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Grenke Freestyle Chess Open

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Grenke Freestyle Chess Open
Magnus Carlsen, the winner of the Grenke Freestyle Chess Open
Tournament information
SportChess variant (Chess960)
LocationKarlsruhe, Germany
DatesApril 17–21, 2025
Tournament
format(s)
9-round Swiss-system tournament
Host(s)Schachzentrum Baden-Baden
Freestyle Chess Operations
VenueKongresszentrum Karlsruhe
Participants574
Final positions
ChampionNorway Magnus Carlsen
Runner-upIran Parham Maghsoodloo
3rd placeGermany Frederik Svane and
FIDE Andrey Esipenko

The Grenke Freestyle Chess Open was an open Chess960 tournament. It took place from 17 April to 21 April 2025 in Karlsruhe, Germany. It was held concurrently with the Grenke Chess Open as part of the annual Grenke Chess Festival, supplanting the former round-robin Grenke Chess Classic.[1][2][3] It was a part of the Freestyle Chess Grand Slam Tour, a series of Chess960 tournaments being held throughout 2025.

Magnus Carlsen won the tournament with a perfect score, winning all nine of his games.[4] Seven players tied for second place, with Parham Maghsoodloo finishing second with the best tiebreak score. The winner was set to qualify to the Las Vegas Freestyle Chess Grand Slam. Since Carlsen had already qualified from a previous event, the spot was awarded to Maghsoodloo.[5]

Background

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In 2024, the traditional Grenke Chess Festival returned after a five-year hiatus. The invitational "Classic" tournament was won by Magnus Carlsen, while the Open, which was held concurrently, was won by Hans Niemann, who thereby qualified for the 2025 Classic.[6]

On February 13, 2025, the organizers of the Festival and the Freestyle Chess Grand Slam Tour, a series of Chess960 tournaments being held throughout 2025, announced that a Chess960 open would be held in place of the Grenke Chess Classic. The new open is part of the Grand Slam Tour, with the top ten finishers scoring tour points, and the winner qualifying for the upcoming Las Vegas Grand Slam.[7][1][2]

As part of the cooperation, Niemann, who had previously qualified for the now-cancelled Classic, was given a wild card invite to the Paris Grand Slam to compensate.[8] He controversially withdrew from that tournament at the last minute without explanation, leading to doubts about his potential participation in Grenke. He ultimately did arrive to play in the Freestyle Open.[9]

Format

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Qualification

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As an open tournament, any interested chess player can participate. Players are distributed into three sections according to their classical FIDE Elo rating number and their German DWZ rating number.[1][10]

  • Freestyle Open A: FIDE Elo or DWZ > 1950
  • Freestyle Open B: FIDE Elo and DWZ < 2000
  • Freestyle Open C: FIDE Elo < 1600 and DWZ < 1400

As of 10 April 2025, 466 players have registered with 251 of them playing in the Freestyle Open A section.[11]

Tournament

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In each of the three sections, a 9-round Swiss-system tournament will be held. For each round, a random position from the 960 possible starting positions of Chess960 is drawn, which all the games in that round will use, excluding the standard chess starting position. A position that is drawn in one round is be excluded for all subsequent rounds. All games use a time control of 90 minutes with an increment of 30 seconds per move.[10]

Before rounds 2-5, any player may switch from the Grenke Chess Open to the Freestyle Open, with points from the former tournament carried over.[10]

Prize money and grand slam points for the Freestyle Open A section will be awarded as follows:[10]

Place Prize money Grand slam points
1st €60,000 25
2nd €40,000 18
3rd €30,000 15
4th €20,000 12
5th €15,000 10
6th €12,000 8
7th €10,000 6
8th €8,000 4
9th €5,000 2
10th €3,000 1
11th €2,000 0
12th €1,000 0
13th €500 0
14th €300 0
15th €200 0

