The marathon has reached its final sprint. After 13 rounds of intense battles, Grandmaster R. Vaishali now stands on the brink of making history. In a dramatic 13th round, China’s Zhu Jiner faltered under pressure against Aleksandra Goryachkina, giving Vaishali a vital lifeline.
Entering Wednesday’s final round, the Indian pioneer is tied for first place with Kazakhstan’s Bibisara Assaubayeva. With the winner securing a World Championship challenge against Ju Wenjun, every move in Round 14 carries immense stakes.
| Rank | Player | Points | Round 14 Opponent |
|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | R. Vaishali (IND) | 7.5 | Kateryna Lagno (B) |
| 2 | Bibisara Assaubayeva (KAZ) | 7.5 | Divya Deshmukh (B) |
| 3 | Zhu Jiner (CHN) | 7 | Anna Muzychuk (W) |
| 4 | Aleksandra Goryachkina (RUS) | 6.5 | Tan Zhongyi (B) |
| 5 | Anna Muzychuk (UKR) | 6.5 | Zhu Jiner (B) |
| 6 | Kateryna Lagno (RUS) | 6.5 | R. Vaishali (W) |
While six players are mathematically in contention, the primary focus is on the neck-and-neck race between Vaishali and Assaubayeva. Here is how the Indian GM can secure the crown:
Vaishali walks away as the champion on Wednesday if:
She wins her game against Kateryna Lagno.
And Bibisara Assaubayeva fails to win (draws or loses) against Divya Deshmukh
If Vaishali draws her game, she can still win the title outright if:
Bibisara loses to Divya Deshmukh.
And Zhu Jiner fails to beat Anna Muzychuk.
The battle will move to a playoff round on Thursday if:
Both Vaishali and Assaubayeva win their respective matches.
OR both Vaishali and Assaubayeva draw, and Zhu Jiner fails to win.
OR Vaishali draws, Assaubayeva loses, but Zhu Jiner wins (setting up a Vaishali vs. Zhu playoff).
Although Divya Deshmukh is currently at the bottom of the standings, she remains crucial to Vaishali’s title hopes. Notably, one of Divya’s only two victories in this event was against Bibisara Assaubayeva. If the young Indian can recapture that giant-killing form and decisively stop the Kazakh grandmaster’s momentum, it could significantly boost Vaishali’s chances.
Lifeline: Vaishali was sharing the lead with Zhu Jiner until Round 12, lost it, and clinicaly regained it in Round 13 after Zhu's shock defeat.
Top-order stutter: Vaishali has maintained her lead for five consecutive rounds, withstanding both time pressure and the challenges on the board.
White vs. black: Vaishali will have the White pieces against Lagno, a considerable edge in this must-win final round.
For R. Vaishali, the Round 13 draw against former champion Tan Zhongyi marked a comeback from a clearly inferior position, underscoring the resilience demanded of a World Championship contender. As she meticulously readies herself to face Kateryna Lagno, she is acutely aware that a single misstep could undo a year of preparation. In the rarefied air of the Candidates, standings matter less now; what counts is who can endure the last 40 moves without a moment’s lapse.