India's first chess features print magazine published quarterly from Lucknow since 2004 by Aspire Welfare Society.

Monday, April 7, 2025

Gukesh, Vidit, Pragg, Arjun begin Quest at Freestyle Chess 2nd Leg in Paris


Paris, April 7 2025 - The second Freestyle Chess Grand Slam of the year is underway in Paris. From April 7 to 14, twelve of the world’s top grandmasters are battling for a $750,000 prize fund—$200,000 for the winner—in a format that has already redefined elite chess competition.

Freestyle CEO Jan Henric Buettner and his team are determined to build on the momentum: “The first Grand Slam in Weissenhaus was a huge success – we tripled the reach compared to the inaugural Freestyle tournament at the same venue the year before,” says Freestyle COO Thomas Harsch. With that experience in mind, the journey continues in one of the most vibrant cities in Europe. Buettner: “We’re constantly learning – but one thing is guaranteed: the very best are playing.”

The exclusive Pavillon Chesnaie du Roy, nestled in the Bois de Vincennes, hosts the high-stakes event in Paris. With randomized back-rank positions in every game, Freestyle Chess removes memorized openings and rewards pure chess skill: creativity, calculation, and adaptability.

 

A Clash of Champions: Keymer vs. Carlsen?

All eyes are on Germany’s Vincent Keymer, the surprise winner of the inaugural Grand Slam in Weissenhaus. Can the 20-year-old repeat his stunning run? Will Magnus Carlsen, the world number one, return with vengeance and restore order at the top?

“Mind against mind. Freestyle against the world’s best is the ultimate challenge,” says Carlsen. He’s looking forward to the tournament in Paris — and to the unique creative possibilities Freestyle Chess offers from the very first move. “For the spectators, it’s exciting to watch the best players take on this challenge.”

With only the top three players securing automatic qualification for the next Grand Slam in New York this July, every point in Paris counts.

Line-Up Update: Rapport, Abdusattorov In – Firouzja, Niemann Out

Two late changes add extra intrigue: French number one Alireza Firouzja and wildcard Hans Niemann have withdrawn. Stepping in are Hungary’s Richard Rapport and Uzbekistan’s Nodirbek Abdusattorov. Fan favorite Rapport, runner-up in the official Qualification Tournament, is renowned for his bold, imaginative play. His presence injects fresh energy into an already world-class field. The same goes for Nodirbek Abdusattorov, whose uncompromising, fighting style has made him one of the most dangerous players on the circuit. On a good day, the tricky and unpredictable world No. 6 can take down anyone.

Paris Line-Up:

Magnus Carlsen

Gukesh Dommaraju (World Champion)

Fabiano Caruana 

Hikaru Nakamura

Ian Nepomniachtchi

Vincent Keymer

Maxime Vachier-Lagrave

Praggnanandhaa R.

Arjun Erigaisi

Vidit Santosh Gujarathi (Qualification winner)

Richard Rapport (Qualification runner-up)

Nodirbek Abdusattorov

 

The Road Ahead

After Paris, the Grenke Freestyle Open in Karlsruhe, Germany (April 17–21) promises to set participation records, featuring stars like Carlsen and Keymer. The winner there will claim a ticket to the New York Grand Slam—making the upcoming weeks decisive in the Freestyle Chess calendar.


With elite names, unpredictable positions, and momentum on the line, Paris sets the tone for a dramatic spring in world chess.

 

For schedule, pairings, and live coverage, visit: freestylechess.com

Wednesday, March 12, 2025

Sanyam Srivastava wins CCBW Rapid Chess, Daksh Arora Junior Champion

Chief guest well-known socio-political journalist Chandrani Banerjee with prize winners at CCBW Rapid Open Chess

Lucknow's teen talent fourteen-year-old Sanyam Srivastava won the CCBW Rapid Chess on tiebreak ahead of Anchal Rastogi (Central GST) and Pawan Batham (State Tax Department). All three scored 6/7 points. The state-wise tournament was hosted by Chess Club Black and White (CCBW) at Charans Plaza in Hazratganj on Sunday.

Tournament winner Sanyam Srivastava

Sanyam lost his last round game to Pawan blundering two pawns away but earlier Sanyam beat Anchal in a Scotch Gambit game where white misplayed the opening. Octogenarians Kranti Kumar Gupta (Bareilly) and Kapil Kumar Khare (Lucknow) — an inspiration for the entire chess community — played super strong chess to top the senior citizen section with 4 points each. Well-known socio-political journalist Chandrani Banerjee gave away the prizes and discussed her YouTube channel, Across the Table in the 'Meet & Greet session'.

Junior Champion Daksh Arora

Daksh Arora won the Junior Unrated Under 16 section on tiebreak ahead of Ishaan Kumar. Both scored 6/7 points.

Tournament hall at The Charans Plaza, Hazratganj

Anirudh Dwivedi was the Best Rated Under 16 player with 5 points followed by Anay Agarwal at 4.5 points and Abhinav Kirti Varman at 4 points.

The Best Unrated players were Nikhar Saxena and Somesh Srivastava with 3.5 points each.

The top-scoring schools were DPS - Eldeco branch and Modern School, Aliganj.

More photos in Facebook album (including newspaper clippings): https://www.facebook.com/media/set/?vanity=ChessCCBW&set=a.1066604852173460 

Other News Links:





Anchal Rastogi wins 3rd Maha Shivratri Chess, Rachit Yadav Junior Champion

Caption: Chief guest Fariduddin Abbasi, Director, Silverstone Group, with prize winners of the 3rd CCBW Maha Shivratri Chess at Kapoor's Inn.

Defending champion Anchal Rastogi (Central GST) took home the winner's trophy on tiebreak ahead of Pawan Batham (State Tax Department) and Saeed Ahmad (Lucknow Chess Centre) with 6/7 points on Sunday at the 3rd Maha Shivratri Rapid Open Tournament. Chess Club Black & White (CCBW) hosted the tournament at Kapoor's Inn Banquets & Suites in Kapoorthala, Lucknow, on Sunday. All three scored 6 points. 

Tournament Champion Anchal Rastogi

Junior Champion Rachit Yadav
Chief guest Fariduddin Abbasi, Director, Silverstone Group, gave away the prizes.

Anchal dropped a point only to Saeed in a Queens Gambit Declined game. Saeed found a great pawn break to set his centre pawns rolling to the last rank. However, Saeed blundered and lost his game versus Pawan. Pawan, in turn, lost a pawn and his game to Anchal.

Rachit Yadav was the junior champion with 6 points and Aadi Saxena was runner up with 5.5 points. Kaustubh Mishra, and Advika Tiwari were the stars of the under-10 section. Shah Murad Alam won the under-13 section.

Tournament hall at Kapoor's Inn at Kapoorthala

Senior citizens' section winners were KK Khare and KK Kesarwani 4 points each. UB Singh was third with 2.5 points. KK Gupta and RK Gupta were close with 2 points each.

Other results
Best Unrated: 1st Nikhar Saxena 3.5 points, 2nd Shatrugan Rawat 3 points

More photos in Facebook album (including newspaper clippings): https://www.facebook.com/media/set/?set=a.1066403505526928&type=3

Other News Links:

.


.
.
.
 
Design by Free WordPress Themes | Bloggerized by Lasantha - Premium Blogger Themes | Press Release Distribution