Sinquefield Cup: Praggnanandhaa still joint-second on another day of draws; Gukesh tied-fourth
Indian Grandmaster R. Praggnanandhaa settled for his fifth consecutive draw, splitting points with Poland’s Jan-Krzysztof Duda in the sixth round of the Sinquefield Cup, part of the Grand Chess Tour.
With this result, Praggnanandhaa moved to 3.5 points from six games, maintaining a joint-second position. Meanwhile, American Grandmaster Fabiano Caruana held on to his lead with four points, staying half a point ahead of the field.
Giving Praggnanandhaa company is American Levon Aronian. World champion D. Gukesh is still tied for the fourth spot on three points, along with Wesley So and Samuel Sevian of the United States, and the French duo of Alireza Firouzja and Maxime Vachier-Lagrave.
In the sixth round, Gukesh survived another scare before steering the game to a draw with Firouzja.
On another all-drawn day, Caruana shared the point with Sevian, and Nodirbek Abdusattorov got the same result against Vachier-Lagrave. Aronian also drew with Wesley, making it the second day in a row when all the games were drawn.
Praggnanandhaa opted for the Alapin variation against the Sicilian defense of Duda and obtained some optical advantage.
However, Duda struck in time with a rook sacrifice after white castled on the queen side. Praggnanandhaa gave back the extra material and drew vide perpetual checks. The game lasted just 32 moves.
Gukesh started with the King pawn as well, with white, and also faced the Sicilian defense. It was Classical setup by Gukesh wherein Firouzja played imaginatively in the middle game to seize the initiative. Gukesh was looking at an inferior position and even lost a pawn.
However, the technicalities remained, and with some fine defense, Gukesh reached a minor piece endgame and eventually made black’s extra pawn immaterial.
Caruana drew with Sevian when the latter decided against pressing hard out of a Ragozin defense game. The scales were even till Caruana went for a dubious pawn exchange, and his king side was under scrutiny when Sevian decided to end the game through repetition. It was over in just 27 moves.
Published on Aug 25, 2025