
Mumbai International Chess: Local teen Maniar holds GM Mikulas to a draw
Mumbai: The 13-year-old Hriday Maniar, a promising local talent, held seasoned Slovak Grandmaster Manik Mikulas to a surprise draw, earning the biggest result of his young career in the first round of the Mumbai International Grandmaster Chess Tournament on Tuesday.
The tournament got off to an exciting start at the World Trade Centre, Mumbai, with Hriday's sensational result stealing the spotlight in Round 1.
Despite a rating difference of nearly 500 points, Hriday played with remarkable poise and accuracy, showcasing flawless technique against his opponent, who is far more experienced than him. The result is being hailed as one of the biggest upsets of the opening round.
Barring this remarkable performance, the remaining 15 Grandmasters had no difficulty in overcoming their opponents to cruise into the second round of this 9-round Swiss tournament. The event has drawn 293 players from 18 countries, all competing for a total prize fund of ₹25.00 lakhs.
The tournament is organised by Indian Chess School under the aegis of the All India Chess Federation (AICF).
Key results:
Round 1
Levan Pantsulaia (1) beat Raman Siddharth B. (0)
Petrosyan Manuel (1) beat Gada Om (0)
Paichadze Luka (1) beat Shubh Kapur (0)
Nikitenko Mihail (1) beat Gogte Soumil (0)
Lalit Babu M R (1) beat Ayaan Trikha (0)
Gharibyan Mamikon (1) beat Chavan Aditya (0)
Savchenko Boris (1) beat Advik Reddy (0)
Panesar Vedant (1) beat Saranya Devi (0)
Sanikidze Tornike (1) beat Bhavya Gupta (0)
Deepan Chakkravarthy J. (1) beat Shahan Vohra (0)
Davtyan Arsen (1) beat Arjun Singh (0)
Nguyen Duc Hoa (1) beat Parkar (0)
Slizhevsky Alexander (1) beat Patlolla Indra Reddy (0)
Aleksandrov Aleksej (1) beat Shitiz Prasad (0)
Fedorov Alexei (1) beat Vageesh Swaminathan (0)
Budhidharma Nayaka (1) beat Raj Kapoor (0)
Neelotpal Das (1) beat Karthik Gopal G. (0)
Nithin Babu (1) beat Mithilesh P. (0)
Nguyen Van Huy (1) beat Laddad Aadhavan Atish (0)
Tologon Tegin Semetei (1) beat Gnanaseelan (0)
Gochelashvili Davit (1) beat Aabhas Kumar Srivastava (0)
Saravana Krishnan P. (1) beat Jagesia Daksh (0)
Manik Mikulas (½) drew Hriday Maniar (½)
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


Hindustan Times
8 hours ago
- Hindustan Times
Amandeep, four other Indians make cut in Czech Ladies Open
Beroun , India's Amandeep Drall birdied her final two holes as she rallied to an even-par second round and be tied in 12th place after two rounds of the Tipsport Czech Ladies Open here. HT Image Amandeep, who had a superb 8-under 64 in the opening round, added a 72 in round two to make the cut along with four other Indians. The next best Indian was Hitaashee Bakshi at 6-under and in T-32 place. Diksha Dagar , Tvesa Malik and Sneha Singh also fought hard to make the cut on the line at T-61. A total of 71 players, including two amateurs, made the cut. Swiss golfer Kim Metraux produced a career-best round of 63 to storm into sole lead on 13-under par. In second spot was Esme Hamilton, the rookie Englishwoman teeing up in only her sixth LET event. She replicated her first round 66 to remain in contention. Amandeep had a rough day as she was 2-over through 16 holes with one birdie and three bogeys before she rallied with birdies on the last two holes. Diksha finished earliest among the Indians with 71 that had four birdies and three bogeys. Later, Hitaashee had a steady 2-under 70 with four birdies and two bogeys on day two. Tvesa and Sneha kept flirting with the cut before landing birdies towards the end. Tvesa picked birdies on two of the last three holes and, despite a bogey on the closing ninth, made the cut. Sneha, an Order of Merit winner in her home circuit, played bravely to birdie three times in the last five holes to cross over the cut line. Metraux lit things up from the get-go, carding three birdies in a row on the 10th, 11th and 12th. She added two more birdies on the 16th and 18th to go out in 31. On her second nine, she added birdies on the third, fifth, seventh and the eighth. The career-best round was made even more special given that Metraux's husband, Rodolphe, was alongside her on the bag. In a tie for third place on 10-under par are the Mallorcan duo Nuria Iturrioz and Luna Sobron Galmes and 16-year-old rookie Anna Huang . This article was generated from an automated news agency feed without modifications to text.


