Xu Xiangyu dominates Rilton Cup

by Stefan Liebig
1/6/2026 – With a one-point margin, third seed Xu Xiangyu of China won the Rilton Cup, which was played in Stockholm over the turn of the year. A total of 19 grandmasters competed for the title at the traditional tournament, but there was no way past Xu. He conceded just two draws: one against top seed Anton Demchenko in round five and another against Mahadevan Siva in the final round. These were also the two players he relegated to second and third place respectively. | Photo: Rilton Cup, Abdel Rahman Sadeh

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At the heart of the chess festival held in Stockholm over the turn of the year was the traditional Rilton Cup, which was staged for the 53rd time. The event was open to players rated 2200 and above, as well as women rated at least 2100 and junior players. The tournament was played over nine classical games with a time control of 90 minutes for 40 moves, followed by 30 minutes for the rest of the game, plus a 30-second increment per move from move one, using the Swiss system. Over the years, the long list of winners has included players such as Jan Timman (1972 and 1973), Ilya Smirin (1989), Lars Bo Hansen (1994), and Radoslaw Wojtaszek (2008 and 2009). Last year’s winner, Amin Bassem, did not take part this time.

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Of the three pre-tournament favourites rated above 2600, two lived up to expectations. Xu Xiangyu of China (2601) conceded only two draws and finished a full point clear of Anton Demchenko of Slovenia (2631). Both players remained unbeaten and drew their direct encounter in round five. The tournament did not run as smoothly for the third Elo heavyweight, Jon Ludvig Hammer. The Norwegian, who entered the event as the second seed with a rating of 2606, finished in a disappointing 29th place with 5.5 points. He lost in round six to the third-placed finisher, IM Mahadevan Siva of India (2427), and in round eight to the French IM Rajat Makkar (2396), who eventually finished 17th.

A particularly strong performance was delivered by the Austrian junior talent Lukas Dotzer (2478). The U16 player finished in a shared fifth place, which placed him sixth on tie-breaks. He was just half a point behind the players in second to fourth place and, apart from his loss to Demchenko, remained unbeaten throughout the tournament. A draw in the final round against the Pole Krzystof Raczek (2489) secured sixth place and a gain of 13 Elo points. In the previous round, Dotzer defeated the Czech player Bayarjavkhlan Delgerdalai (2376):

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Final standings after 9 rounds

Rk. Name Pts.  Tb1 
1 XU, Xiangyu 8 48,5
2 DEMCHENKO, Anton 7 50
3 SIVA, Mahadevan 7 45,5
4 DAI, Changren 7 44
5 XIE, Kaifan 6,5 46,5
6 DOTZER, Lukas 6,5 46
7 LI, Di 6,5 45,5
8 MESHKOVS, Nikita 6,5 45
9 SENGUPTA, Deep 6,5 45
10 RACZEK, Krzysztof 6,5 44
11 HEBERLA, Bartlomiej 6,5 42
12 RIEHLE, Marco 6,5 41,5
13 SARDANA, Rishi 6,5 40
14 ZHALMAKHANOV, Ramazan 6 49
15 BAUER, Christian 6 43,5
16 CIESLAK, Patryk 6 42
17 MAKKAR, Rajat 6 42
18 JAIN, Kashish Manoj 6 40,5
19 DIXIT, Nikhil 6 40
20 SEEMANN, Jakub 6 40

...168 participants

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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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