the defeat to Gukesh went viral on the internet. "I think it's the same. I mean, there were a lot of great moments in the tournament, but that one definitely stands out," Carlsen said. We will ALL remember this one thing #NorwayChess — Norway Chess (@NorwayChess) June 7, 2025 World number one Magnus Carlsen, after clinching his seventh Norway Chess title on Saturday, noted that Indian chess stars D Gukesh and Arjun Erigaisi are "very good" but "still need a little bit of time to prepare." Carlsen's final-round game against Arjun ended in a draw. The title was then decided by the result of the match between Gukesh and American Grandmaster Fabiano Caruana. Caruana's win over Gukesh helped Carlsen secure the top spot. Carlsen finished the tournament with 16 points. Caruana came second with 15.5 points, and Gukesh secured third place with 14.5 points. Arjun Erigaisi, who had a strong campaign, ended in fifth place with 13 points. Speaking to ANI after the tournament, Carlsen said, "I feel great. It is a relief to win the tournament. In the end, it was such a rollercoaster, but it is good." Carlsen also appreciated the talent of both Gukesh and Arjun but said they still need some time to grow. Referring to his match against Gukesh, which he lost, Carlsen called it a game that will "stick out" and stay in memory. After that loss, Carlsen's visible frustration, which included banging the table and knocking over chess pieces, went viral on social media. "They are all very good (Gukesh and Arjun), but they still need a little bit of time to prepare. We also have a tournament running simultaneously in Armenia, where Pragg (R Praggnanandhaa) and Aravindh Chithambaram showed very good chess... It is not a positive memory, but the game that will stick out is the game against Gukesh," Carlsen said.3


Time of India
7 hours ago
- Time of India
D Gukesh heartbreak paves way for Magnus Carlsen in Norway Chess
D Gukesh and Magnus Carlsen at Norway Chess (Images via X/@NorwayChess) D Gukesh failed to see the knight fork. And when it was on the board, the pain was difficult to hide. The 19-year-old record-breaking world champion did not cry. He did not bang the table either. But he was inconsolable, sitting stunned in his chair, covering his face and forehead. He remained in the chair, not making eye contact with anyone and turning the chair the other way, making his face less visible. Fabiano Caruana had given a lifeline to Gukesh in the 10th and last round by missing some tactics in a thrilling endgame in Stavanger on Friday. The winning position for the American turned dead equal when Caruana made a dubious pawn push on the 47th turn in the queen, knight, bishop and pawns vs queen, rook and pawns endgame. He failed to see a forced sequence that would have given him extra bishop in queen and pawns each climax. But Gukesh made a cardinal mistake of queening his d-file pawn in a hurry. The knight fork (for rook and queen) which gave him quite a heartburn. Moments earlier, Magnus Carlsen had just managed to draw with Arjun E,rigaisi and jumped to a minimum 16 points in a topsy-turvy game, meaning a classical 3-0 win for Caruana would be still short of Carlsen by at least half a point. by Taboola by Taboola Sponsored Links Sponsored Links Promoted Links Promoted Links You May Like Giao dịch vàng CFDs với sàn môi giới tin cậy IC Markets Tìm hiểu thêm Undo Poll Who do you believe will be the next big contender against Magnus Carlsen? D Gukesh Fabiano Caruana Arjun Erigaisi But if Gukesh had held his position to a draw in time trouble, he could have caught Carlsen level on points with a win in the Armageddon (worth 1.5 points) and Carlsen losing the Armageddon (worth one point). That would have set up a blitz tiebreak between Carlsen and Gukesh for the title. But Gukesh let this opportunity slip away. For a change, lady luck smiled the other way. Minutes later, Carlsen indeed lost his Armageddon game against Arjun with black pieces. But it was still good enough to be clear first and clinch the Norway title for the seventh time. Virat Kohli's love for 'dhaba' food, priority for family & more | RCB bus driver shares stories Earlier, Anna Muzychuk failed to beat R Vaishali with white pieces in a winning position in the Armageddon game. The draw with white pieces (hence technical defeat in 10 mins vs 7 mins scenario) meant she finished on 16.5 points and had to wait for Humpy's result. Since the Indian veteran could only draw with women's world champion Ju Wenjun after a temporary knight sacrifice in the classical game, Ukraine's world No. 7, Muzychuk (Elo 2535), took an unassailable lead. It was the first Norway title for the Olympiad winne