The Hindu
3 days ago
- The Hindu
Berlin Open 2025: Top seed Sabalenka beats Masarova in straight sets, reaches quarterfinals
Aryna Sabalenka completed a 6-2, 7-6(6) win over Swiss Rebeka Masarova on Thursday to reach the Berlin Open quarterfinals, completing a match that had been suspended on Wednesday because of slippery conditions. The Belarusian, playing for the first time since losing to American Coco Gauff in the French Open final almost two weeks ago, was a set up on Wednesday when play was stopped after tournament officials said the court was getting too slippery with humidity rising after sunset. When the match resumed on Thursday, the 27-year-old was broken at the start of the second set and found herself 3-1 and 4-2 down. She kept her cool, however, and broke back with a fine volley to force a tiebreak. worth the wait 😊@SabalenkaA makes the last eight in Berlin with a win over Masarova 6-2, 7-6(6)!# — wta (@WTA) June 19, 2025 Sabalenka squandered two matchpoints before sealing her victory at her next opportunity when her opponent sank a simple mid-court forehand into the net. Less than two weeks before Wimbledon, the top seed will next face either Elena Rybakina of Kazakhstan or Czech Katerina Siniakova. Fellow Czech Marketa Vondrousova, the 2023 Wimbledon champion, needed three sets and two hours and 20 minutes to break the resistance of Russia's Diana Shnaider. Vondrousova, who was 6-5 and 30-0 up in the second set, advanced with a 6-3, 6-7(3), 6-3 win and will face lucky loser Ons Jabeur, a two-time Wimbledon finalist, in the last eight.
&w=3840&q=100)

First Post
3 days ago
- First Post
Cristiano Ronaldo is not part of the action at the FIFA Club World Cup; here's why
FIFA would have hoped to have both Lionel Messi and Cristiano Ronaldo in action at the 32-team Club World Cup in the US. However, while Messi's Inter Miami is playing through the host nation's slot, Ronaldo's is absent from the tournament. Here's why. read more Cristiano Ronaldon has expressed frustration with Al-Nassr's lack of trophies since he signed with the Saudi club in December 2022, and has demanded wholesale changes to the club for him to extend his contract that expires on 30 June. Reuters FIFA president Gianni Infantino was hopeful of having a Cristiano Ronaldo vs Lionel Messi showdown in the that currently is underway in the United States. The tournament, after all, has expanded from a seven-team face-off between continental champions to a 32-team football carnival, and having two of the biggest superstars in the modern era of the sport would have only boosted its popularity and ticket sales. However, while Messi's team Inter Miami qualified for the tournament through the host nation's slot, Ronaldo's Al Nassr failed to make the cut, with Al Hilal being the only Saudi Pro League team to make the cut. STORY CONTINUES BELOW THIS AD Also Read | CR7 could still have faced off against his old rival had he joined one of the clubs playing in the tournament in the short transfer window that had specially been created between the end of the 2024-25 season and the tournament. More from Football FIFA chief Infantino even made a public appeal for the clubs taking part in the tournament to sign Ronaldo for the tournament. 'If any club is watching and is interested in hiring Ronaldo for the Club World Cup…,' the Swiss administrator said in an interview with popular YouTuber iShowSpeed. Why Ronaldo is not playing at the Club World Cup The fact that was also set to expire in the ongoing season further fuelled speculations of a transfer to one of the World Cup-bound clubs. Despite Ronaldo's participation in the Club World Cup also being in the interest of Saudi Arabia, with the Real Madrid star having been the face of the Gulf Kingdom's football ambitions, a possible move to Al Hilal ultimately fell through despite the fact that it is financed by Saudi's sovereign wealth fund, the same as Al Nassr. Al Hilal's chief executive claimed Ronaldo's last-minute signing from their cross-town rivals would have been 'counter-intuitive' regardless of the 40-year-old's stature as a player. 'As much as I respect Ronaldo as a huge player, as we all recognize he is, it's certainly completely counter-intuitive that you bring the biggest player of your biggest opponent to play with you. Even more when it's only for three to four weeks,' Al Hilal chief executive Esteve Calzada told the BBC. The statement certainly comes as a surprise given Saudi's push for signing some of the biggest names in the sport from top European clubs, including Neymar, Sadio Mane, Karim Benzema, Joao Cancelo etc. besides Ronaldo. And while Saudi Arabia has won the hosting rights for the 2034 FIFA World Cup, it has also made major investments in the Club World Cup, including in broadcaster DAZN as well as the prize money of $1 billion that will be distributed to the participating teams. STORY CONTINUES BELOW THIS AD Al-Hilal, however, chose to focus their attention on signing high-profile coach Simone Inzaghi, who had recently parted ways with Champions League runners-up Inter Milan, ahead of the Club World Cup instead of going ahead with the Ronaldo signing. The move thus highlights the fact that they intended to stick to their tried-and-tested squad while trying out new tactics through their new manager.