Nearly All Decisive Day: Caruana Pulls Off Hat Trick, Niemann Defeats Aronian


Nearly every single game was decisive in the 2023 U.S. Championship on Tuesday. The frontrunners have begun to distinguish themselves as they accumulate victories. GM Fabiano Caruana won a third game in a row, gaining a winning position vs. GM Andrew Tang by move 10. GM Hans Niemann defeated GM Levon Aronian for the first time to move into sole second. 

GM Ray Robson’s swashbuckling king hunt vs. GM Jeffery Xiong scored him his ever victory in our Game of the Day. 

In the women’s section, IM Carissa Yip and WGM Gulrukhbegim Tokhirjonova both won to maintain their tie for the lead. GM Irina Krush defeated IM Anna Zatonskih to stay within half a point as she pursues the leaders. 

Round six starts on October 11 at 2:30 p.m. ET/20:30 CEST/12:00 a.m. IST.

See what happened
You can follow the games from the US Championships on our Events Pages: Open | Women.


On the first rest day on Monday, the players participated in community day, sharing their knowledge with local students and teaming up with the kids for casual games and variants. 

Top grandmasters duke it out in hand-and-brain. Photo: Crystal Fuller/St. Louis Chess Club.

To introduce round five—one of the most combative days possible—here is Niemann’s reflection on his experience of playing the usually light-hearted game of hand-and-brain the day before:

At one point, my team started saying every single piece perfectly. They were reading my mind. It was such synergy.

Of course, even a casual game with school kids, I take extremely seriously. I’m not messing around. Victory must be obtained at all costs.

Victory must be obtained at all costs.

-Hans Niemann

U.S. Championship

Unleashing a rare line vs. Tang, Caruana achieved a winning positon by move 10, reinforcing his lead over the field. 

When Aronian opted for the Sicilian Defense—an uncommon visitor in his classical games—vs. Niemann, the 20-year-old grandmaster was ready with a surprise of his own, a sideline in the Alapin that he discovered while watching a game beside him at the recent World Junior Championship. As commentator GM Cristian Chirila described: “Levon is looking for a fight, and he got it.”

After the game, Niemann admitted: “Levon is such a legend. I’m honored to play against him… He’s one of the greatest players of modern times. It means a lot to beat him, especially after he slipped away the last two times. It’s nice to win.” 

On his third try, Niemann scores his first-ever victory vs. Aronian. Photo: Lennart Ootes/Saint Louis Chess Club.

Also with ambitious intentions, GM Abhimanyu Mishra played the classic …Rxc3 exchange sacrifice in the Open Sicilian vs. GM Wesley So. Though this initially gave his queenside attacking play a head start, the rising prodigy followed up it inaccurately. So began to build up his own attack but offered Mishra one additonal opportunity to get back into the game. Can you find it?

Black to move.

Position after 21.Ka2

Ultimately, So broke through on the kingside first—a fitting victory for the day after his 30th birthday. 

Despite a rough start to the event, Robson seized his opportunity to play the “not best objectively, but just so tempting” f5 break followed by a sacrifice to jumpstart his attack. After an inaccuracy in defense, Robson’s king hunt raged, chasing the enemy monarch across the board.

Robson’s sacrifice-laden first victory is our Game of the Day. Annotations by GM Dejan Bojkovare coming soon.

Chess.com Game of the Day Dejan Bojkov

Afterwards, Robson revealed the depth of his calculations: “After …Be6, I had seen basically everything that happened in the game up to Ne4 from afar.”

GMs Leinier Dominguez and Sam Shankland also dove into the complexities of the Open Sicilian with their kings castled to opposite sides. Dominguez built up the faster attack, won an exchange, and traded into an ending. Shankland nearly held off his opponent’s attempts to press until Dominguez found a decisive trick at the very end.  

GMs Dariusz Swiercz and Sam Sevian were the only players with peaceful intentions. They drew a short, quiet game as crossfire raged all around them. 

U.S. Championship | All Games Round 5

Round 5 Open Standings


U.S. Women’s Championship

In tune the open section, the U.S. Women’s Championship also had nearly all decisive games. 

WGM Tatev Abrahamyan, a longtime 1.e4 player, decided to play 1.d4 vs. Yip, inducing the 2021 champion’s favored King’s Indian Defense. Though she succeeded at surprising her opponent, this strategy backfired for Abrahamyan. As the players reached the middlegame, Yip felt at home with the complexities due to her years of experience in the system. 

When Abrahamyan went all in for her kingside attack with a knight sacrifice, Yip accepted the material immediately, defended her own king resourcefully, and then finished the game off with a mating combination. 

Keeping pace with Yip, Tokhirjonova obtained a dominant position in the Maroczy Bind vs. WGM Thalia Cervantes. After the game, the co-leader shared: “I played this line since I was a kid, and I love it for White, so I felt very comfortable. When she played 1…c5, I knew it was going to be a good day, no matter what.”

Chasing the leaders, Krush faced her longtime rival, Zatonskih. The eight-time champion gained the initative with an early pawn sacrifice. When Zatonskih tried to fight back by activating her own forces, she blundered the exchange. 

After her win today, Irina Krush gave a shoutout to one of the students from community day. Photo: Crystal Fuller/Saint Louis Chess Club.

Defending champion WGM Jennifer Yu scored her first victory in a dynamic struggle vs. IM Nazi Paikidze. When the 2018 champion attempted to counterattack on the kingside, Yu thwarted her opponent’s play and broke through with her own mating combination. 

When asked about her defensive abilities in her earlier game vs. Cervantes, Yu shared with a chuckle:

I honestly think that’s just me, my entire career. If you look at my most of my games, I’m just always losing, sometimes out of the opening. So if I don’t want to lose every lose, you just got to mess around, create some chances. If I have a bad position, I’m just like let’s make it a little tricky for my opponent. It’s not something I like doing, but I’m pretty used to this situation.

Joining in the feast of decisive games, IM Alice Lee outplayed WGM Atousa Pourkashiyan in a complicated queenless middlegame. With this second win in a row, Lee has changed her fortunes, joining the tie for fourth while eyeing the top three spots. 

Lee resurges into contention with back-to-back wins. Photo: Lennart Ootes/Saint Louis Chess Club.

The only draw of the round between FMs Ruiyang Yan and Ashritha Eswaran may’ve felt like a victory to Eswaran, who has made it onto the scoreboard and ended her losing streak. After the game, she shared her mentality in the face of a tough event: “I’ve been getting advice to just take it game by game and forget about the past.”

U.S. Women’s Championship | All Games Round 5

Round 5 Women’s Standings


The 2023 U.S. Chess Championship is an invitational classical event that determines the chess champion of the United States. The 2022 U.S. Women’s Championship is being held concurrently. Both events start on October 5 and have the same format: a 12-player, 11-round tournament with a $250,000 prize fund for the U.S. Championship, and $152,000 for the U.S. Women’s Championship.


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