Results

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Final classification

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Rank Player Rating Round
1
Round
2
Round
3
Round
4
Round
5
Round
6
Round
7
Round
8
Round
9
Total Tie
1  Magnus Carlsen (NOR) 2837 (W256) (B84) (W22) (B32) (W38) (B80) (W2) (B9) (W13) 9 52½
2  Parham Maghsoodloo (IRN) 2684 (W233) ½ (B223) (W288) (B48) (W47) (B10) (B1) (W27) ½ (B5) 7 52½
3  Andrey Esipenko (FIDE) 2696 (W141) (B74) ½ (W48) ½ (B56) (W69) (B38) (W11) (B13) (W28) 7 52
3  Frederik Svane (GER) 2668 (W145) (B43) ½ (W52) (B49) (W28) (B86) (W64) (B12) ½ (W20) 7 52
5  Leinier Dominguez Perez (USA) 2738 (W293) (B189) ½ (W39) ½ (B40) (W63) ½ (B18) (W56) (B30) ½ (W2) 7 50½
5  Alexey Sarana (SRB) 2672 (B231) (W78) (B187) (W55) ½ (B10) ½ (W25) ½ (B27) ½ (W8) (B44) 7 50½
7  Erigaisi Arjun (IND) 2782 (B123) ½ (W35) (B81) (W31) (B87) ½ (W89) (B60) (W17) (B36) 7 50
7  Fabiano Caruana (USA) 2776 (W292) (B50) (W32) (B117) (W186) (B24) ½ (W28) ½ (B6) (W37) 7 50
9  Rauf Mamedov (AZE) 2657 (B102) (W72) (B58) ½ (W41) ½ (B16) (W35) (B25) (W1) ½ (B15) 56
10  Leon Luke Mendonca (IND) 2643 (W201) (B90) (W26) (B15) ½ (W6) (W2) ½ (B14) (W35) ½ (B19) 54
11  Pranesh M (IND) 2572 (W180) (B122) (W20) ½ (B12) ½ (W37) (W23) (B3) (W80) ½ (B16) 53
12  Javokhir Sindarov (UZB) 2706 (B93) (W155) (B42) ½ (W11) (B25) (W58) (B31) (W4) (B55) 52½
13  Vincent Keymer (GER) 2718 (B172) ½ (W81) (B115) (W118) ½ (B18) ½ (W31) (B114) (W3) (B1) 52
14  Wesley So (USA) 2748 (W208) (B63) (W47) ½ (B43) (W65) (B49) ½ (W10) ½ (B40) (W56) 50½
14  Richard Rapport (HUN) 2722 (B108) (W120) (B114) (W10) ½ (B55) (W84) ½ (W18) (B53) ½ (W9) 50½
16  Yangyi Yu (CHN) 2714 (W232) (B69) (W186) ½ (B47) ½ (W9) ½ (B39) ½ (W40) (B42) ½ (W11) 50
16  David Anton Guijarro (ESP) 2639 (W204) (B73) ½ (W33) ½ (B82) (W88) ½ (B26) (W34) (B7) (W63) 50
18  Rasmus Svane (GER) 2625 (W212) (B277) ½ (W34) (B151) ½ (W13) ½ (W5) ½ (B15) ½ (B26) (W67) 49½
19  Maxime Vachier-Lagrave (FRA) 2722 (W128) (B41) (W123) (B135) ½ (W57) (B62) (W39) ½ (B37) ½ (W10) 49
19  Ray Robson (USA) 2692 (B129) (W230) (B11) (W116) ½ (B187) ½ (W60) (B81) (W25) ½ (B4) 49
19  Alexander Grischuk (FIDE) 2682 (B143) (W153) (B55) (W72) ½ (B84) ½ (W45) (B155) (W51) ½ (B23) 49
22  Nils Grandelius (SWE) 2640 (B291) (W257) (B1) (W90) (B35) (W92) (B103) ½ (W43) (B58) 48½
23  Grigoriy Oparin (USA) 2660 (W182) (B107) (W38) (B166) (W159) (B11) (W117) (B61) ½ (W21) 48
24  Murali Karthikeyan (IND) 2651 (W196) (B175) (W41) (B77) (W152) (W8) (B153) (B38) ½ (W26) 47½
25  Paulius Pultinevicius (LTU) 2558 1 (open) ½ (open) 1 (open) 1 (open) (W12) ½ (B6) (W9) (B20) (W88) 6 55½
26  Ian Nepomniachtchi (FIDE) 2757 (B79) (W60) (B10) (W153) (B41) ½ (W17) ½ (B46) ½ (W18) ½ (B24) 6 54
