Hong Kong: Rating favourites make it to quarterfinals

by Carlos Alberto Colodro
6/21/2026 – The World Team Blitz Championship began in Hong Kong with 48 teams split into four pools, followed by the first knockout round on the same day. WR Chess, Endgame.AI, Hexamind and Mr Birdie and Friends both won their groups and reached the quarterfinals, while Dragon Chilling, Uzbekistan, Team MGD1 and Chessgurukul also made it to Sunday's final stages. Chessgurukul produced the main upset by eliminating Chess United, led by Viswanathan Anand. | Photo: FIDE / Michal Walusza

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Carlsen & co. swiftly recover, shine on the first day of blitz action

The World Team Blitz Championship began in Hong Kong with an opening day that reduced the field from 48 teams to 8. The day included both the pool stage and the round-of-16, with most of the leading teams reaching the quarterfinals.

The blitz event uses a different format from the rapid championship. Instead of a single Swiss tournament, the 48 teams were divided into 4 pools of 12 squads. Each pool was played as a round-robin, with the top four teams advancing to the knockout stage. From the round-of-16 onwards, each tie consists of two blitz matches, with colours reversed in the second encounter. Extra matches are used only if the score remains level.

WR Chess, Endgame.AI, Hexamind and Mr Birdie and Friends won their pools and then won their first duels in the knockout, while Dragon Chilling, Uzbekistan, Team MGD1 and Chessgurukul also made it through the first knockout round. Among the players eliminated on the first day were Vishy Anand, Richard Rapport and Peter Svidler.

World Team Blitz Chess Championship 2026

Chess fans of all ages visited the Queen Elizabeth Stadium to witness top-notch blitz action on Saturday | Photo: FIDE / Michal Walusza

Pool A

Pool A was won by WR Chess, who responded strongly after finishing only 17th in the rapid event. The defending blitz champions and three-time winners of the competition won all but one of their matches in the pool stage. Their only dropped point came in a 3-3 draw against China's Schnappi Krokodil Team, a match in which Magnus Carlsen, Fabiano Caruana and Alexandra Kosteniuk all lost.

Carlsen's start to the blitz event was also notable after his difficult finish in the rapid tournament. Having lost his last four rapid encounters in a row, he began the pool stage with eight consecutive wins. He looked close to making it nine when he reached a winning position against Xu Xiangyu, but an exchange of queens allowed the advantage to fade, and he eventually lost after taking risks in the resulting position.

Chess United finished second in Pool A. The team was led by former world champion Vishy Anand and also included Faustino Oro, the "Messi of chess", who scored 9½/10 in the pool stage. Their heaviest setback came in a 5-1 defeat against WR Chess. Barys took third place, while Schnappi Krokodil completed the set of qualifiers from the group.

Viswanathan Anand, Magnus Carlsen

Magnus Carlsen (WR Chess) defeated Vishy Anand (Chess United) with black in round three - the Norwegian scored eight wins in a row on Saturday | Photo: FIDE / Michal Walusza

Faustino Oro, Jan-Krzysztof Duda

Argentine prodigy Faustino Oro (Chess United) scored an astounding 9½/10 in the pool stage - his biggest win came in round three, when he upset Jan-Krzysztof Duda (WR Chess) with black | Photo: FIDE / Michal Walusza

Final standings

Rk. Team TB1
1 WR Chess 21
2 Chess United 19
3 Barys 18
4 Schnappi Krokodil Team  17
5 Theme International Trading 12
6 Fearless Knights of Hong Kong China Chess Sch 10
7 Chongqing Kylin Chess Club 9
8 Duobeniajan Costa Calida Esj 9
9 The Chess Academy Hong Kong Team B 7
10 InstAdapt 6
11 Kindness On Board Infinite Team 2
12 C.A. Silla Integrant Col-lectius 2

Pool B

Endgame.AI topped Pool B with 10 wins and 1 draw. Hans Niemann, playing on his 23rd birthday, was one of the team's leading performers, scoring 9/11, a result coincidentally matched by teammates Alexey Sarana, Leinier Dominguez and Zhu Jiner. Their only drawn match came against the newly crowned World Rapid Team champions, Dragon Chilling.

Dragon Chilling also went through the pool stage unbeaten, finishing second with 9 wins and 2 draws. The all-Chinese team advanced comfortably, though Ding Liren had a difficult time on the top board, suffering four losses in nine games. Chessgurukul and Indonesia took the remaining two qualification places from Pool B.

Hans Niemann

Endgame.AI's Hans Niemann turned 23 years old on Saturday! | Photo: FIDE / Michal Walusza

Wang Zihao

Wang Zihao is one of two "recreational player" in Dragon Chilling's roster - he scored 2½/6 in the pool stage, and then collected back-to-back victories in the round-of-16! | Photo: FIDE / Michal Walusza

Final standings

Rk. Team TB1
1 Endgame.AI 21
2 Dragon Chilling 20
3 Chessgurukul  17
4 Indonesia  15
5 Mongolia-Aldar 13
6 May Wind Newbies 12
7 Global Ramblers 11
8 Chess Thulir  11
9 Street Chess Canberra 5
10 Scholastic Anichess HK 3
11 Davao Chess Eagles 3
12 Perfect  1

Pool C

Pool C was headed by Hexamind, who scored 10 wins and 1 draw. Their squad included several experienced blitz specialists, with Alireza Firouzja, Levon Aronian, Anish Giri and Volodar Murzin all playing key roles. Giri, much like Carlsen, started with 8/8 before losing his ninth game.

