FIDE World Cup Drama: Arjun, Pragga, Hari Head to Tense Tiebreaks

Three Indian chess stars have advanced to tiebreaks at the FIDE World Cup after drawing their fourth round games. Arjun Erigaisi played solidly against veteran Peter Leko, while Praggnanandhaa held his own against former world rapid champion Daniil Dubov. Harikrishna showed resilience by saving a difficult position against Sweden's Nils Grandelius. The trio will now face tense tiebreak matches to determine who advances to the Round of 16.

Key Points: Arjun Praggnanandhaa Harikrishna Advance to FIDE World Cup Tiebreaks

  • Arjun Erigaisi drew with Peter Leko in 36 moves after Nimzo Indian opening
  • Praggnanandhaa split points with Daniil Dubov in 30 moves
  • Harikrishna saved difficult position to force draw against Nils Grandelius
  • Martinez Alcantara first to advance after drawing Alexey Sarana
3 min read

FIDE World Cup 2025: Arjun, Pragga, Hari head to tiebreak in 4th round after drawing both games

Indian chess stars Arjun Erigaisi, R Praggnanandhaa and P Harikrishna draw fourth round games, head to tiebreaks at FIDE World Cup 2025 in Panaji.

"I am getting more and more in my preparations, and I wasn't really afraid of Arjun's opening line - Peter Leko"

Panaji, Nov 12

Grandmaster (GM) Arjun Erigaisi and GM Rameshbabu Praggnanandhaa played out solid draws while Pentala Harikrishna saved the day after finding himself in a difficult position to head into a tiebreak in the fourth round of the FIDE World Cup 2025 here on Wednesday.

Erigaisi accepted a draw after 36 moves against the experienced GM Peter Leko of Hungary with white pieces, Praggnanandhaa split the point after 30 moves against GM Daniil Dubov, while Harikrishna also drew after 38 moves with GM Nils Grandelius of Sweden.

GM Jose Eduardo Martinez Alcantara, who won with black pieces on Tuesday, became the first player to advance to the Round of 16 after he went for a threefold repetition and took a draw against GM Alexey Sarana in 20 moves. He will now face the winner of the match between Harikrishna and Grandelius.

Also advancing to the next round was two-time champion GM Levon Aronian after he drew the second game in 35 moves with black against GM Radoslaw Wojtaszek.

Among the five Indians in fray in the fourth round, all eyes were on Arjun and Praggnanandhaa on the top boards.

Erigaisi opted for the Nimzo Indian opening with white against Leko and looked like he was prepared quite well as he gained time on the clock after 16 moves. But the Hungarian defended resolutely, and the highest-ranked Indian opted to trade queens on the 20th move after thinking for 26 moves. He tried to push ahead thereafter but could not find a breakthrough.

"I am getting more and more in my preparations, and I wasn't really afraid (of Arjun's opening line). I knew that this b5 that I played is quite solid and there cannot be any miracle in this position. But over the board, when Arjun is blitzing all his moves, I know that there is always some pressure. But it was more or less equal all the time," said Leko after the match.

Praggnanandhaa was also satisfied with a draw in 30 moves with black against GM Daniil Dubov. The Indian will now start with black pieces against the former World Rapid Champion in the first game.

In the match between Harikrishna and Grandelius, the Indian looked under pressure despite playing white. But he kept it cool and forced a draw in a bishop-pawn endgame.

Meanwhile, world junior champion Pranav V., playing black, was knocked out of the tournament after he lost the second game against GM Nodirbek Yakubboev of Uzbekistan in 38 moves.

India results (Round 4, Game 2):

GM Arjun Erigaisi drew with GM Peter Leko (HUN) (1:1 aggregate)

GM Daniil Dubov (FID) drew with GM R Praggnanandhaa (1:1 aggregate)

GM P Harikrishna drew with GM Nils Grandelius (SWE) (1:1 aggregate)

GM Nodirbek Yakubboev (UZB) beat GM Pranav V. (1.5:0.5 aggregate)

GM Karthik Venkataraman lost to GM Le Quang Liem (VIE) (0.5:1.5 aggregate)

- IANS

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Reader Comments

P
Priya S
Hari's resilience was amazing today! Saving a difficult position shows his experience. Hope all three make it through the tiebreaks. Fingers crossed!
D
David E
As a chess enthusiast, I must say the draws were quite logical. Leko's assessment was spot on - solid positions with no miracles. Professional chess at its finest.
S
Shreya B
Sad to see Pranav V. and Karthik getting eliminated, but they fought well. The experience will help them in future tournaments. Chess is growing so well in India!
A
Arjun K
While the draws are respectable, I wish our players would take more risks in these positions. Sometimes playing safe doesn't pay off in knockout tournaments. Still, hoping for the best in tiebreaks!
M
Meera T
The way Pragga handled Dubov with black pieces was impressive. At just 19, he's competing with the world's best. What a talent we have in this generation!

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