Indian Chess Stars Shine at World Cup: Pranav, Arjun Win with Black Pieces

Indian chess stars made a strong start in the FIDE World Cup 2025 second round. World junior champion V Pranav and GM Arjun Erigaisi both scored impressive victories playing with black pieces against tough opponents. Vidit Gujrathi faced a major scare against 12-year-old Argentinian prodigy Faustino Oro but managed to salvage a draw under time pressure. The tournament features 206 players from 82 countries competing for the prestigious Viswanathan Anand Cup.

Key Points: Pranav Arjun Win FIDE World Cup Games Vidit Survives Oro Scare

  • World junior champion V Pranav defeats Norway's GM Aryan Tari in 41 moves with black pieces
  • GM Arjun Erigaisi beats Martin Petrov in 37 moves despite spirited Bulgarian resistance
  • Vidit Gujrathi survives time pressure to draw against 12-year-old Argentinian prodigy Faustino Oro
  • Seventeen Indian players competing in Round 2 with eight top-50 players starting campaigns
3 min read

FIDE World Cup 2025: World junior champion V Pranav, GM Arjun Erigaisi win with black; Vidit survives Oro scare

World junior champion V Pranav and GM Arjun Erigaisi score impressive wins with black pieces, while Vidit Gujrathi survives scare against 12-year-old prodigy Faustino Oro in FIDE World Cup 2025.

"Today, it was an interesting game. It was a tense middle game battle, but starting from b4, he started to drift a bit, and I think I managed to make full use of it - GM Arjun Erigaisi"

Panaji, Nov 4

World Junior Champion V. Pranav and the highest-rated Indian GM Arjun Erigasi pounced on the error from their respective opponents to win with black pieces while Vidit Gujrathi survived a scare against the tournament's youngest player in the first game of Round 2 in the FIDE World Cup 2025 here on Tuesday.

In a battle of two young stars, Pranav defeated Norway's GM Aryan Tari in 41 moves, while Arjun got the better of Martin Petrov of Bulgaria in 37 moves and will be the favourites to advance as they play white in the second game.

The FIDE World Cup 2025 is played as a single-elimination knock-out tournament with 206 players from 82 countries vying for the coveted Viswanathan Anand Cup, named after the Indian legend.

A total of 17 Indian players are in the fray in Round 2, with eight of them, ranked among the top-50, starting their campaign after a bye in the opening round.

Arjun was the first among them to bag the full point despite a spirited fight from Petrov. The Indian kept up the pressure in the middle game and then took advantage of the Bulgarian's slightly erroneous move to win the game.

"Today, it was an interesting game. It was a tense middle game battle, but starting from b4, he started to drift a bit, and I think I managed to make full use of it," said Arjun after the match.

On another board, Aryan Tari and Pranav were locked in a dodged battle before the former opened up the board for the Indian on the 40th move by advancing his pawn on g4, and Pranav went for the kill.

While Arjun and Pranav celebrated a win, Vidit did well to dig himself out of the time pressure hole to split points against Argentinian prodigy IM Faustino Oro. The 31-year-old, playing white, Indian, had just 38 minutes on the clock after 11 moves and looked under pressure as his 12-year-old opponent played with confidence.

However, Oro tried to play it safe by moving his rook away from the attacking line, allowing Vidit to save the day and draw by repetition after 28 moves, and will now be the favourites to advance to the next round as they play white in the second game.

Among other Indians in the fray, GM Diptayan Ghosh did well to hold the experienced GM Ian Nepomniachtchi to a draw with white pieces, while GM Gukesh D, GM R Praggnanandhaa, GM P Harikrishna, and GM Narayanan SL also split the point with their respective opponents.

Indian results (Round 2, Game 1)

GM Gukesh D drew with GM Nogerbek Kazybek (KAZ) 0.5-0.5; GM Martin Petrov (BUL) lost to GM Arjun Erigaisi 0-1; GM R Praggnanandhaa drew with GM Temur Kuybokarov (AUS) 0.5:0.5; GM Maxime Vachier-Lagrave (FRA) bt GM Surya Shekhar Ganguly 1-0; GM Diptayan Ghosh drew with GM Ian Nepomniachtchi (FID) 0.5:0.5; GM Levon Aronian (USA) bt IM Aronyak Ghosh 1-0; GM Vidit Gujrathi drew with IM Faustino Oro (ARG) 0.5:0.5; GM Karthik Venkataraman drew with GM Aravindh Chithambaram 0.5:0.5; GM Arseniy Nesterov (FID) drew with GM P Harikrishna 0.5:0.5; GM Thai Dai Van Nguyen (CZE) drew with GM Iniyan P 0.5:0.5; GM Narayanan SL drew with GM Nikita Vitiugov (ENG) 0.5:0.5; GM Dmitrij Kollars (GER) drew with GM Pranesh M 0.5:0.5; GM Aryan Tari (NOR) lost to GM Pranav V 0-1; GM Robert Hovhannisyan (ARM) drew with GM Raunak Sadhwani 0.5:0.5.

- IANS

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Reader Comments

R
Rohit P
Vidit's escape against the 12-year-old prodigy Oro was nerve-wracking! Time pressure almost cost him, but experience prevailed. Hope he finishes the job in the second game.
S
Sarah B
As someone new to following chess, I'm impressed by how many Indian players are competing at this level. The depth of talent is incredible!
A
Arjun K
While the wins are great, I'm concerned about Surya Ganguly's loss. We need our experienced players to step up too. The competition is getting tougher every year.
M
Michael C
The Anand Cup is such a fitting tribute to our chess legend! Would be amazing to see an Indian lift the trophy named after him. Go team India!
K
Kavya N
Diptayan Ghosh holding Nepomniachtchi to a draw is a massive result! That's the kind of fighting spirit we need. Hope all our players bring their A-game in the second round.

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