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Gukesh Heads Field In London As Classic Event Returns In December

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Gukesh Heads Field In London As Classic Event Returns In December

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The London Chess Classic will return with its 13th edition this December in a field headed by Indian prodigy GM Gukesh Dommaraju. The event could potentially be decisive for the 18-year-old’s hunt for a Candidates spot.

The return of the flagship event was announced by IM Malcolm Pein‘s Chess in Schools and Communities on Thursday, just two weeks before the first move is scheduled to be made at a location in central London on December 1.

The London Chess Classic returns to its traditional format with a 10-player round-robin for the first time since 2017. That event was won by GM Fabiano Caruana who edged out GM Ian Nepomniachtchi after a blitz playoff. In 2018 and 2019, the tournament was a four-player event serving as a final for the Grand Chess Tour. The Chess Classic returned in 2021 during the World Championship match in Dubai and featured a match between England and the Rest of the World.














Player Title Country World Rank Rating
Dommaruju Gukesh GM India 12 2746
Nikita Vitiugov GM England 31 2712
Amin Tabatabaei GM Iran 42 2694
Mickey Adams GM England 62 2670
Andrei Volokitin GM Ukraine 77 2660
Hans Niemann GM USA 79 2659
Mateusz Bartel GM Poland 89 2651
Jules Moussard GM France 105 2639
Luke McShane GM England 131 2626
Shreyas Royal IM England 1765 2404

The Field

While the 13th edition is weaker than most of the former editions, it’s bound to attract plenty of interest anyway. In 2023, the event is back to the original format from 2009 in a field headed by Gukesh ahead of England’s new number one, GM Nikita Vitiugov, who just made his debut for England in the ongoing European Team Championship in Montenegro after completing his transfer from Russia.

His teammates there will join him in London, such as the newly crowned World Senior Champion GM Michael Adams and England’s former number-one GM Luke McShane. Britain’s 14-year-old rising star IM Shreyas Royal will also get his debut at this level, facing some of the world’s top players in what will be a great learning experience for the youngster.

The field is completed by grandmasters who tend to lack invitations for high-level closed events but remain among the world’s 100 top-ranked players: GM Amin Tabatabaei, GM Andrei Volokitin, GM Hans Niemann, GM Mateusz Bartel, and GM Jules Moussard.

Can Gukesh Qualify For The Candidates?

But likely all eyes will be on Gukesh, who is currently in the race for one of the last two spots in the prestigious Candidates tournament next year through his performance in the FIDE Circuit, which determines who gets a shot at challenging reigning World Champion GM Ding Liren.

GM Anish Giri, who will play in the Sinquefield Cup starting next week, is his main rival as circuit leader GM Fabiano Caruana already qualified through the FIDE World Cup. GM Wesley So also has a shot with a good finish in St. Louis.

“If neither of Wesley or Anish come out of St. Louis with higher scores than Giri has now, then Gukesh could take pole position by winning London,” chess statistician Tai Pruce-Zimmerman tells Chess.com.

Pruce-Zimmerman maintains ChessNumbers on X/Twitter, an account dedicated to tracking statistics in top-level chess, and follows the Candidates race closely for Chess.com.

“And even if winning London doesn’t get him into first, it might close the gap enough for him to be in more realistic striking distance at the World Rapids,” he says, adding: “Now if London had gotten one or both of Erigaisi/Abdusattorov, then it would have had way more potential to influence the Candidates.”

If Gukesh wins in London, he will get around 17.7 points, while he needs 17.03 to catch Giri’s current mark. Pruce-Zimmerman says Giri likely needs to finish within the top-five in the Sinquefield Cup to make London irrelevant.

The London Chess Classic takes place from December 1 to 10, with a rest day on December 6. The first prize is £15,000 (around $18,600).  The event will be played with a time control of 40 moves in 90 minutes plus 30 minutes for the remainder of the game, with a 30-second increment from move one.



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