Ding Liren scores 4/5 and a 2795 TPR at Chinese Team Championship

by Stefan Liebig
5/1/2026 – Ding Liren took a long break from classical chess after losing the World Championship title in December 2024. He lost the title to Gukesh Dommaraju and was thereafter only occasionally active in online or rapid tournaments. For his comeback, the former world champion chose the Chinese Team Championship. At the tournament in Daqing, he played five games for his team, won four times, drew twice and achieved a performance rating of almost 2800 points. | Photos: Heilongjiang Provincial Sports Bureau

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Back in action

Since Ding Liren lost the world title, the chess world has been wondering whether the Chinese star will return and once again reach the elite level he showed during his earlier years. After a long absence, Ding took part in the Chinese Team Championships, which recently concluded in Daqing, Heilongjiang province, with an open section featuring fifteen squads and a competition featuring twelve women's teams. The national titleholders were decided over nine rounds using the Swiss system.

Ding made his debut in this event and, as one of the 23 grandmasters taking part, was a member of one of the 15 teams in the open tournament: the 17th undisputed world chess champion represented the Zhejiang Provincial Intellectual Sports Management Centre - and did so very successfully. Ding won his first three games and then drew against Bu Xiangzhi, another player long known at the professional circuit. In round eight, Ding's final appearance in the event, he also signed a draw. On that occasion, his opponent was Wang Yue.

The former world champion thus achieved a performance rating of 2795 - a genuinely promising comeback, which gives hope that chess fans will soon be able to see the 34-year-old at the board more often again. The 4 Elo points Ding gained left him with a rating of 2737.6 points and 15th place in the live world rankings.

Two of his wins can be seen in this article, while here is the game he drew against who was his strongest opponent in the tournament.

Chongqing takes the title

The prize-giving ceremony | Photo: Heilongjiang Provincial Sports Bureau

After nine rounds, the Chongqing team secured the title in the open section. Bu Xiangzhi and Xiao Tong remained unbeaten on the top boards, as did Peng Xiongjian on board three. With six match wins and three draws, the team delivered a commanding performance and finished 2 points ahead of Hangzhou, with Shanghai a further point behind. Ding and his teammates, among whom Lu Shanglei also remained unbeaten on board two, finished in fifth place.

Final standings

Rk. Team TB1
1 Chongqing 15
2 Hangzhou 13
3 Shanghai 12
4 Beijing 12
5 Zhejiang 10
6 Shandong 10
7 Tianjin 10
8 Chengdu 10
9 Jiangsu 10
10 Guangdong 9
11 Heilongjiang 9
12 Shenzhen 9
13 Jiangxi 7
14 Hebei 4
15 Hubei 4

In the women's section, there was an 11-round all-play-all tournament. Hebei won the title ahead of Jiangsu and Hangzhou.

Final standings

Rk. Team TB1
1 Hebei 18
2 Jiangsu 17
3 Hangzhou 15
4 Shanghai 15
5 Tianjin 14
6 Zhejiang 13
7 Chongqing 10
8 Beijing 8
9 Guangdong 8
10 Chengdu 8
11 Shenzhen 5
12 Shandong 1

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Stefan Liebig, born in 1974, is a journalist and co-owner of a marketing agency. He now lives in Barterode near Göttingen. At the age of five, strange pieces on his neighbour’s shelf aroused his curiosity. Since then, the game of chess has cast a spell over him. Flying high in the NRW youth league with his home club SV Bad Laasphe and several appearances in the second division team of Tempo Göttingen were highlights for the former youth South Westphalia champion.
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