Uzbekistan finished second in the same pool, also unbeaten, with 8 wins and 3 draws. Nodirbek Abdusattorov took over from Javokhir Sindarov on the top board and produced a strong performance. Team MGD1, featuring Arjun Erigaisi, Nihal Sarin and Pranav Venkatesh on the top boards, finished third. Sky Chess took the final qualifying place, helped by a 10/11 score from Uzbek teenager IM Mukhammadzokhid Suyarov on board four.

Levon Aronian

The ever-charismatic Levon Aronian (Hexamind) right before his team's encounter against Uzbekistan | Photo: FIDE / Michal Walusza

World Team Blitz Chess Championship 2026

Rustam Kasimdzhanov, Javokhir Sindarov, Mukhiddin Madaminov and Nodirbek Abdusattorov (Uzbekistan) following closely the game of their teammate Nodirbek Yakubboev | Photo: FIDE / Michal Walusza

Final standings

Rk. Team TB1
1 Hexamind Chess Team 21
2 Uzbekistan 19
3 Team MGD1 17
4 Sky Chess 16
5 Red Pseudodragon 15
6 Shenzhen Qiyu Chess Club 12
7 Kidult Chess Academy Hong Kong 11
8 Caissa Hong Kong Chess Club 6
9 Quadcore+ 5
10 The Chess Academy Hong Kong Team A 5
11 Malaysia Chess Hub 4
12 Chess In Shanghai 1

Pool D

Pool D produced the only perfect match score of the round-robin stage. Mr Birdie and Friends won all 11 matches to finish on 22/22 match points, continuing the form that had taken them close to a podium place in the rapid championship. Vladislav Artemiev did not have his best day on board one, but the team had strong returns elsewhere: Le Quang Liem and Sam Sevian both scored 9/11, Awonder Liang made 8½/11, while Carissa Yip and "recreational player" Ning Yunlong collected 10/11 each.

The rest of Pool D was much closer. KazChess took second place after a 6-0 win over Chessnut Nova in the final round, a result that proved costly for the team that features, among others, rising stars Marc'Andria Maurizzi and Lu Miaoyi. Chessnut Nova missed qualification only on game-point tiebreaks. Odlar Yurdu from Azerbaijan finished third, while Interstellar Club took the fourth and final qualifying place.

Carissa Yip, Awonder Liang

The only squad from Pool D that made it to the quarterfinals was Mr Birdie and Friends - here Ning Yunlong, Carissa Yip and Awonder Liang facing their round-two opponents from Qatar Chess Team | Photo: FIDE / Michal Walusza

Rauf Mamedov, Aydin Suleymanli

Odlar Yurdu from Azerbaijan, with Rauf Mamedov and Aydin Suleymanli on the top boards, finished third in Pool D and were then knocked out by Uzbekistan in the round-of-16 | Photo: FIDE / Michal Walusza

Final standings

Rk. Team TB1
1 Mr Birdie and Friends 22
2 Kazchess 18
3 Odlar Yurdu (Azerbaijan)  15
4 Interstellar Club 14
5 Chessnut Nova 14
6 Farm - Valera Chess Training 13
7 The MongolZ 12
8 PKU-Alpha2Fund Chess Team 7
9 Blue Bulldogs 6
10 Wizard Manpower – Pilipinas 6
11 Qatar Chess Team 5
12 Beijing Yijia Chess Club 0

All available games - Pool stage

Round-of-16

The round-of-16 was also played on the opening day, reducing the knockout field to eight teams. The group winners all advanced comfortably.

  • WR Chess defeated Indonesia 5-1 and 4-2
  • Endgame.AI went through convincingly, defeating Schnappi Krokodil 5½-½ and 3½-2½
  • Hexamind beat Interstellar Club 4-2 and 4½-1½
  • Mr Birdie and Friends continued their smooth run with 4-2 and 4½-1½ victories over Sky Chess

Team MGD1, despite ending third in their group, also achieved a clear victory in the first round of the knockout, scoring 5-1 and 3½-2½ victories over Kazchess to remain in contention.

Dragon Chilling and Uzbekistan had to work harder for their quarterfinal places. Dragon Chilling drew the first match against Barys before winning the second 4-2. Uzbekistan also drew their first match, against Odlar Yurdu, and then edged the second by a 3½-2½ score.

The main upset of the round-of-16 came from Chessgurukul, who eliminated Chess United. The Indian team won the first match 4-2 and then increased the margin with a 5-1 victory in the second.

The quarterfinals, semifinals, third-place match and final will be played on Sunday, with WR Chess set to face Uzbekistan - Carlsen is likely to face either Abdusattorov or Sindarov - in a highly anticipated quarterfinal pairing.

World Team Blitz Chess Championship 2026

World Team Blitz Chess Championship 2026

Team MGD1 defeated Kazchess in the round-of-16 | Photo: FIDE / Michal Walusza

Praggnanandhaa Rameshbabu, Viswanathan Anand

Praggnanandhaa Rameshbabu (Chessgurukul) scored 1½/2 against Viswanathan Anand (Chess United) to help his team reach the quarterfinals | Photo: FIDE / Michal Walusza

Ju Wenjun, Ding Liren

Chinese superstars! Reigning women's world champion Ju Wenjun and former world champion Ding Liren | Photo: FIDE / Michal Walusza

All available games - Knockout stage

Links


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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