The ongoing $2m, 206-player World Cup in Goa, India, has a brutal format designed to maximise the chance of shock results. Its knockout matches consist of the best of two classical games, followed by rapid and blitz tiebreaks at increasingly fast speeds, then a final Armageddon game where White has more time but is obliged to win. The incentive, besides prize money, isthethreeplaces in the 2026 Candidates, the pathway to the world title.
The Russia No 1, Ian Nepomniachtchi, who twice played for the global crown, the US’s world No 8, Wesley So, and Hans Niemann, who has huge ambitions, were the high profile casualties in last Thursday’s second round of 128, which was the first round for the top 50 seeds. After losing to the little-known Indian Diptayan…
