
Chitambaram finishes with 7.5 points, half a point ahead of Predke and Praggnanandhaa
er Arvindh Chitambaram of India was crowned champion of the 22nd Dubai Open Chess Tournament during the awarding ceremony Sunday night at the Sheikh Saeed Bin Hamdan Al Maktoum Hall of the Dubai Chess and Culture Club in Al Mamzar. The closing ceremony was attended by His Excellency Khalid Ali bin Zayed Al Falasi, Chairman of the club’s board of directors, His Excellency Tarim Matar, President of the UAE Chess Federation, and members of the club’s board of directors.
In a speech during the ceremony, tournament director Saeed Yousuf Shakari praised the strong support extended by the Dubai Sports Council to the club and its various chess programs, and for supporting the development of Emirati chess talents and their participation in tournaments in the UAE and outside the country. He also commended all the participants for the high level of competition and exciting matches during tournament, and the arbitration team, headed by the Emirati International Arbiter (IA) Mahdi Abdulrahim.
Final round results
Chitambaram, who started as the tournament’s 13th seed, finished alone at the top with 7.5 points after a draw in the final round with his compatriot GM Rameshbabu Praggnanandhaa. Top-seed GM Alexandr Predke of Russia and Praggnanandhaa finished with seven points, but the Russian claimed second place with a higher tiebreak score, relegating Praggnanandhaa to third.
Predke had a chance to tie Chitambaram for first place and even win the tournament with a higher tiebreak score over the Indian, but the Russian could only manage a draw in his game against GM Ahmed Adly of Egypt.
“It’s always nice playing in Dubai,” said Chitambaram, who had been a guest at a friend’s house during his stay in the emirate. “The conditions are great and it’s a brilliant venue.”
Chitambaram had nursed a slight edge against Praggnanandhaa, but eventually conceded to a draw by repetition of moves when the fourth-seed Praggnanandhaa was able to mount a dangerous counterattack against the white king.
“The position was equal, so I had to take a draw,” Chitambaram said.
“I’ve not done too well in any of the Dubai tournaments before, but this one came out a surprise, like I cannot believe that I won the championship.”
His triumph in Dubai, in addition to winning the Indian blitz and rapid titles earlier this year and a tournament in Benasque, Spain, has helpedChitambaram rebound from a heartbreaking campaign in 2021, when he lost rating points and missed a chance to join the Indian teams to the World Chess Olympiad, which India hosted last month.
“It’s always nice to win any tournament in general and I’m really happy with this win,” said the 2018 and 2019 Indian champion.
Chitambaram received USD13,000 and a championship trophy during the awarding ceremony, while the rest of the top 15 players also received cash prizes.
Three other players finished with seven points: the tournament’s 2011 champion GM Abhijeet Gupta, IM Sammed Jaykumar Shete and former Asian champion GM Sethuraman S.P., who finished fourth to sixth in that order.
Gupta defeated GM Sandipan Chanda, Shete upset Armenia’s GM Aram Hakobyan after over four and a half hours of play in one of the two last games to finish in the tournament, and Sethuraman outplayed IM Das Arghyadip.
The rest of the top 15 finishers were GM Arjun Erigaisi of India (6.5 points), FM Seyed Kian Poormosavi of Iran (6.5), who was the only Fide Master in the top 10 and also picked up a GM norm with a 2658 performance rating, GM Aleksandar Indjic of Serbia (6.5), GM Harsha Bharathakoti of India (6.5), Adly (6.5), GM Ziaur Rahman of Bangladesh (6.5), GM Samvel Ter-Sahakyan of Armenia (6.5), GM Arjun Kalyan of India (6.5) and GM Aram Hakobyan of Armenia (6).
Special Prizes
IM Omran Al Hosani received the Best Emirati Player award, while India’s WGM Divya Deshmukh took the Best Female award. Indian players, meanwhile, took the rating category prizes: Panda Sambit (under 2400), Sanket Chakravarty (under 2300), Ayush Sharma (under 2200), Raghav Srivathsav V (under 2100), and Joel Paul Ganta (under 2000).
Rating gains
Nine-year-old Rami Talab from Syria earned the most rating points in the tournament, adding 142 points to his international rating, followed by Kuwait’s Meshal Alhejab with 138 points, and India’s Rohit S. with 116 points.
Khalid Ali bin Zayed Al Falasi, Chairman of the Dubai Chess and Culture Club, congratulated Chitambaram for joining the elite list of Dubai Open champions. Back after a two-year hiatus due to the pandemic, Al Falasi underlined the very strong field of the tournament and the high level of competitiveness with the leadership changing hands in almost every round.
He added that the success of the tournament’s 22nd edition serves as a strong motivation to continue to enhance the event and attract even more top players to achieve the club’s ultimate goal of developing the sport in the UAE and nurturing new talents in the country.
Tarim commends the Dubai Chess and Culture Club
Tarim Matar Tarim, President of the UAE Chess Federation, congratulated the management of the Dubai Chess Club on the great success of the tournament. He said events such as Abu Dhabi International, Dubai Open, Sharjah Masters and more have put the UAE prominently on the international chess calendar.
He added that the federation and its member clubs will be focusing on two important goals: first is cultivating the sport in schools and the grassroots to discover new talents among citizens and residents, and the other is to continue organizing tournaments and sending top talents to international events to develop their skills in the game.