Key Points

German GM Vincent Keymer held onto his lead at the Chennai Grand Masters after drawing with Vidit Gujrathi. The tournament's ₹1 Crore prize pool and FIDE Circuit points add high stakes. Keymer will face closest rival Arjun Erigaisi in a crucial sixth-round matchup. Meanwhile, Abhimanyu Puranik strengthened his Challengers lead with a win over Harika Dronavalli.

Key Points: Vincent Keymer Leads Chennai Grand Masters After Vidit Draw

  • Keymer maintains 1-point lead over Arjun Erigaisi after Vidit draw
  • Jorden van Foreest beats Robson to join mid-table pack
  • Abhimanyu Puranik extends Challengers lead with Harika win
  • ₹1 Crore prize pool includes FIDE Circuit points for Candidates qualification
2 min read

Chennai Grand Masters 2025: Vincent Keymer held to second successive draw by Vidit; retains lead past midway point

German GM Vincent Keymer stays atop Chennai Grand Masters 2025 standings despite second straight draw, setting up key clash with Arjun Erigaisi.

"Keymer and Arjun Erigaisi will play each other in a clash between the table toppers on day 6 – Tournament Report"

Chennai, Aug 11

German GM Vincent Keymer maintained his grip on the top of the Chennai Grand Masters 2025 table despite being held to his second consecutive draw, this time by GM Vidit Gujrathi in Round 5 on Monday.

The result kept Keymer a point clear of nearest rival Arjun Erigaisi, who was also held to a draw by compatriot Pranav V. Erigaisi. Keymer and Arjun Erigaisi will play each other in a clash between the table toppers on day 6, with the latter starting with the white pieces.

Now in its third year, the Quantbox Chennai Grand Masters 2025 is India’s strongest classical chess event. Organised by MGD1, it features two elite 10-player round-robin sections—Masters and Challengers—across nine rounds in ten days. With a ₹1 Crore prize pool, the Masters winner earns ₹25 Lakhs, the Challengers winner ₹7 Lakhs and a coveted 2026 Masters berth. The event also offers FIDE Circuit points, with the Masters champion securing 24.5 toward 2026 Candidates qualification.

In the Masters section, Jorden van Foreest scored the only decisive result of the day, defeating American GM Ray Robson to go level on points with the latter at 2.0 apiece. Nihal Sarin drew with Awonder Liang, while Anish Giri split the point with Murali Karthikeyan in a balanced contest.

The Challengers section saw a remarkable sweep for the black pieces on the top boards, with leader GM Abhimanyu Puranik defeating GM Harika Dronavalli to extend his lead to a commanding full point. IM Harshavardhan GB scored a win with black by overcoming GM Vaishali Rameshbabu, while GM Leon Luke Mendonca held GM Pranesh M to a draw to remain in joint second. GM Iniyan Pa also split the point with GM Diptayan Ghosh.

- IANS

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Reader Comments

A
Ananya R
So proud to see Chennai becoming a chess hub! The organizers deserve credit for creating such a world-class event. Hope more cities follow this example.
P
Pranav D
The Challengers section is more exciting than Masters this year! Abhimanyu Puranik is showing great form. Hope he gets the Masters spot next year.
S
Sarah B
As someone new to chess, I'm amazed by the ₹1 Crore prize pool! India is really investing in chess talent. The coverage could be better though - wish there were more live streams with commentary.
K
Karthik V
Nihal Sarin's consistency is impressive. He's been drawing against strong opponents but needs to convert some wins to challenge for top spot. The next generation of Indian chess looks bright!
M
Michael C
Interesting to see how the FIDE Circuit points are making this tournament more significant. Keymer's lead is narrow - tomorrow's match could change everything!

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