
Norway Chess 2025: Gukesh gets first classical win over Erigaisi; Humpy third in women's section
Reigning world champion D. Gukesh pulled off a gritty escape to beat compatriot Arjun Erigaisi for the first time in classical chess, jumping to sole second after Round 7 of the Norway Chess tournament.
Playing with white, Gukesh was on the back foot for over three hours but held firm under pressure. He seized his chance when Erigaisi faltered in time trouble and forced resignation after a tense battle.
'Probably I was just losing it at some point… I just had to keep making moves, which doesn't lose on the spot and in the time scrambles, things happen,' Gukesh said after the win.
The 19-year-old now has 11.5 points, leapfrogging defending champion Magnus Carlsen (11), who beat Hikaru Nakamura in Armageddon. Arjun dropped to fifth with 7.5. Fabiano Caruana leads the standings with 12.5 points after defeating Wei Yi, who remains bottom with 6.5. Nakamura is fourth on 8.5.
In the women's section, Ju Wenjun leads with 11.5 points. Anna Muzychuk (11) beat Koneru Humpy (10.5) in Armageddon. R. Vaishali lost to China's Lei Tingjie in time trouble.
This was Gukesh's second straight classical win — no tie-break required — and a revenge of sorts for his Round 2 loss to Erigaisi. The victory also followed a comeback win over Carlsen in Round 6.
Gukesh's coach, Grzegorz Gajewski, acknowledged it wasn't his cleanest performance but praised the resilience.
'Probably not his best game ever... but definitely a very good second half of the game,' he said.
'When you're in such trouble and you keep fighting and get rewarded for it... you have even more faith that it makes sense to keep fighting.'
Gajewski credited Gukesh's mindset shift and relentless accuracy:
'He's demanding the very highest level of precision... and if you're not up to it, you might mess up—even if you're number one in the world.'
Asked whether the win over Erigaisi meant more than beating Carlsen, the coach replied, 'Yes, definitely, Erigaisi is a very difficult opponent to beat... but I would not compare the two games.'
'Gukesh was just making moves; he was completely in the zone... His extraordinary calculation abilities, combined with his fighting spirit, help him defend so many positions.'
Results (Round 7)
Open: D Gukesh (Ind – 11.5 points) bt Arjun Erigaisi (Ind – 7.5); Fabiano Caruana (USA – 12.5) bt Wei Yi (Chn – 6.5); Magnus Carlsen (Nor – 11) bt Hikaru Nakamura (USA – 8.5) in Armageddon tie-break.
Women: Lei Tingjie (Chn – 9) bt R Vaishali (Ind – 8); Ju Wenjun (Chn – 11.5 points) bt Sara Khadem (Esp - 6); Koneru Humpy (Ind - 10.5) lost to Anna Muzychuk (Ukr – 11) in Armageddon tie-break.

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First Post
an hour ago
- First Post
Blunder in final round costs Gukesh Norway Chess title as Carlsen reigns supreme once again
D Gukesh missed out on a historic triumph at the Norway Chess, finishing third after losing to Fabiano Caruana in the 10th and final round, allowing Magnus Carlsen to retain his title with 16 points. Also missing out on the title was Koneru Humpy, who finished third in the women's section after a draw in Round 10. read more D Gukesh missed out on a historic Norway Chess triumph after losing to Fabiano Caruana in the 10th and final round on Friday, allowing Magnus Carlsen to retain his title. Image credit: Michal Walusza/Norway Chess Gukesh Dommaraju missed out on a historic triumph at the Norway Chess on Friday despite Magnus Carlsen being held to a draw and losing the subsequent Armageddon battle, finishing at the third spot after losing to Fabiano Caruana in the 10th and final round of the elite tournament on Friday. Defending champion Carlsen, collected 1.5 points in the final round after losing the Armageddon battle against Arjun Erigaisi, finished with 16 points out of a possible 30 to win his seventh Norway Chess title in the process. STORY CONTINUES BELOW THIS AD It was a similar story in the women's section where reigning world rapid champion Koneru Humpy finished third, behind Ukrainian GM Anna Muzychuk and China's Lei Tingjie despite collecting an Armageddon victory in the final round. Gukesh was half-a-point behind Carlsen at the second spot heading into the final round, having beaten Carlsen, Arjun and Chinese No 1 Wei Yi in three of the last four rounds. And Carlsen's draw against Arjun put him in pole position for the top spot – the reigning world champion could have taken the tournament into a tie-breaker after finishing level with the world No 1 had he secured at least a draw against world No 5 Caruana and won the Armageddon playoff. The 2025 Norway Chess and Norway Chess Women tournaments have officially come to an end! In the Open: 🥇 1st: Magnus Carlsen – 16 points 🥈 2nd: Fabiano Caruana – 15.5 points 🥉 3rd: Gukesh Dommaraju – 14.5 points 4th: Hikaru Nakamura – 14 points 5th: Arjun Erigaisi – 13 points… — Norway Chess (@NorwayChess) June 6, 2025 Gukesh stumbles in final hurdle to miss out on historic triumph Gukesh, however, found himself on the backfoot after Caruana fortified his position with a series of solid moves in the middlegame. He was also trailing his American opponent on the clock and decided to shake hands in 50 moves shortly after committing a blunder (d1=Q). The victory allowed 2018 champion Caruana, who had been at the top of the standings at one point, to finish at the second spot ahead of the Indian Grandmaster, who had turned 19 during the course of the tournament. World No 2 Hikaru Nakamura finished fourth with 14 points after being held to a draw by Wei (9.5), who was set to finish at the bottom regardless of his final-round result. STORY CONTINUES BELOW THIS AD Arjun, the other Indian in the 'Open' section, finished fifth with 13 points after his Armageddon victory over Carlsen. As for the women's section, Humpy could have faced Muzychuk in a tie-breaker for the title had she collected an outright victory Chinese GM Ju Wenjun, the highest-rated female player in the tournament. Muzychuk's draw in the Classical and the Armageddon games against R Vaishali, which gave her just one point, gave Humpy the opening that she needed to challenge for the title. Ju, however, put up a solid fight and dragged her Classical game past the 50-move mark to deflate Humpy's title hopes. The two players had a bishop left on the board, with Humpy having three pawns to Ju's one. Humpy, however, chose to shake hands with Ju despite having nearly 50 minutes left on the clock.


The Hindu
2 hours ago
- The Hindu
Gukesh blunders against Caruana as Carlsen wins Norway Chess title for seventh time
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Defending champion Carlsen, who was the overnight leader with 15 points after round 9, ended the tournament with 16 points after fashioning the great escape against GM Erigaisi and steering the game to a draw in the 10th round on Friday. Gukesh finished third — the same as in the 2023 edition — with 14.5 points, while Caruana was second with 15.5 points. Erigaisi finished fifth with 13 points. Erigaisi won the Armageddon tie-break against Carsen following the miraculous draw by the Norwegian, but it did not matter in the end as the five-time world champion had already secured a point with the stalemate to win the title. While Gukesh quietly walked out of the arena after losing to Caruana, Carlsen said he had to 'literally fight for his life' to stay in the match against Arjun Erigaisi. 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India Gazette
2 hours ago
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