27  Matthias Blübaum (GER) 2662 (W148) (B98) ½ (W49) (B52) (W29) ½ (B28) ½ (W6) (B2) ½ (W50) 6 53½
27  Baadur Jobava (GEO) 2600 (B138) ½ (W85) (B94) (W44) (B4) ½ (W27) ½ (B8) ½ (W36) (B3) 6 53½
29  Josefine Heinemann (GER) 2342 1 (open) ½ (open) 1 (open) 1 (open) (B27) ½ (W42) ½ (B89) (W118) ½ (B31) 6 52½
30  David Navara (CZE) 2665 (B162) (W76) ½ (B51) ½ (W35) ½ (B58) (W41) (B55) (W5) ½ (B45) 6 51½
30  Aryan Chopra (IND) 2620 (W65) ½ (B82) (W190) (B7) ½ (W34) ½ (B13) (W12) (B57) ½ (W29) 6 51½
32  Etienne Bacrot (FRA) 2633 (B234) (W140) (B8) (W1) ½ (B60) ½ (W81) (B43) (W92) (W95) 6 51
33  Levon Aronian (USA) 2747 (B169) (W124) ½ (B17) ½ (W39) ½ (B42) ½ (W51) ½ (B45) (W71) ½ (B40) 6 50½
33  Hans Moke Niemann (USA) 2736 (B142) (W71) ½ (B18) (W51) ½ (B31) ½ (W114) (B17) (W120) ½ (B48) 6 50½
33  Cem Kaan Gokerkan (TUR) 2489 (W216) ½ (B7) (W284) ½ (B30) (W22) (B9) (W65) (B10) (W83) 6 50½
36  Jorden Van Foreest (NED) 2681 (W147) (B117) (W61) (B38) (W134) ½ (B56) (W48) ½ (B28) (W7) 6 50
36  Amin Tabatabaei (IRI) 2661 (B127) (W116) ½ (B118) (W223) ½ (B11) ½ (W53) (B67) ½ (W19) (B8) 6 50
36  Victor Mikhalevski (ISR) 2513 (B224) (W222) (B23) (W36) (B1) (W3) (B164) (W24) (B97) 6 50
39  Yagiz Kaan Erdogmus (TUR) 2618 (B253) (W125) ½ (B5) ½ (B33) (W82) ½ (W16) (B19) (W115) ½ (B43) 6 49½
39  Gata Kamsky (USA) 2603 (B228) (W238) ½ (B44) ½ (W5) ½ (B45) (W115) ½ (B16) ½ (W14) ½ (W33) 6 49½
39  Juraj Druska (SVK) 2442 (B220) (W19) (B24) ½ (B9) (W26) (B30) (W137) ½ (W59) (B91) 6 49½
42  Kacper Piorun (POL) 2577 (W113) (B137) (W12) (B277) ½ (W33) ½ (B29) (W82) (W16) (B85) 6 49
42  Jonas Hacker (GER) 2370 (B154) (W4) (B224) ½ (W14) (B127) ½ (W68) (W32) ½ (B22) ½ (W39) 6 49
44  Quang Liem Le (VIE) 2729 (W171) (B86) ½ (W40) (B28) (W190) ½ (B50) (W69) (B68) (W6) 6 48½
45  Tobias Kölle (GER) 2459 (W163) ½ (B289) ½ (W64) (B122) ½ (W40) ½ (B21) ½ (W33) (B125) ½ (W30) 6 48
46  Daniel Dardha (BEL) 2650 (B178) ½ (W94) (B85) (W121) (B80) (W57) ½ (W26) ½ (B50) ½ (W49) 6 47½
46  Dmitrij Kollars (GER) 2623 (B248) (W194) (B14) ½ (W16) (B2) (W67) ½ (B94) (W160) (B81) 6 47½
46  Francesco Sonis (ITA) 2576 (B296) (W105) ½ (B3) (W2) (B125) (W151) (B36) (W116) ½ (W34) 6 47½
46  Casper Schoppen (NED) 2529 (B150) (W193) ½ (B27) (W4) (B144) (W14) (B151) (W70) ½ (B46) 6 47½
46  Bibisara Assaubayeva (KAZ) 2494 (B149) (W8) ½ (B142) (W158) (B126) ½ (W44) (B83) ½ (W46) ½ (B27) 6 47½
51  Denis Kadric (MNE) 2533 (W179) (B133) ½ (W30) (B34) (W197) ½ (B33) (W88) (B21) (W96) 6 47
52  Leon Livaic (CRO) 2536 (B211) (W225) ½ (B4) (W27) (B121) ½ (W59) ½ (B70) ½ (W85) (B93) 6 45
53  Daniel Fridman (GER) 2582 (W273) ½ (B151) ½ (W99) (B257) (W119) ½ (B37) ½ (W80) (W15) (B90) 6 42½
54  Dennis Wagner (GER) 2607 (W202) ½ (B190) (W82) (B284) (W151) (B256) ½ (B90) (W105) (W107) 6 38½
Sources:[4][12]

