Round 1 FIDE Candidates 2026 Report
Caruana, Sindarov and Praggnanandhaa strike early
The headline pairing of the opening round delivered the decisive result everyone hoped for. Fabiano Caruana (USA) exacted revenge on Hikaru Nakamura (USA), winning a tense, 52‑move battle to become the first leader of the 2026 Candidates. Caruana, playing white, chose the Catalan and slowly built pressure before forcing a decisive endgame error from his rival.
The victory was especially significant: Nakamura had won the last six decisive classical games between them. “I knew I had to play solidly and wait for my chance,” Caruana said after the game. “The endgame went my way today.” Nakamura, who looked uncomfortable in the queenless middlegame, admitted he was “a bit rusty” and vowed to bounce back in round 2.
Key moment: On move 41, Nakamura missed a defensive resource that would have held the rook endgame. Caruana’s precise technique did the rest.
The youngest player in the field, Javokhir Sindarov (UZB), made an immediate statement, defeating Andrey Esipenko (RUS) in just 36 moves. Sindarov, the reigning World Cup champion, unleashed a sharp Sicilian with the white pieces and never gave Esipenko a chance to stabilise.
Esipenko, known for his solidity, was out‑calculated in a tactical melee. “I felt good today,” Sindarov said with a smile. “I want to try to win every game, not just draw.” The Uzbek lion now sits on 1/1, level with Caruana and Praggnanandhaa.
Key moment: On move 22, Sindarov sacrificed a pawn to open the e‑file, and Esipenko’s defence crumbled under the pressure.
R Praggnanandhaa (IND) got his campaign off to the perfect start, beating Anish Giri (NED) in a 71‑move positional masterpiece. The 20‑year‑old Indian showed patience beyond his years, squeezing every drop of advantage from a closed Italian.
Giri, who entered with high hopes after winning the Grand Swiss, was visibly frustrated as Pragg slowly improved his position. “I didn’t take enough risks,” Giri admitted afterwards. Pragg, who finished fifth in the 2024 Candidates, said: “This is a good start. I need to keep pushing.”
Key moment: Pragg’s 46. g4! opened a second front on the kingside, and Giri’s passive pieces could not defend both wings.
The only draw of the round came on board three, where Wei Yi (CHN) and Matthias Blรผbaum (GER) split the point after a cautious 30‑move Berlin. Wei Yi, the pre‑tournament dark horse, chose a solid line with black, while Blรผbaum was content to keep the position closed.
Neither player ever looked in danger, and the game ended in a threefold repetition. “It’s a long tournament,” Wei Yi said afterwards. “A draw is not a bad result.” Blรผbaum, the surprise qualifier, was satisfied with his first point.
| Player | Points | Result |
|---|---|---|
| ๐บ๐ธ Fabiano Caruana | 1 | W vs Nakamura |
| ๐บ๐ฟ Javokhir Sindarov | 1 | W vs Esipenko |
| ๐ฎ๐ณ R Praggnanandhaa | 1 | W vs Giri |
| ๐จ๐ณ Wei Yi | 0.5 | Draw vs Blรผbaum |
| ๐ฉ๐ช Matthias Blรผbaum | 0.5 | Draw vs Wei Yi |
| ๐บ๐ธ Hikaru Nakamura | 0 | L vs Caruana |
| ๐ท๐บ Andrey Esipenko | 0 | L vs Sindarov |
| ๐ณ๐ฑ Anish Giri | 0 | L vs Praggnanandhaa |
Caruana, Sindarov and Praggnanandhaa share the early lead. Nakamura, Esipenko and Giri will need to recover quickly in a tournament where a slow start can be fatal.
Round 2 (Monday, 30 March) features the following pairings (colours reversed from the preview):
- Esipenko – Nakamura: Both need to bounce back after losses. Esipenko has white; Nakamura will be desperate to avoid 0/2.
- Giri – Caruana: Giri (0) faces the early leader Caruana (1). Can the Dutchman find his form?
- Wei Yi – Praggnanandhaa: A clash of two winners from round 1 (Wei Yi drew, Pragg won). Both are young, creative players – expect fireworks.
- Sindarov – Blรผbaum: Sindarov (1) takes on Blรผbaum (0.5). The Uzbek will look to continue his momentum.
All games begin at 15:30 local time. Follow the live broadcast on Lichess and the FIDE YouTube channel.
Comments
Post a Comment