Arjun, Nihal Take Aim At Two-Time Bughouse World Champions Liang, Xiong
GMs Arjun Erigaisi and Nihal Sarin finally booked their spot in the 2024 Chess.com Bughouse Championship knockouts on their fourth attempt after scoring 68/78 on Thursday. The Indian superstars, alongside FM Richard Zheng and NM Vincent Baker, secured the last two qualifying spots and will fight for their share of the $2,000 first prize.
Commiserations must also go to FMs Marten Aronsson and Daniel Yeager, the former of whom finished qualifier eight in first by a single point, but four of his points do not count toward qualification as they were played with an alternate partner.
The field for the knockout finals is full of bughouse experts including the two-time bughouse world champions GMs Awonder Liang and Jeffery Xiong, the 2024 Chess.com Crazyhouse champion NM Jalen Wang, and "Helmsknight" (aka Grace Ferguson). This will commence on Friday, August 23, at 12 p.m. ET / 18:00 CEST / 9.30 p.m. IST.
Qualifier 7 - Standings
Rank | Fed | Title | Username | Name | Rating | Score |
1 Q* | GM | GHANDEEVAM2003 | Arjun Erigaisi | 2483 | 245 | |
1 Q* | GM | nihalsarin | Nihal Sarin | 2349 | 245 | |
2 | IM | schoolmeester | Vincent Rothuis | 2492 | 222 | |
2 | FM | Crazy_Eight | Roee Aroesti | 2493 | 222 | |
3 | IM | Wormpaca | Daniel Gurevich | 2331 | 195 | |
3 | ClocKingswitcher | 2664 | 195 | |||
4 | tjarkvos | Tjark Vos | 2505 | 185 | ||
4 | pknm | Patrik Nystrom | 2249 | 185 | ||
5 | NM | ybothg | Tobias Rizzo | 2257 | 179 | |
5 | SoccerBoy6 | 2323 | 179 | |||
6 | IM | papapizza | Ben Li | 2370 | 147 | |
6 | ChikaKyo | Chika Kyoko | 2047 | 147 | ||
7 | JarlCarlander | Jarl Carlander | 2220 | 136 | ||
7 | chuckmoulton | Chuck Moulton | 2077 | 136 | ||
8 | Parthichess1 | Vignesh Kannan P | 1625 | 122 | ||
8 | IM | DragonB70 | Nhat Minh To | 2173 | 122 | |
(Full final standings here)
Qualifier 8 - Standings
Rank | Fed | Title | Username | Name | Rating | Score |
1 | FM | Zyxon | Marten Aronsson | 2507 | 226 | |
2 Q* | FM | TheDuck | Richard Zheng | 2598 | 225 | |
2 Q* | NM | vjbaker | Vincent Baker | 2548 | 225 | |
3 | FM | chickencrossroad | Daniel Yeager | 2650 | 222 | |
4 | GM | CaspiIsrael | Israel Caspi | 2433 | 195 | |
4 | FM | Crazy_Eight | Roee Aroesti | 2482 | 195 | |
5 | pknm | Patrik Nystrom | 2250 | 193 | ||
5 | tjarkvos | Tjark Vos | 2506 | 193 | ||
6 | IM | Wormpaca | Daniel Gurevich | 2240 | 160 | |
6 | ClocKingswitcher | 2589 | 160 | |||
7 | Rapid | 2065 | 132 | |||
7 | FM | JunjiCol | Julian Colville | 1940 | 132 | |
8 | ChikaKyo | Chika Kyoko | 2109 | 120 | ||
(Full final standings here)
- Qualifier 7 - Arjun, Nihal Qualify On Final Day
- Qualifier 8 - North American Duo Posts 28-Game Winning Streak
Qualifier 7 - Arjun, Nihal Qualify On Final Day
Defeating two-time bughouse world champions Liang and Xiong will be a difficult task for any of the teams who have qualified for the knockouts; however, as some of the best tacticians in the world, Arjun and Nihal could prove to be a significant, albeit unorthodox threat to the top seeds.
