
After 8 games over 3 days, Vantika Agrawal stuns ex-women's world champion Anna Ushenina to enter Round 3 of FIDE Women's World Cup
The FIDE Women's World Cup is an important event on the calendar since it offers three spots to the prestigious 2026 FIDE Women's Candidates Tournament. The Women's Candidates is the final stepping stone to decide the challenger to compete against world champion Ju Wenjun.
The FIDE World Cup sees head-to-head knockout battles across two games between two players in classical format with each player playing with white pieces once. If the two games cannot determine a winner, players play best-of-two-game tiebreaks. In the tiebreaks, players first play two games in the 15 minutes (+10 seconds increment per move, popularly called 15+10) format. If that also cannot separate the two players, from this point on, the time gets reduced at each two-game interval unless there's a winner. So, if after the 15+10 games, the scores are still level, players play two more games with 10 minutes (+10 seconds increment per move, called 10+10). Then the time trickles down to five minutes + three seconds (5+3).
After this point, if players are still deadlocked, the game enters chess' equivalent of a sudden death: a winner-takes-all single game of three minutes + 2 seconds. This 3+2 game will be played until there's a winner.
Remarkably, young Vantika was not the only Indian woman duelling a former women's world champion late in the day on Friday. Padmini Rout also had dragged Alexandra Kosteniuk for eight games across all the three formats before her resistance ended and she lost. In the two classical games there were two draws necessitating a two-game tiebreak in the rapid time control. There too, there were two draws, which necessitated two more games.
Vantika will join many of her history-making teammates from the Chess Olympiad gold medal winning Indian women's team. Koneru Humpy (who beat Khamdamova Afruza of Uzbekistan 1.5-0.5), Harika Dronavalli (who beat compatriot Nandhidhaa PV 1.5-0.5), Vaishali Rameshbabu (who prevailed by a 2-0 score over Ouellet Maili-Jade of Canada) and Divya Deshmukh (who defeated Mgeladze Kesaria of Georgia 1.5-0.5) also entered the third round, but sans the drama Vantika had to survive to enter the third round.
India's Priyanka K was the other Indian to exit in this round besides Nandhidhaa.
The event regulations stipulate that the 21 top seeds in the event get a bye and enter the fray in the second round while 86 players square off in the first. The 43 winners of the first round then play in the second round where there are 64 players. This meant that while Vantika's opponent had a bye in the first round, Vantika had battled her way into the second round.
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