Seven leading chess grandmasters, including Praggnanandhaa R and Fabiano Caruana, have issued an open letter urging organizers of the Grand Chess Tour and the Esports World Cup to resolve a major scheduling overlap in August 2026. The conflict involves key events from both series, making dual participation impossible for top players. The Grand Chess Tour has stated it cannot alter its dates due to prior commitments.
The chess community faces a significant challenge with overlapping dates for two prominent 2026 tournaments: the Grand Chess Tour (GCT) and the Esports World Cup (EWC) chess events. The GCT, a longstanding circuit co-founded by Garry Kasparov, announced its full 2026 schedule on October 3, 2025. This includes the Saint Louis Rapid & Blitz from July 31 to August 7, the Sinquefield Cup from August 8 to 21, and the GCT Finals from August 21 to 28.
In contrast, the EWC, which featured a chess event won by GM Magnus Carlsen in its 2025 debut, scheduled its chess portion with a Last Chance Qualifier from August 6 to 8 and the main event from August 11 to 15. These dates directly overlap with the GCT's Saint Louis Rapid & Blitz and Sinquefield Cup, preventing many players from competing in both.
On February 11, 2026, seven top grandmasters—Levon Aronian, Fabiano Caruana, Alireza Firouzja, Anish Giri, Vincent Keymer, Praggnanandhaa R, and Maxime Vachier-Lagrave—released an open letter expressing "serious concern" about the conflict. The letter states: "These are two of the most important tournaments on the calendar. A clash of this scale prevents many of the world’s best players from participating in both competitions."
The players noted that they had raised the issue with both organizers earlier but received no scheduling adjustments, and discussions have stalled. They emphasized: "Avoiding direct conflicts between flagship events is a basic principle in other professional sports, and chess should strive for the same standard. Resolving this situation is now the players’ clear and immediate priority."
The GCT responded firmly, stating: "Given our longstanding contractual commitments … it is not possible to move our August dates." Kasparov added: "The Grand Chess Tour has always represented the highest level of professional chess. What distinguishes the GCT is not only the strength of the field, but the integrity, tradition and global vision behind it."
The EWC offers substantial prizes, including a $1.5 million pool for chess, while the GCT circuit totals $2 million. This standoff highlights tensions between established chess traditions and emerging esports investments, with fans debating which event should yield.