They did it! GMs Nihal Sarin and Arjun Erigaisi win the 7th Bughouse Championship Qualifiers and guarantee a spot in tomorrow's big finals! ✨ pic.twitter.com/9SCT3P5zxf
— Chess.com Community (@GreenPawns) August 22, 2024
Though their bughouse pedigree is limited, Arjun and Nihal managed to brute-force their way to the top of the seventh qualifier, focusing on sacrificial attacks with White and trusting in a classic, French Defense-inspired setup with Black.
While dueling with the eventual second-place finalists IM Vincent Rothuis and FM Roee Aroesti, Arjun and Nihal showed that against specialists, longer and anti-theoretical positions are their forte.
In the position below, Arjun launched a scintillating attack on Black's king after dropping a pawn on a7.
There are no good counterattacking moves for Black, and now he has to buy time for his teammate. Time is ticking, though, and White doesn't hesitate to promote a pawn.
Black then starts reinforcing the squares around his king as White promotes another pawn (below). Humorously, if given a chance, Arjun can drop another queen, and there would be four white queens on the board at once! Time begins to become a problem for Arjun, though, as his teammate's king has come under threat.
A few moves later, Arjun put the game to bed with a combination that shows why knights are more powerful than bishops or rooks in bughouse chess.
Eventually, Arjun found a way to checkmate on move 31. Longer games like this are a taste of what's to come in Friday's knockouts.
In the end, Arjun and Nihal's ability to play at lightning speed helped them to establish a 23-point lead over the second-placed team. Despite losing fewer games, Rothuis and Aroesti couldn't complete the same amount as the Indians.
Qualifier 8 - North American Duo Posts 28-Game Winning Streak
An unusual situation arose in the eighth and final qualifier after a sole player, Aronsson, leapfrogged Zheng and Baker and topped the leaderboard following a 57-move showdown with the leaders. This would not be enough to qualify, though, as his partner finished four points lower.
When the dust had settled, it became evident that Aronsson had initially joined the qualifier as an individual and won one game before linking up with Yeager. According to the tournament regulations: "Only games played with the same partner will count towards Bughouse Championship Main Event qualification," meaning that for qualification purposes his score was 222.
To reach their score of 225, Zheng and Baker won 60/66 of their games and notched a 28-game win streak in the process. GM Denis Lazavik and FM Artiom Strybuk, as well as bughouse streamer Chuck Moulton and his partner Jarl Carlander, were notable casualties of this streak.
Zheng and Baker also played some instructive miniatures which demonstrate why normal chess openings are not always viable in bughouse chess. Below, Black is punished for playing the Giuoco Piano with a thematic bishop sacrifice.
After taking the bishop, Black faces another check.
Given Baker's partner has already fashioned a queen trade on the other board, Baker is ready to deliver checkmate if the king goes back to the eighth rank.
As Zheng and Baker were the last qualifiers, they are relatively untested against the teams who qualified early in the week. Thus, gauging how they will fare in the finals is tricky. For those looking to improve their understanding of bughouse chess ahead of the knockouts, be sure to check out Moulton's stream of the event where he and his partner Carlander gave a play-by-play.
With all eight teams now locked in for Friday's final, it's prediction time! Comment who you think will take the $2,000 first prize and the title of 2024 Chess.com Bughouse Champions.
Knockouts Format
The 2024 Chess.com Bughouse Championship is the latest event in the Chess.com Community Championship series, and anyone can battle for a piece of this month's increased $7,500 prize fund. The tournament will be decided with an eight-team double-elimination bracket. Each team must qualify via one of eight, two-hour arenas with a 3+0 time control.
Previous Coverage
- Tang Scores 71/80 In 6th Qualifier With Mysterious New Bughouse Partner
- Helmsknight, Vasquez Overcome Team Tang To Qualify On 3rd Attempt
- Xiong, Liang Win 50 Consecutive Games In Bughouse Championship Qualifier
- Moroni Claims Spell Chess Crown In Grand Final Reset
- Spell Chess Specialists Qualify For Knockout Ahead of Bok, Bortnyk, Hambleton
- Younger Brother Triumphs In Atomic Rivalry
- National Master Halts GM Martinez's Reign In Crazyhouse Championship
- Martinez Defends Variant Crown In 3 Check Chess
- Martinez Is King of The Hill In Variants Final
- Variants Community Series Results
- Variants Community Series: All The Information