Weissenhaus: Carlsen to battle Caruana for world title on Sunday

by Carlos Alberto Colodro
2/15/2026 – The second day of action at the FIDE Freestyle Chess World Championship in Weissenhaus saw he start of the knockout phase, with the two semifinal matches deciding who will compete for the 2026 title. Magnus Carlsen and Fabiano Caruana emerged victorious and will meet in Sunday's final. In addition to a world title, a place in the 2027 FIDE Freestyle Chess World Championship has already been secured by both finalists. | Photo: Freestyle Chess / Carlotta Wessel

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Carlsen beats Abdusattorov in hard-fought match

As winner of the rapid round-robin, Magnus Carlsen had the privilege of selecting his opponent and opted to face Nodirbek Abdusattorov. The four-game match proved more demanding than the final score of 3–1 might suggest.

Carlsen's day began in slightly unusual fashion, as he arrived somewhat late for the opening game and was unable to participate in the joint pre-game analysis. From the outset, he invested considerable time in the opening, spending several minutes on his first moves. Abdusattorov reacted energetically and obtained the more comfortable position, but Carlsen gradually equalised and secured a draw with the black pieces.

The second game was also drawn. Abdusattorov held a significant advantage on the clock - around ten minutes against less than a minute for Carlsen - when the players agreed to split the point. Despite the imbalance in time, the position on the board was assessed as level. The scoreboard remained tied.

The critical moment of the match occurred in game three. Both players had advanced passed pawns in a sharp middlegame that eventually simplified to a heavy-piece ending. Abdusattorov chose to press for a win rather than steer towards a safe draw, which turned out to be a serious miscalculation. Carlsen converted his newfound advantage with accurate play and moved ahead in the match.

In the fourth game, Carlsen maintained a stable position from the outset. Although complications arose and he once again allowed his clock to run dangerously low, he retained control of the position. Abdusattorov, needing to win to force tiebreaks, took risks and erred in the decisive phase. Carlsen capitalised and closed out the match, finishing 3–1.

Carlsen, who relinquished the classical world title but currently holds the FIDE rapid and blitz crowns, now has the opportunity to add another world title to his record.

Magnus Carlsen

Magnus Carlsen | Photo: Freestyle Chess / Stev Bonhage

Nodirbek Abdusattorov

Nodirbek Abdusattorov | Photo: Freestyle Chess / Stev Bonhage

Carlsen v. Abdusattorov

Caruana edges past Keymer

The semifinal between Fabiano Caruana and Vincent Keymer followed a different trajectory, but was equally competitive. Caruana struck in game one, winning an exchange in the middlegame and eventually converting the advantage. Later analysis indicated that Keymer might have been able to escape with a draw at one stage, but the American grandmaster secured the full point.

Game two ended peacefully. In the third encounter, the roles were reversed. Caruana committed an early inaccuracy and found himself under sustained pressure. Keymer missed one opportunity to finish the game and then another, but Caruana was unable to stabilise the position and eventually went down, bringing the match level at 1½–1½.

The fourth and final game decided matters. Rather than producing another tense struggle, the game developed in a more one-sided fashion. Caruana gained the initiative and did not allow it to slip, converting convincingly to take the match 2½–1½ and advance to the final.

Sunday's championship match will therefore see Carlsen and Caruana meet again in a world title contest, echoing their 2018 classical championship encounter, which tool place in London.

Vincent Keymer

Vincent Keymer | Photo: Freestyle Chess / Stev Bonhage

Caruana v. Keymer

Placement matches

In the battle for fifth to eighth places, Hans Niemann defeated Levon Aronian by 2½–1½, while Arjun Erigaisi got the better of Javokhir Sindarov by 3–1.

Niemann, who had finished fifth in the round robin and thus was entitled to choose his opponent, selected Aronian. The decision was vindicated in game one, where Aronian drifted in the early middlegame and fell into severe time trouble. After move 25 he had just over half a minute remaining, compared to nearly ten minutes for Niemann, and resigned shortly thereafter in a lost position.

Aronian responded in game two after Niemann experimented with an early rook manoeuvre that left the piece sidelined for much of the game. The US grandmaster seized the initiative and equalised the match. The third game proved decisive: Aronian, a pawn down and again short of time, was unable to locate the path to a draw while a pawn down in an endgame with rook and knight against rook and bishop. Niemann required only a draw in the final game and achieved it without major incident.

Hans Niemann

Hans Niemann | Photo: Freestyle Chess / Lennart Ootes

Niemann v. Aronian

The match between Erigaisi and Sindarov began with two hard-fought draws. In the second game, Erigaisi played an endgame of two knights against a lone king for dozens of additional moves before the inevitable draw was agreed.

Game three featured an early queen move to a5 - an idea discussed in the pre-game analysis session - and a bold exchange sacrifice by Erigaisi. Although computer evaluations initially suggested the sacrifice was unsound, practical play told a different story. After a tactically rich struggle, Erigaisi emerged with the point. Sindarov, needing a win in the final game with the black pieces, made an early strategic error and soon found himself under pressure. Erigaisi converted to win the match 3–1.

On Sunday, Carlsen and Caruana will contest the title, while Abdusattorov and Keymer will compete for third place. Niemann and Erigaisi will meet in the match for fifth, while Aronian and Sindarov will play for seventh.

Arjun Erigaisi

Arjun Erigaisi | Photo: Freestyle Chess / Stev Bonhage

Erigaisi v. Sindarov

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Carlos Colodro is a Hispanic Philologist from Bolivia. He works as a freelance translator and writer since 2012. A lot of his work is done in chess-related texts, as the game is one of his biggest interests, along with literature and music.
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