All posts tagged: Abhijeet Gupta

Nihal Sarin bounces back with second straight win at Asian Chess Championship

Nihal Sarin bounces back with second straight win at Asian Chess Championship

India’s top seed Nihal Sarin returned to strong form with his second consecutive victory at the Asian Individual Chess Championship on Friday, moving into joint second place after three rounds. Facing Iran’s Reza Mahdevi with the white pieces, Nihal opted for the Queen’s Gambit and maintained a firm grip on the game from the outset. His dominance grew steadily through the middlegame, and he eventually converted the advantage into a smooth win in a minor piece endgame. The two bishops proved to be decisive for the 20-year-old Indian Grandmaster. With this result, Nihal now sits just behind Iran’s Baradiya Danehswar, who leads the tournament with a perfect 3/3 score. #Chess ♟️| R. Praggnanandhaa secured his first win of the tournament, propelling him to joint top of the leaderboard at the Superbet Chess Classic Romania 2025. Read:https://t.co/7j8EWserGB — The Bridge (@the_bridge_in) May 10, 2025 Among other Indians, L R Srihari impressed with a solid performance against former World Junior Champion Abhijeet Gupta. Meanwhile, P Iniyan and Murali Karthikeyan remain in contention to finish in the top …

Can India’s NextGen of chess players live upto the expectations in the era of Gukesh and Praggnannandhaa | Chess News

Can India’s NextGen of chess players live upto the expectations in the era of Gukesh and Praggnannandhaa | Chess News

In the span of a heady few hours for Indian chess on Friday, there were twin coronations. In Petrovac, Montenegro, 18-year-old Pranav Venkatesh became the world junior champion a few hours after Aravindh Chithambaram won the Prague Masters event in Czechia. It was another sign that the next wave of Indian gunslingers was already arriving on the scene, even while the world is still gawking at names like D. Gukesh, Arjun Erigaisi, R. Praggnanandhaa and Vidit Gujrathi. “Obviously, we were very optimistic about Indian chess some months ago. But if players like Aravindh and Pranav Venkatesh join the party, then of course that’s great for us,” Viswanathan Anand declared after Pranav’s victory. Story continues below this ad Pranav’s victory at the World Junior Chess Championship came a year after Divya Deshmukh had won the equivalent girls’ title. After Anand, India struggled to produce a steady stream of super-elite chess talents. For a brief period, Pentala Harikrishna and later Vidit kept India relevant in elite chess, but such exceptional players remained rare. The era dominated by …