Zagreb Grand Chess Tour: Firouzja Leads Blitz; Pragg, Gukesh Slide
Digital Desk
Alireza Firouzja dominates the blitz section at the Zagreb Grand Chess Tour with 8/9 points. India's Praggnanandhaa and Gukesh slide down after tough losses.
France’s Alireza Firouzja produced an extraordinarily dominant performance on the penultimate day of the Croatian leg of the Grand Chess Tour, blowing the field apart in the blitz section. Shifting gears from his joint-lead status in the rapid rounds, Firouzja completely took control of the faster format to emerge as the runaway sole leader of the tournament.
A Record-Breaking Blitiz Run
Firouzja systematically dismantled his opponents, securing an astonishing 8 points out of a possible 9 in the first half of the blitz section. His masterclass has left him on a total of 20 points—opening up a massive three-point cushion over his closest competitors.
Grand Chess Tour Standings (After 9 Rapid & 9 Blitz Rounds): โโโ 1. Alireza Firouzja (FRA) : 20.0 pts (Sole Leader) โโโ 2. Nodirbek Abdusattorov (UZB) : 17.0 pts โโโ 3. Maxime Vachier-Lagrave (FRA) : 17.0 pts โโโ 4. R Praggnanandhaa (IND) : 15.5 pts Half the competitive field is now drifting at least seven points behind Firouzja, making his run one of the most utterly superior displays in Grand Chess Tour history.
Rough Day for the Indian Contingent
While Indian Grandmaster R Praggnanandhaa shared the tournament lead with Firouzja heading into the day, he suffered a severe drop in momentum during the blitz format. After opening cleanly with a win over Germany's Vincent Keymer and a draw against Dutchman Anish Giri, Praggnanandhaa lost his thread entirely, dropping four consecutive games. He finished the grueling day with a net score of just 3.5 points out of nine, sliding to a distant fourth place overall at 15.5 points.
Concurrently, reigning world champion D Gukesh faced a similarly average outing. Hampered by a patch of four losses, Gukesh managed only 4 points out of nine on the day, placing him fifth in the standings with 13.5 points. With 9 rounds of blitz left on the final day, Praggnanandhaa retains a mathematical shot at a podium finish for the $200,000 prize fund if he recovers his rapid-round form.
--------
๐จ Beat the News Rush โ Join Now!
Get breaking alerts, hot exclusives, and game-changing stories instantly on your phone. No delays, no fluff โ just the edge you need. โก
Tap to join:ย
๐ข WhatsApp Channel: Dainik Jagran MP CG
Crave more?
๐ Facebook: Dainik Jagran MP CG English
๐ ง Twitter (X): Dainik Jagran MP CG
๐ Instagram: Dainik Jagran MP CG
Share the fire โ keep your crew ahead! ๐๏ธ๐ฅ
Zagreb Grand Chess Tour: Firouzja Leads Blitz; Pragg, Gukesh Slide
Digital Desk
France’s Alireza Firouzja produced an extraordinarily dominant performance on the penultimate day of the Croatian leg of the Grand Chess Tour, blowing the field apart in the blitz section. Shifting gears from his joint-lead status in the rapid rounds, Firouzja completely took control of the faster format to emerge as the runaway sole leader of the tournament.
A Record-Breaking Blitiz Run
Firouzja systematically dismantled his opponents, securing an astonishing 8 points out of a possible 9 in the first half of the blitz section. His masterclass has left him on a total of 20 points—opening up a massive three-point cushion over his closest competitors.
Grand Chess Tour Standings (After 9 Rapid & 9 Blitz Rounds): โโโ 1. Alireza Firouzja (FRA) : 20.0 pts (Sole Leader) โโโ 2. Nodirbek Abdusattorov (UZB) : 17.0 pts โโโ 3. Maxime Vachier-Lagrave (FRA) : 17.0 pts โโโ 4. R Praggnanandhaa (IND) : 15.5 pts Half the competitive field is now drifting at least seven points behind Firouzja, making his run one of the most utterly superior displays in Grand Chess Tour history.
Rough Day for the Indian Contingent
While Indian Grandmaster R Praggnanandhaa shared the tournament lead with Firouzja heading into the day, he suffered a severe drop in momentum during the blitz format. After opening cleanly with a win over Germany's Vincent Keymer and a draw against Dutchman Anish Giri, Praggnanandhaa lost his thread entirely, dropping four consecutive games. He finished the grueling day with a net score of just 3.5 points out of nine, sliding to a distant fourth place overall at 15.5 points.
Concurrently, reigning world champion D Gukesh faced a similarly average outing. Hampered by a patch of four losses, Gukesh managed only 4 points out of nine on the day, placing him fifth in the standings with 13.5 points. With 9 rounds of blitz left on the final day, Praggnanandhaa retains a mathematical shot at a podium finish for the $200,000 prize fund if he recovers his rapid-round form.
