The 2026 FIDE Candidates Tournament in Cyprus has reached its midpoint, and the chess world is witnessing a historical anomaly. As the players take a well-earned rest before the second half resumes this Tuesday, the narrative is split: an absolute coronation in the Open section and a wide-open, high-stakes chase in the Women’s category.
While Javokhir Sindarov has reduced a field of the world's best to a race for second place, India’s R. Vaishali has emerged as the primary challenger to last-minute replacement Anna Muzychuk, keeping the dream of an Indian challenger to the Women's World Championship very much alive.
Uzbekistan’s 20-year-old Javokhir Sindarov has not just led the tournament; he has dismantled it. With 6 points from 7 rounds, Sindarov has achieved the most dominant start in the modern Candidates format, surpassing the previous 5.5/7 record set by Ian Nepomniachtchi.
Sindarov has already defeated heavyweights like Fabiano Caruana, Hikaru Nakamura, and R. Praggnanandhaa. At his current pace, he needs only a few more draws and a single win to mathematically secure a title match against World Champion D. Gukesh.
| Rank | Player | Points | W-D-L | Status |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | Javokhir Sindarov (UZB) | 6 | 5-2-2000 | Runaway Leader |
| 2 | Fabiano Caruana (USA) | 4.5 | 3-3-2001 | Chasing |
| 3 | Anish Giri (NED) | 3.5 | 1-5-2001 | Middle Pack |
| 4 | Praggnanandhaa R. (IND) | 3.5 | 1-5-2001 | Middle Pack |
In the Women’s section, the drama is far more balanced. Ukraine’s Anna Muzychuk, who entered the tournament as a late replacement for Koneru Humpy, leads with 4.5 points. However, the momentum is firmly with R. Vaishali.
The Indian Grandmaster, who had a slow start with four draws and a loss, has roared back with consecutive wins. Known for her "Toronto Turnaround" in 2024, where she won five games in a row, Vaishali is just half a point behind the lead.
| Rank | Player | Points | W-D-L | Status |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | Anna Muzychuk (UKR) | 4.5 | 2-5-2000 | Sole Leader |
| 2 | Vaishali Rameshbabu (IND) | 4 | 2-4-2001 | Challenger |
| 3 | Divya Deshmukh (IND) | 3.5 | 1-5-2001 | Contender |
| 4 | Aleksandra Goryachkina (FIDE) | 3.5 | 0-7-0 | Drawing Machine |
While Sindarov’s dominance feels like an inevitability, the second Indian woman in the fray, Divya Deshmukh, is the tournament's biggest "What If." Currently tied for third at 3.5 points, Divya has played some of the highest-quality chess in Cyprus.
Marathon: Her Round 7 draw against Kateryna Lagno lasted seven hours and 135 moves.
Missed chances: Analysts note that Divya had nearly winning positions against both Vaishali and Lagno; converting either would have placed her at the top of the table.
Humpy Factor: Anna Muzychuk’s lead is particularly ironic given she was only invited after Koneru Humpy withdrew due to regional safety concerns.
Sindarov’s efficiency: In a tournament where draws are frequent, Sindarov has won 5 out of 7 games, a win rate of 71.4%.
Pragg's deficit: For R. Praggnanandhaa to catch Sindarov, he would likely need to mirror the Uzbek’s 6/7 run in the second half, a statistically monumental task.
Young phenom of Chess? At just 20, Sindarov is being heralded as the "phenom" of this generation, much like Gukesh was in 2024.
The second half of the Candidates usually favors those with the deepest opening prep and the strongest stamina. For Sindarov, it is about avoiding a collapse; for Vaishali, it is about replicating her historic win streaks. With the colors reversed for the second half, the under-pressure Caruana and the surging Indian women have seven rounds to change the course of chess history.