How D Gukesh fought back from a tough position against Hans Niemann at Prague Masters


World champion D Gukesh has begun his campaign at the Prague International Chess Festival Masters with back-to-back draws, surviving a tough phase against Hans Niemann and holding the American GM to a hard-fought draw in the first of those.

D Gukesh began his campaign at the 2026 Prague Chess Festival Masters with back-to-back draws, having to fight his way to safety against American Grandmaster Hans Niemann in the first of those on Wednesday. The reigning Classical world champion is known for his fighting spirit and never-say-die attitude, and it was that fighting spirit that helped Gukesh rescue half-a-point against Niemann.

How Gukesh survived against Niemann

Niemann, a late replacement for Czech GM Thai Dai van Nguyen, had pushed Gukesh on the backfoot by sacrificing his knight in the 13th move (13.f4 Nxd3) after the game developed from a Berlin Defense opening. The American piled pressure on Gukesh by pushing his queen forward (14. Qxd3) and later putting his bishop in a dangerous position (15. Ba6).

Gukesh, however, is someone who is known to thrive in difficult situations with his ability to remain calm and calculate his way to safety or a position of strength. After a Queen exchange in the 18th move, the 19-year-old – who also had the advantage of playing as white – Gukesh continued to hold fort and resisted whatever curveballs Niemann attempted to throw at him.

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In the end, the two played out a 62-move draw that concluded with a rook endgame. It was the only stalemate in the opening round, with each of the other boards witnessing a victory for white.

Gukesh’s second-round meeting with Tata Steel Chess winner Nodirbek Abdusattorov, however, was nowhere near as dramatic, with the two players shaking hands in just 30 moves from an Indian Game opening.

The Uzbekistani GM wasn’t quite able to put the world champion under pressure the way Niemann had in the previous round, with the eval bar remaining on level terms throughout.

Aravindh opens account with a victory

Niemann, meanwhile, was in for a setback in the second round after losing to Gukesh’s compatriot Aravindh Chithambaram despite playing as white. Aravindh, who had won the Prague Masters in dominant fashion last year, ceded control to his opponent after committing a couple of errors (20. h6 and 28. Ne4).

The 26-year-old, however, was quick to turn the tide in his favour after Niemann produced a blunder with his bishop (31.  Bd3) that was followed by more errors, with the American eventually raising the white flag of surrender after 53 moves.

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Prague Chess Festival: Gukesh faces tough challenge as he eyes first success of the year


Prague Chess Festival: Gukesh faces tough challenge as he eyes first success of the year

File photo of D. Gukesh
| Photo Credit: PTI

After an early exit from the World Cup and an underwhelming performance at the Tata Steel Masters, world champion D Gukesh would be eyeing a turnaround when he spearheads India’s challenge in the Prague International Chess festival starting in Prague on Wednesday (February 25, 2026).

Seeded second in a young elite field, Gukesh will have his task cut out against the likes of top-seeded German Vincent Keymer and Uzbek Nodirbek Abdusattorov who are both currently performing better than him if results in the past few events are anything to go by.

Keymer, ranked fourth globally in live ratings, is just ahead of Abdusattorov while Gukesh, ranked 10th, is the highest-rated Indian.

It wasn’t too long ago when there were as many as three Indians in the top-10 but Arjun Erigaisi, and R Praggnanandhaa have both dropped down recently, allowing Gukesh, who has been consistent if not at his best, to be the new India number one in live rankings.

Giving Gukesh company as a fellow Indian will be defending champion Aravindh Chithambaram. This is the event that gave the Chennai-based player his first big breakthrough.

Abdusattorov, fresh from his maiden triumph at the Tata Steel Masters, will be the people’s favourite to add another title while Keymer can be relied upon to give everyone a run for their money.

Hans Niemann of the USA is another player everyone will have to gun for as he has proved his detractors wrong time and again.

Parham Maghsoodloo of Iran is also there, trying to carve a niche for himself in top level chess while Dutch Grandmaster Jorden van Foreest would go in as Mr Consistent despite his low appearance in strong tournaments.

Seeded seventh is Chithambaram, who will look forward to walking back in the 2700 rating club, after a sub-par performance in the Tata event. Chithambaram faces an uphill task for an encore here.

Nodirbek Yakubboev of Uzbekistan, David Anton Gujjaro of Spain and local star David Navarra complete the 10-player line-up for the nine-round Masters competition.

In the challengers section, Surya Shekhar Ganguly will spearhead the Indian challenge along with Women’s World Cup winner Divya Deshmukh.

Benjamin Gledura of Hungary starts as the top seed in this section ahead of Jonas Buhl Bjerre of Denmark.