Kamalidenova and Omonova the biggest underdogs in the round-of-16
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The third round of the Women's World Cup in Batumi concluded on Monday with six tiebreak matches determining the final places in the round-of-16. Ten matches had already been decided in the classical section by Sunday, meaning that only a third of the round required additional games. A rest day now follows before the final four rounds of the knockout tournament begin.
Two of the biggest surprises of the round were already confirmed before Monday's tiebreaks, as 19-year-olds Meruert Kamalidenova (Kazakhstan, 59th seed) and Umida Omonova (Uzbekistan, 81st seed) both secured 1½-½ victories in the classical games. Kamalidenova defeated Anna Shukhman (27th seed, FIDE), while Omonova overcame fellow outsider Elnaz Kaliahmet (80th seed, Kazakhstan). Both players had reached round three after upsetting high-profile opponents in the previous stage - Kamalidenova eliminated defending champion Aleksandra Goryachkina and Omonova knocked out Alina Kashlinskaya.
The King‘s Indian Attack is a universal opening: easy to learn, flexible, and rich in both tactical and positional opportunities.
In the tiebreaks, most of the favourites prevailed. Georgia's Nana Dzagnidze defeated Valentina Gunina, while 2021 World Cup champion Alexandra Kosteniuk got the better of Meri Arabidze. Harika Dronavalli beat Stavroula Tsolakidou, while Vaishali Rameshbabu eliminated Carissa Yip in a match of rising stars.
The only upset came in the match between Anna Muzychuk and China's Song Yuxin. After losing the first tiebreak game, Song impressively bounced back by winning the third rapid game and securing a draw in the fourth to advance.
With the conclusion of the round, the sixteen participants who remain in contention have been decided. Notably, the three lowest seeds remaining in the knockout - Kamalidenova, Omonova and Song - are all 19 years old. Their continued success adds a strong youthful presence to the final stages of the competition.

Alexandra Kosteniuk | Photo: Anna Shtourman

Harika Dronavalli defeated Stavroula Tsolakidou | Photo: Anna Shtourman

Vaishali Rameshbabu knocked out three-time US women's chess champion Carissa Yip | Photo: Anna Shtourman
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Muzychuk 0-1 Song
Analysis by André Schulz
This video course provides a comprehensive and practical White repertoire in the Ruy Lopez! Through instructive model games and in-depth theoretical explanations, you will learn how to confidently handle both main lines and sidelines.
This video course provides a comprehensive and practical White repertoire in the Ruy Lopez! Through instructive model games and in-depth theoretical explanations, you will learn how to confidently handle both main lines and sidelines.
Free video sample: Introduction
Free video sample: Overview
Free video sample: Chigorin: 9...Na5 10.Bc2 c5 11.d4 Nd7/cxd4

Anna Muzychuk playing white against Song Yuxin | Photo: Anna Shtourman
Vaishali 1-0 Yip
Analysis by André Schulz
In this video course, experts (Pelletier, Marin, Müller and Reeh) examine the games of Judit Polgar. Let them show you which openings Polgar chose to play, where her strength in middlegames were, or how she outplayed her opponents in the endgame.

Vaishali Rameshbabu | Photo: Anna Shtourman
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