Sindarov Youngest To Win Chess World Cup

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November 26, 2025 18:51 IST

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Sindarov has come out as the second biggest star from Uzbekistan after Nodirbek Abdusattorov and it seems that the Russian dominance in the sport has finally ended.

Sindarov

IMAGE: Nineteen-year-old Javokhir Sindarov became the youngest FIDE World Cup Winner, surpassing Levon Aronian, who won the title at the age of 23. Photograph: FIDE

Uzbekistan's Javokhir Sindarov beat China's Wei Yi to win the FIDE World Cup in Panaji on Wednesday, becoming, at 19, the youngest ever player to achieve the feat.

The Uzbek was an overwhelming favourite of Grandmaster Sahaj Grover, who minced no words while placing his money on Sindarov once the quarterfinals arrived.

As it turned out, Yi played out another easy draw with white pieces but Sindarov was at his best as he cracked through white's defenses in the second game itself.

The Uzbekistan youngster went home richer by $1,20,000 (over Rs 1 crore) despite starting as the 16th seed in a competition that is known for its heartbreaks.

Both Sindarov and Yi will play in the Candidates and the latter earned $85,000 for his performance here over the last few weeks.

As things stand, Sindarov, Yi and Andrey Esipenko of Russia are the qualifiers from this World Cup, and they will be joined by Fabiano Caruana of the USA, Anish Giri of Holland and Matthias Bluebaum of Germany.

R Praggnanandhaa and Hikaru Nakamura are almost certain to make it unless a hurricane hits the chess circuit.

 

Sindarov has come out as the second biggest star from Uzbekistan after Nodirbek Abdusattorov and it seems that the Russian dominance in the sport has finally ended.

It remains to be seen how far the Uzbek stars continue to dominate, but for now, it is clear that it is not Europe sans Magnus Carlsen but Asia that dominates the chess world.

Sindarov simply dominated Yi right from the early stages of the middle game even thought the computer gave a different evaluation.

As the game took shape in the middle game out of an Italian open from the second game, Sindarov had things to worry but he activated his rooks just in time to cause the final damage.

Earlier in the first game Yi seemed secure enough to go for another solid draw but clearly his tactics did not work out well.

Results:

Final game 2: Wei Yi (Chn) lost to Javokhir Sindarov (Uzb) 1.5-2.5.

Third-place match: Nodirbek Yakubboev (Uzb) lost to Andrey Esipenko (FID) 0-2.

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