Gukesh snaps winless run at Prague Masters with victory in final round as impressive Aravindh finishes joint-second


D Gukesh concluded his underwhelming campaign at the Prague International Chess Festival on a somewhat happy note, defeating Spain’s David Anton Guijarro in the ninth and final round to snap his winless run.

D Gukesh finally snapped his winless run at the Prague International Chess Festival on Friday, signing off from the tournament with a victory over Spain’s David Anton Guijarro in the ninth and final round of the Masters section. Aravindh Chithambaram, meanwhile, continued to impress as he finished joint-second in the standings with a victory over Czech Grandmaster David Navara.

Friday’s fixtures marked the conclusion of what was another forgettable campaign for Indian chess star Gukesh, whose performance graph has
witnessed a sharp decline since he had been crowned the youngest world champion in December 2024.

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How Gukesh collected his first win in Prague

The 19-year-old, after all, had
failed to win a single game in the previous eight rounds, suffering three defeats along the way including against compatriot Aravindh as well as world No 5 Nodirbek Abdusattorov. The struggling champion was additionally dealing with the challenge of playing as black against Guijarro in his quest to sign off with a victory.

The Chennai lad, however, appeared to regain his form and was far more accurate compared to the Spaniard on the day. While the two players were largely on level terms for the first 40 moves with Guijarro also leading Gukesh on the clock, it was the latter’s accuracy that proved to be the difference.

Gukesh was quick to capitalise on a couple of errors late in the game and began breathing down his opponent’s neck in a rook and bishop endgame, forcing a resignation in 56 moves in the end.

Gukesh and Guijarro finished at the bottom of the table with 3.5 points each, the latter concluding his campaign with a hat-trick of defeats.

Aravind wins error-strewn game to finish joint-second

Aravindh, who had won this event last year, defeated Navara while playing as white in a game that witnessed both players make commit blunders along the way. The 26-year-old, however, put the veteran Czech GM under considerable pressure, chipping away at all of his pieces and eventually knocking every single black pawn off the board.

With a three-pawn advantage and a knight to block a rook, it was only a matter of time before Aravindh walked away with a fourth win in nine outings and a second on the trot, and he eventually did in 64 moves.

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Nodirbek, meanwhile, was crowned champion, finishing as the undisputed leader with 6 points in nine rounds after collecting three wins – including against Gukesh and Aravindh – and six draws. It’s the second consecutive trophy for the Uzbekistani GM, who had won the prestigious Tata Steel Chess just last month.

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