Qatar Masters Round 4: Carlsen Great Escape; Nakamura, Gukesh Join Leaders


GMs Hikaru Nakamura, Gukesh Dommaraju, and Saleh Salem all won in round four of the 2023 Qatar Masters to join a seven-way tie for first place on 3.5/4. GM Magnus Carlsen languishes a point back in 29th place after again being involved in the day’s most enthralling game. The world number-one flirted with disaster against 17-year-old Indian GM M Pranesh before finding a fantastic escape.

Round five starts on October 15 at 8:15 a.m. ET/14:15 CEST/5:45 p.m. IST.

No one has a perfect score after four rounds of the Qatar Masters, though GM Rinat Jumabayev came very close when he spotted a trick his 17-year-old opponent GM Javokhir Sindarov had overlooked.

White is a pawn down, but Sindarov planned to level things up by taking the a7-pawn. It can’t be defended by 31…a6? since 32.Qa5! then wins for White, but it turned out there was a defense—the shocker 31…Bc5!, exploiting the pinned d4-pawn (32.dxc5?? Qxa4). Black kept the extra pawn and all the winning chances, but Sindarov dug deep and held a draw.

Carlsen almost fell to another 2500-player. Photo: Valeria Kaidanov/Qatar Masters.

The day’s most dramatic draw, however, featured Carlsen, who has now lost over 10 rating points in Qatar, but could also breathe a sigh of relief. Nakamura, who again recapped that game before his own, introduced the former world champion’s young opponent as follows, recalling their online games:

What I remember from all the games I’ve had is that Pranesh is somebody who is a lunatic! He loves to sacrifice material, whether it’s pawns, whether it’s pieces, he’s very tactical and very, very aggressive. Let’s see if Magnus would understand that and try to avoid a tactical skirmish against a talented Indian junior…

At first Carlsen seemed to do everything right, taking risks in the opening but then outplaying his opponent with bold, positional chess.

Pranesh “blinked” with 22.Be3!?, but when Carlsen then captured that bishop it was taking his conceptual idea a little too far. Before the second knight could come to c4 and reestablish control, White blew open the position with 25.f5!

“Not again!” Carlsen may have muttered under his breath, and after both players found a string of great moves it was ultimately the world’s highest-rated player who found himself in trouble. Pranesh correctly rejected a draw by repetition (“They have no fear of a random world champion like Magnus Carlsen!” said Nakamura), and probably wondered why his opponent wasn’t simply resigning when he was about to lose a full rook with check.

Carlsen had seen further, however, and was not only holding a draw but posed a couple of tough challenges to his young opponent. Pranesh was up to the task and didn’t spoil one of the most spectacular draws you’ll ever witness.

Nakamura, in contrast, has made smooth progress in Qatar, and moved to 3.5/4 by beating Dutch GM Robby Kevlishvili.

It was only in the opening, where his opponent blitzed out his moves, that Nakamura felt uncomfortable, but he solved that issue by swapping off queens. Objectively, it wasn’t great, but Nakamura’s endgame prowess came to the fore, helped by his opponent panicking:

“I was stunned when my opponent decided to sac the rook. This was a horrible move. He started to see ghosts…”

Nakamura was joined on 3.5/4 by Salem, who defeated IM Mukhiddin Madaminov, and Gukesh, who showed enormous fighting spirit to beat former Turkish Champion GM Mert Yilmazyerli from a position where a draw seemed only a matter of time.

Gukesh has now won three games in a row. Photo: Valeria Kaidanov/Qatar Masters.

Both players contributed to a wild ride, with Yilmazyerli shrugging off the fact that his queen, and then rook, got trapped one after the other. In fact, he emerged with enough compensation to hold a draw, before the 17-year-old world number-eight finally prevailed to make it three wins in a row.

That epic clash is our Game of the Day, analyzed by GM Dejan Bojkov.

Chess.com Game of the Day Dejan Bojkov

There’s just one round to go before the players get a well-deserved rest day, and it sees a major match-up in Sindarov-Nakamura. Carlsen also continues his coaching session for talented young Indian stars.



The standings look as follows, with five rounds to go.

Qatar Masters | Standings After Round 4 (Top 29)

































Rk. Seed No.

Name Age Sex FED Rating Points TB1 TB2
1 2

GM Nakamura, Hikaru

2780 3.5 2 2846
2 4

GM Gukesh, D U18

2758 3.5 4 2773
3 6

GM Erigaisi, Arjun U20

2712 3.5 6 2868
4 12

GM Sindarov, Javokhir U18

2658 3.5 12 2841
5 13

GM Narayanan.S.L,

2651 3.5 13 2863
6 16

GM Salem, A.R. Saleh

2632 3.5 16 2809
7 25

GM Jumabayev, Rinat

2585 3.5 25 2823
8 3

GM Giri, Anish

2760 3 3 2714
9 5

GM Abdusattorov, Nodirbek U20

2716 3 5 2642
10 7

GM Maghsoodloo, Parham

2707 3 7 2655
11 19

GM Yakubboev, Nodirbek

2616 3 19 2663
12 20

GM Karthikeyan, Murali

2611 3 20 2623
13 22

GM Vakhidov, Jakhongir

2607 3 22 2657
14 23

GM Paravyan, David

2599 3 23 2640
15 24

GM Sethuraman, S.P.

2598 3 24 2626
16 26

GM Kuybokarov, Temur

2584 3 26 2587
17 28

GM Vokhidov, Shamsiddin

2578 3 28 2769
18 30

GM Aditya, Mittal U18

2572 3 30 2746
19 32

GM Karthik, Venkataraman

2563 3 32 2596
20 36

GM Adhiban, B.

2551 3 36 2538
21 37

IM Makarian, Rudik U20

2548 3 37 2560
22 39

GM Visakh, N R

2547 3 39 2546
23 40

GM Fawzy, Adham

2535 3 40 2610
24 43

GM Kevlishvili, Robby

2521 3 43 2686
25 45

GM Sankalp, Gupta U20

2518 3 45 2535
26 55

IM Ahmadzada, Ahmad U20

2494 3 55 2702
27 75

IM Vaishali, Rameshbabu

w 2448 3 75 2714
28 142

GM Laxman, R.R.

2322 3 144 2750
29 1

GM Carlsen, Magnus

2839 2.5 1 2579

Full standings

Qatar Masters | All Games Round 4


The 2023 Qatar Masters is a nine-round open tournament for players rated 2300+. It takes place in Lusail, Qatar on October 11-20, and boasts a $108,250 prize fund with $25,000 for first place, as well as a $5,000 prize for the top female player.


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