He did almost win the Tata Chess Masters in Wijk aan Zee, but lost to R Praggnanandhaa in the tie-breaker title-deciding round. The Indian GM has also failed to meet expectations in Freestyle Chess, but that was never his main priority too. He will be hoping to find some form ahead of defending his title next year.
Speaking to The Indian Express, Indian chess legend Viswanathan Anand weighed in on Gukesh’s poor form in 2025. “No, big deal,” he said.
“He’s been experimenting in lots of formats. He’s willing to travel, he’s willing to go out there and try again and again. He’s not sitting on prestige (of being world champion). These are healthy qualities. His year in classical events, it’s fairly acceptable. I mean, losing a tiebreak (at Wijk aan Zee) doesn’t mean you’ve had a bad tournament. His performance in Norway Chess didn’t fit any mold, but in its own way, it was hopefully satisfactory.
“It’s true that subsequently, whether it’s Grand Swiss, or World Cup, or, especially the faster formats, he’s probably disappointed. My own feeling is, no big deal. As long as he keeps pounding away at it, he’ll eventually correct the formula,” he added.
Gukesh beat Ding Liren in Singapore last year, to become the new world champion. The result saw him become the youngest, undisputed world champion at the age of 18 years and 195 days. His team for the World C’ship included GMs Grzegorz Gajewski, Radoslaw Wojtaszek, Jan-Krzysztof Duda, Jan Klimkowski, Pentala Harikrishna and Vincent Keymer. He also had Paddy Upton as his mental conditioning coach.
