Illustration depicting FIDE's correction of chess ratings list error, crossing out Sergey Karjakin from top 10 and promoting D Gukesh.
Illustration depicting FIDE's correction of chess ratings list error, crossing out Sergey Karjakin from top 10 and promoting D Gukesh.
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FIDE removes Sergey Karjakin from March 2026 ratings top 10 after brief error displacing world champion Gukesh

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The International Chess Federation (FIDE) apologized and swiftly removed Russian grandmaster Sergey Karjakin from its March 2026 classical ratings list, where he had briefly appeared at No. 10 due to an unregistered tournament and games, displacing world champion D Gukesh to 11th. The incident reignited debates over Karjakin's exclusion from chess since his 2022 ban for supporting Russia's invasion of Ukraine.

FIDE's March 2026 classical ratings, released over the weekend, initially listed 36-year-old Sergey Karjakin at world No. 10 with 2750 Elo, pushing India's reigning champion D Gukesh Dommaraju (2748) to No. 11 and excluding Indians from the top 10. Magnus Carlsen remained No. 1 at 2840. The anomaly stemmed from an oversight approving the 'Russian Chess Crown' tournament—breaching registration rules under Article 0.2.1—plus two private rated games in Moscow where Karjakin defeated an 8-year-old opponent rated 1549. Karjakin posted 'Surprise!😉' on X before FIDE acted.

FIDE's Qualification Commission deleted the event and games, restoring Gukesh to No. 10 and reverting Karjakin to inactive status, as he has been since 2022 for lack of rated events. The Russian flag also erroneously appeared on FIDE pages, violating neutral status rules for Russians. 'Due to an oversight in the approval process, the Russian Chess Crown match was included... in breach of regulations,' FIDE stated. 'Sergey Karjakin’s status has been changed to inactive, and he has been removed from the list of active players.' The federation apologized and pledged process improvements amid ties to its December 2025 General Assembly easing some Russian restrictions.

Social media erupted in outrage, with critics demanding a lifetime ban: 'Outrageous: @FIDE_chess reinstated 🇷🇺 chess player Sergey Karjakin... due to his insanely active support of 🇷🇺 invasion of 🇺🇦.' The episode underscores persistent chess-politics tensions.

Born in 1990 in Simferopol, Crimea, to a lower middle-class family, Karjakin emerged as a prodigy, training at Ukraine's Kramatorsk chess school—a talent factory. He became the youngest grandmaster ever at age 12 in 2002, holding the record for 19 years until Abhimanyu Mishra surpassed it in 2021; at 12, he placed second to then-youngest world champion Ruslan Ponomariov. Confident, he predicted world champion status by 16.

His family sacrificed jobs and relocated over 1,000 km to Kramatorsk for his training. 'We had to leave our jobs and move to Kramatorsk. That was a hard decision... We sacrificed everything so that he could become world champion,' his father Alexander said in the documentary Sergey by Alexander Turpin. His mother Tatyana cited a lack of grandmasters and support in Crimea. Trainer Alexander Alexikov called him 'a dragon that eats everything,' training nine hours daily. The school closed when Karjakin was 13, prompting a return to Simferopol without support until age 19, when the family accepted Russian citizenship to boost his career.

Karjakin earned a world title shot in 2016 against Carlsen, forcing a tie-break, but a decade past his prediction. In 2022, FIDE banned him six months for pro-Russia statements on the Ukraine invasion. He boycotted neutral-flag events, backed military efforts and chess in occupied areas, lost elite invites like Norway Chess, faced EU sanctions in 2025, ran unsuccessfully for Russian Chess Federation president, received the 'For Merit to the Fatherland' medal, and became a senator in Russian-controlled Crimea's parliament since September 2024.

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X users expressed outrage over Sergey Karjakin's brief top 10 return, citing his support for Russia's Ukraine invasion, with calls for permanent ban from Ukrainian players and coaches. Relief followed FIDE's correction restoring Gukesh to top 10, celebrated by Indian accounts. Karjakin mocked the reversal, while neutral reports noted the administrative error.

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World chess champion D. Gukesh intensely plays rapid chess at Grand Chess Tour, focusing on training by skipping classical events.
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World champion Gukesh limits Grand Chess Tour to rapid and blitz events

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Reigning world chess champion D. Gukesh announced he will participate only in the rapid and blitz tournaments in Warsaw and Zagreb during the 2026 Grand Chess Tour. Citing recent poor form, the 19-year-old Indian grandmaster plans to skip longer events away from home to focus on training. Grand Chess Tour organizers approved his request and named Javokhir Sindarov as his replacement for the full tour.

Twenty-year-old Uzbek grandmaster Javokhir Sindarov dominated the 2026 FIDE Candidates Tournament in Cyprus, securing victory with a round to spare and earning a world championship match against reigning champion Gukesh Dommaraju. In the women's event, India's Vaishali Rameshbabu clinched the title on the final day despite starting as the lowest seed. The tournaments highlighted the rise of young talents from India and Uzbekistan.

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Javokhir Sindarov returned home to Uzbekistan as a national hero after winning the 2026 FIDE Candidates Tournament. Magnus Carlsen and Fabiano Caruana offered predictions favoring Sindarov in his upcoming world championship match against Gukesh Dommaraju. Both highlighted Sindarov's strengths while noting Gukesh's potential to rebound.

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