Freestyle Chess G.O.A.T. Challenge
The Freestyle Chess G.O.A.T. Challenge was an 8-player over-the-board classical Chess960 tournament that took place at Gut Weißenhaus in Wangels, Germany from February 9–16, 2024. It was the first major Chess960 tournament that used classical chess time controls.
The tournament was organized and sponsored by Jan Henric Buettner, owner of the Weißenhaus resort, and co-organized by five-time World Chess Champion Magnus Carlsen.
Carlsen reportedly handpicked the seven other competitors – Ding Liren, Fabiano Caruana, Alireza Firouzja, Gukesh D, Nodirbek Abdusattorov, Vincent Keymer and Levon Aronian. Chess960 World Champion Hikaru Nakamura was invited, but declined to participate, possibly in order to focus on the upcoming Candidates Tournament. Carlsen won the event.
In March 2024, Buettner and Carlsen announced that the tournament would expand into a yearly series of events with increased prize funds. The second edition of the event took place from February 7–14, 2025, as the first leg of the Freestyle Chess Grand Slam Tour.
Format
The event started with a round-robin rapid tournament to determine the pairings for the main classical event. The time control for the round-robin is 25 minutes plus 10 seconds increment per move. It took place over the first two days of the tournament, February 9–10.The main event is a single-elimination tournament.
- The time control is 90 minutes for the first 40 moves, followed by 30 minutes for the rest of the game, and a 30-second increment per move after move 40.
- The matches consist of two classical games. In the event of a tie, rapid and blitz tiebreaks are played in the following order until the tie is broken – two 15+10 rapid games, two 5+2 blitz games and if a tie persists, one armageddon game.
Name
Freestyle Chess is another name for Chess960, otherwise known as Fischer random chess, a variant of chess where there are 960 different possible starting positions. In previous Freestyle Chess tournaments, notably the World Chess960 Championships, largely rapid chess time controls had been used instead of classical chess, despite randomised starting positions requiring more time for thought due to the lack of opening theory. This led Magnus Carlsen to pitch his idea for a classical Freestyle Chess tournament.Carlsen's status as arguably the greatest chess player of all time, or the "G.O.A.T.", and him handpicking his opponents or "challengers" inspired the name "Freestyle Chess G.O.A.T. Challenge".
Prize fund
The total prize fund for the event was $200,000.| Place | Prize money |
| 1 | $60,000 |
| 2 | $40,000 |
| 3 | $30,000 |
| 4 | $20,000 |
| 5 | $15,000 |
| 6 | $12,000 |
| 7 | $10,000 |
| 8 | $8,000 |
Results
Rapid event
The first four rounds of the rapid round-robin event were played on day 1. World Chess Champion Ding Liren blundered a piece and lost against Fabiano Caruana in round 1, and went on to lose his next three games as well. Gukesh recovered from a round 1 loss to Alireza Firouzja to win his next three games, including a round 2 win over Magnus Carlsen and a round 4 win over Ding. The only undefeated players were Vincent Keymer and Nodirbek Abdusattorov, the former scoring 3.5/4 to emerge the sole leader.Ding's loss streak continued on day 2 as he lost his round 5 encounter with Carlsen, the first meeting between the two world champions since Ding's title victory in 2023. Ding lost again in round 6 before finishing in last place with a total score of 0.5/7. Abdusattorov remained undefeated, beating Gukesh in round 6 and Carlsen in round 7 to win the rapid event with a score of 5.5/7, half a point ahead of Keymer.
| # | Player | Rating | 1 | 2 | 3 | 4 | 5 | 6 | 7 | 8 | Points |
| 1 | Freestyle Chess ratingsFreestyle Chess elo ratings for the players were revealed at the end of the event.
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