The Freestyle Chess Grand Slam Tour 2025, a five-leg global series featuring Chess960 (Fischer Random), has ignited the chess world with its blend of unpredictability and elite competition. Hosted at Germany’s Weissenhaus Private Nature Luxury Resort, Stage 1 (February 7–14) set the tone for a year-long battle where randomized starting positions erase opening theory and reward creativity. Co-founded by Magnus Carlsen and German investor Jan Henric Buettner, the tour aims to challenge traditional chess norms while offering a $660,000 total prize pool.
Unlike classical chess, Chess960 randomizes the back-rank pieces (with mirrored positions for Black) while retaining standard movement rules. This forces players to rely on intuition over memorized lines. Key rules include:
Stage 1’s rapid round-robin (10+10 time control) whittled 10 elite players down to 8 knockout contenders, followed by classical time controls (90+30) for high-stakes duels.
After nine grueling rounds in the round-robin phase, here’s how the leaderboard shaped up:
Rank | Player | Points | Key Highlights |
---|---|---|---|
1 | Alireza Firouzja | 6.5 | Topped the table after defeating Javokhir Sindarov in Round 9. |
2 | Javokhir Sindarov | 6.0 | The 19-year-old Uzbek stunned Carlsen in Round 5 and tied Caruana. |
3 | Fabiano Caruana | 5.5 | Consistent but faltered against Nakamura in Round 7. |
4 | Hikaru Nakamura | 4.5 | Revived with a critical win over Caruana. |
5 | Nodirbek Abdusattorov | 4.0 | Struggled against Keymer and Carlsen. |
6 | Vincent Keymer | 3.5 | Local wildcard shined early but faded. |
7 | Magnus Carlsen | 3.0 | Suffered shock losses to Fedoseev and Sindarov. |
8 | D. Gukesh | 3.0 | Youngest player showed resilience with multiple draws. |
9 | Vladimir Fedoseev | 2.5 | Upset Carlsen but missed knockout stage. |
10 | Levon Aronian | 1.5 | Eliminated early after losing five games. |
Knockout Stage Qualifiers: Firouzja, Sindarov, Caruana, Nakamura, Abdusattorov, Keymer, Carlsen, Gukesh.
The 19-year-old Uzbek GM, a last-minute replacement for Viswanathan Anand, became the breakout star. Ranked 37th globally, Sindarov defeated Carlsen, Fedoseev, and Aronian, proving Chess960’s capacity to level the playing field. His Cinderella run highlights the tour’s mission to blend established stars with rising talent.
After Germany, the tour heads to:
Points from each leg accumulate, with the overall winner crowned in South Africa. The current standings position Firouzja and Sindarov as early favorites, but Carlsen’s resilience could rewrite the narrative.