Indian grandmaster Arjun Erigaisi defeated world number one Magnus Carlsen in a classification game during the FIDE Freestyle Chess World Championship in Weissenhaus, Germany. Despite the victory, Erigaisi finished sixth in the round-robin stage and missed the semifinals. The match highlighted Erigaisi's aggressive pawn strategy in Chess960 position 277.
The FIDE Freestyle Chess World Championship 2026 took place at Schloss Weissenhaus in Germany, featuring a round-robin stage with eight elite players to determine the four semifinalists. On Friday, February 13, 2026, Arjun Erigaisi faced Magnus Carlsen in the sixth round. Erigaisi, playing white, secured a win in 28 moves, marking Carlsen's only loss in the league phase where the Norwegian scored 4.5 out of 7 points to top the standings.
Erigaisi remained the only player without a draw, winning against Carlsen, Vincent Keymer, and Javokhir Sindarov while losing his other four games, ending with 3 points in sixth place. Carlsen, Keymer, Fabiano Caruana, and Nodirbek Abdusattorov advanced to the semifinals, each with at least 4 points. The game used Chess960 starting position 277, with bishops on the kingside corners.
Before the match, Erigaisi skipped the white players' discussion table, while Carlsen, with black, remarked to others that the position seemed undangerous. However, Erigaisi troubled Carlsen from the second move, falling behind on the clock early. For the first 10 moves, Erigaisi moved only pawns, advancing them toward Carlsen's position in what commentator Judit Polgar called a 'pawn war.' By move seven, chess engines favored Erigaisi significantly.
Polgar commented on the broadcast, 'This is a position that you don’t even want to get in your nightmares,' adding, 'These are the positions that you want to make a good move and then resign because you don’t want to suffer longer.' Peter Leko added, 'You won’t even wish it upon your biggest enemy. This is a horror.'
This victory came less than two months after Carlsen's frustrated reaction to losing to Erigaisi at the FIDE World Rapid and Blitz Championship. Carlsen had previously called Erigaisi the 'mad man' of chess in an interview. Semifinals were scheduled for the following day, with Erigaisi set for classification matches.