Familiar names as Erigaisi eyes glory

Update: 2025-08-05 18:40 GMT

chennai: India No. 1 Arjun Erigaisi will face tough competition from seasoned compatriot Vidit Gujrathi and Netherland’s top player Anish Giri during the expanded third edition of the Chennai Grandmasters chess tournament, starting here from Monday.

The event, which carries a winner’s purse of Rs 1 crore, will be competed for the first time over nine rounds in classical round-robin format across Masters and Challengers segments.

The tournament, which was played over seven rounds in the previous two editions, will see participation from 19 Grandmasters and will offer crucial FIDE Circuit points.

The points will be vital for securing a spot in the 2026 Candidates Tournament, just like it helped eventual world champion D Gukesh to enter the Candidates.

Erigasi, who has broken into the elite 2800 FIDE rating club, will also face strong challenge from promising Nihal Sarin and Germany’s 20-year-old Vincent Keymer, who was Gukesh’s second during last year’s World Championship.

But his toughest competitor will be Giri, who brings a wealth of experience and a super-solid style that makes him one of the tournament favourites. Apart from the established names, India’s Pranav V and Karthikeyan Murali too are capable of effecting some stunning results.

As for the format, the latest edition marks a significant expansion, growing into a 20-player event split into two distinct 10-player sections: the Masters and the Challengers.

This new structure provides a direct pathway for rising stars to compete at the highest level, with the Challengers winner earning a guaranteed spot in the 2026 Masters. 

Similar News

Jr boxers ensure seven medals

New order in making

53 reasons to smile

Man with the golden arm