Notes:

  • Only players with a score of at least 6 points are listed.
  • For tie-breaks, the Buchholz system was used.
  • The first letter in the brackets denotes if the player had the white or the black pieces in that round. The number after that denotes the final rank of the opponent.
  • If a player switched from the Grenke Chess Open to the Freestyle Open during the tournament, points carried over are denoted as "(open)".

Since Carlsen had already qualified to the Las Vegas tournament, it was initially announced that a tiebreaker would be played between the seven players who tied for second place to determine the qualifier. The following day it was confirmed that Maghsoodloo was awarded the qualification spot.[13]

Tour standings after the tournament

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Pos. Player Points
1 Norway Magnus Carlsen 65
1 2 United States Fabiano Caruana 39
1 3 Germany Vincent Keymer 37
4 United States Hikaru Nakamura 28
8 5 Iran Parham Maghsoodloo 18
Sources:[4][12]

Note: Only the top five positions are included.

References

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  1. ^ a b c "Grenke Freestyle Chess Open and Grenke Chess Open 2025". Freestyle Chess. 2025-02-14. Retrieved 2025-04-11.
  2. ^ a b Levin, Anthony (2025-02-14). "Keymer Leads Vs. Caruana In Final; Carlsen, Nakamura Also Win". Chess.com. Retrieved 2025-04-11.
  3. ^ Ketterer, Frank (2025-04-11). "In Karlsruhe können sich Schach-Amateure mit der Weltelite messen". Badische Neueste Nachrichten (in German). Retrieved 2025-04-11.
  4. ^ a b c Colodro, Carlos Alberto (2025-04-22). "Carlsen scores perfect 9/9 to win Grenke Freestyle Open". ChessBase. Retrieved 2025-04-22.
  5. ^ Schormann, Conrad (2025-04-22). "Magnus Carlsen Achieves the Impossible: 9/9 in Karlsruhe". Freestyle Chess. Retrieved 2025-04-22.
  6. ^ McGourty, Colin (February 2, 2024). "Carlsen, Ding To Clash As GRENKE Chess Classic Returns".
  7. ^ "Cooperation Freestyle Chess and grenke Chess Open". ChessBase. 2025-02-13. Retrieved 2025-04-18.
  8. ^ Svensen, Tarjei J. (2025-02-14). "Niemann Given Surprise Paris Freestyle Wildcard, Set To Face Carlsen". Chess.com. Retrieved 2025-04-18.
  9. ^ Levin, Anthony (2025-04-17). "No Surprises: Carlsen, Arjun, Caruana Start With Wins". Chess.com. Retrieved 2025-04-18.
  10. ^ a b c d "grenke Freestyle Chess Open in Karlsruhe (Tournament Announcements and Regulations)" (PDF). Grenke Chess Open. Retrieved 2025-04-11.
  11. ^ "grenke Chess Open & grenke Freestyle Chess Open: Registrations". ChessTech News. Retrieved 2025-04-10.
  12. ^ a b "grenke Freestyle Chess Open 2025 A-Open: Final Ranking crosstable after 9 Rounds". Chess-Results.com. Retrieved 2025-04-22.
  13. ^ Levin, Anthony (2025-04-21). "Grenke Chess Freestyle Open 2025 Day 5: Carlsen Wins With Shining 9/9 Perfect Score". Chess.com. Retrieved 2025-04-24.