Carlsen tops group stage at FIDE Freestyle Chess World Championship

Grandmaster Magnus Carlsen scored 4.5 out of 7 points to lead the group stage of the 2026 FIDE Freestyle Chess World Championship in Weissenhaus, Germany. He chose GM Nodirbek Abdusattorov as his semifinal opponent, with GM Vincent Keymer set to face GM Fabiano Caruana. The top four advance to the knockout phase, while the others compete for fifth through eighth places.

The 2026 FIDE Freestyle Chess World Championship began on February 13 at the Weissenhaus Private Nature Luxury Resort in Germany, featuring an eight-player round-robin at a 10+5 time control in the freestyle chess variant. Only the top four players qualify for the title battle, with a $300,000 prize fund and $100,000 for first place. The group stage concluded with just one point separating first from fifth, ensuring high stakes throughout.

Carlsen, the current FIDE rapid and blitz champion, expressed enthusiasm for the cut-throat format: "I like the fact that it’s cut-throat and it’s not going to be easy to come through for anybody!" He started with a draw against GM Hans Niemann after spoiling a winning position, then secured a victory over GM Javokhir Sindarov when the opponent blundered into a mate-in-4. Carlsen drew with GM Levon Aronian after turning a losing position around, held an intense 87-move draw against Keymer, and won impressively against Caruana in what was described as "endgame magic" by GM Judit Polgar. A rare loss came against GM Arjun Erigaisi in an extraordinary game where Erigaisi made nine pawn moves before capturing a pawn to win. Carlsen recovered with a draw against Abdusattorov to claim sole first.

Keymer, Caruana, and Abdusattorov joined him on 4/7, each with three wins and two losses. Keymer defeated Aronian, Niemann, and Caruana but lost to Sindarov in the final round. Caruana won against Abdusattorov, Niemann, and Erigaisi, despite losses to Carlsen and Keymer. Abdusattorov bounced back from defeats, notably beating Sindarov spectacularly.

Erigaisi, Niemann, Sindarov, and Aronian finished lower. Aronian scored 2/7, attributing it to lack of practice: "I’m just out of practice—I haven’t played for two months and this is the result." He added, "I love the game, I love playing, I don’t care if I’m playing for winning or playing for fifth place, it doesn't matter."

Semifinals on February 14 start at 9 a.m. ET, featuring four 25+10 games per match, with armageddon if tied.

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Magnus Carlsen, Ian Nepomniachtchi, Hans Niemann and 16 others hold perfect 3/3 scores after three rounds of the Grenke Chess Freestyle Open in Karlsruhe, Germany. Top grandmasters navigated tense battles in Chess960 format, with notable wins by female players Harika Dronavalli and Meruert Kamalidenova. Round four begins Saturday at 10:00 CEST.

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Grandmasters Magnus Carlsen, Vincent Keymer, and Nodirbek Abdusattorov top the field for the Grenke Freestyle Chess Open, set for April 2-6 in Karlsruhe, Germany. The event, part of the Grenke Chess Festival, features 14 players rated over 2700 and a €215,000 prize fund. Carlsen returns as defending champion after his perfect 9/9 score last year.

Grandmaster Vincent Keymer claimed victory in Chess.com's Freestyle Friday tournament on March 27, scoring 8.5 out of 11 points and prevailing on tiebreaks. Five players matched his score, but connection problems cost Nodirbek Yakubboev the title in the final round. Hans Niemann finished third, while Iniyan Paneerselvam took fourth after defeating Keymer.

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