Sunday, May 17, 2026

The Planet’s Best Chess Players Are Having Their LIV Golf Moment

Chess’s prestigious mainstay event is going head-to-head with a new, splashy Saudi PIF–backed tournament. Grandmasters are caught in the clash.

Maxime Vachier Lagrave
Lennart Ootes/Grand Chess Tour
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At the highest levels of play, chess matches come down to exacting decision-making under immense time pressure. Top grandmasters are now feeling that extraordinary stress in their own lives, caught in the crossfire of two key tournament organizers—with no obvious path to checkmate.

Two of the biggest and most important chess tournament circuits are in a scheduling overlap, and the sport’s biggest stars have signed contracts that require them to participate in both. 

First, there’s the prestigious mainstay: the Grand Chess Tour, backed by billionaire philanthropist Rex Sinquefield and his Saint Louis Chess Club, which is the largest non–World Chess Federation (FIDE) tournament. Founded in 2015—and featuring six invitational tournaments of various time formats, culminating in the “classical” multi-hour matches of the Sinquefield Cup—the GCT reliably attracts the strongest players in the world. 

It’s also one of the sport’s richest. The 2026 tour features a $2 million total prize pool across the events, with the winner of the four-person Finals shootout taking home an additional $350,000 on top of their previous winnings. Last year, American grandmaster Fabiano Caruana racked up $439,000 in prize money on his way to victory—among the largest purses in the game.

Despite its essential status, the GCT has found itself in an awkward overlap with the Esports World Cup this year. The EWC is a multi-discipline gaming competition bankrolled by the Public Investment Fund of Saudi Arabia, which added the royal game to its portfolio in 2025. Its chess competition is an in-person tournament with 10-minute digital games, compared to the traditional “over-the-board” format of the GCT. 

The purse for the EWC’s main chess event: a $1.5 million prize pool for the single tournament. Last year, Team Liquid’s Magnus Carlsen, the world No. 1 grandmaster, won the inaugural event in Saudi Arabia. He pocketed $250,000 from the victory. 

The PIF’s splashy investment in chess has rocked the sport: It sent esports organizations—which had never worked with chess players before—scrambling to sign elite grandmasters left, right, and center, and locked them into contracts to play at the Riyadh event, which did not yet have a date for 2026.

Now, the Sinquefield Cup and the in-person finals of the Esports World Cup chess event are set to overlap for the first time in August. Something needs to give.

Sinquefield Cup 2025
Lennart Ootes/Grand Chess Tour

Two of the biggest events of the year getting a date overlap this far out was “unprecedented,” French grandmaster Maxime Vachier-Lagrave tells Front Office Sports. “There’s still at least four or five months” to find a solution, he says. But the resolution will be complicated, and the buttoned-up sport—now flush with Saudi cash—is already upside down.

Echoes of LIV

If the clash between an important old-money prestige event and a shiny new Saudi-backed competitor sounds familiar, it is.

Since 2022, golf’s top players have been torn between long-standing and undisputed leader PGA Tour and the PIF’s LIV Golf. Similar to the EWC in chess, LIV is a rival circuit meant to attract the sport’s biggest names with prize pools that initially made the PGA Tour’s top purses look almost quaint. Forced to choose between the two circuits, many players have jumped to LIV, and although LIV players can still play in golf’s major championships when they qualify, athletes remain divided.

The introduction of the EWC—and its own stunning awards—has similarly disrupted chess’s traditional tournament circuit and caused split loyalties among the players. Carlsen’s embrace has been particularly notable, as well as American grandmaster Hikaru Nakamura, who represents Team Falcons. 

Like many professional sports, chess has overlapping events throughout the year—and normally, a grandmaster would just pick one and move on. But participants of the Grand Chess Tour are contracted for the entire circuit—and in the case of the Esports World Cup, chess players who signed with esports orgs inked deals with the explicit purpose of playing in Riyadh.

With no players’ unions or collective bargaining—and FIDE staying silent on the matter—they are on their own to navigate this new landscape where both their earnings and their reputations hang in the balance. 

“If things stay this way,” says Vachier-Lagrave, who plays for esports org Team Vitality, “I will breach one of my contracts, and the same goes for a lot of the players.”

An Open Plea

After behind-the-scenes appeals failed to solve the issue, seven elite grandmasters—including Vachier-Lagrave as well as four of the world’s ten highest-ranked players—voiced their concerns in an open letter posted on X/Twitter on Feb. 10. 

The signatories explained that the overlap makes it impossible for them to fulfill their mutual contractual obligations, and denies fans the chance to watch the strongest fields at both competitions. They called on the tournament organizers to find a compromise—whether moving dates or coming up with any other kind of solution.

The finger-pointing commenced. In response, the Grand Chess Tour posted a statement of its own the next day, saying it wasn’t responsible for the clash. 

Esports World Cup Chess 2025
Esports World Cup

Alex Onischuk, the tour’s deputy executive director, tells FOS that “the Grand Chess Tour has held consistent August dates for more than a decade” and “the Esports World Cup included chess for the first time last year, and their event was held earlier on the calendar, so there was no scheduling conflict and we had no indication that the dates would shift.” It is not possible, the GCT says, to move its events.

The Esports World Cup has not publicly addressed the open letter and did not respond to FOS’s inquiry about its scheduling practices. However, it has been more willing to engage in dialogue behind the scenes, partly with the help of a key intermediary.

Chess.com, the largest and most influential online chess platform, hosts the EWC qualifiers and manages the event broadcasts. It also provides the platform infrastructure for the event itself, which is played on Chess.com’s servers. The company is trying to broker peace.

“The GCT is an independent event, and while Chess.com qualifies players to the EWC, the EWC schedule is set by the organizer,” Michael Brancato, events commissioner at Chess.com, tells FOS. “That said, we were aware of the potential conflict before the schedules were publicly announced, and we encouraged the organizers of both events to avoid an overlap.”

Brancato says that despite the limited public posturing, the parties actually made an effort to make things work. “We know they tried, but scheduling at this level is genuinely difficult. The GCT has typically held events in August, and the EWC is trying to fit more than 20 titles into a seven-week window.”

A chess insider also confirmed to FOS that the EWC’s scheduling discussions began as early as last summer—significantly earlier than what the current public footprint suggests. Yet, the overlap remained.

A Permanent Split?

World no. 3 Caruana—a strong candidate to become reigning world champion Gukesh D’s next challenger in June, and a fellow signatory of the open letter—said on his podcast on Feb. 25 that he expects that “the vast majority or just everyone will choose the Grand Chess Tour,” citing prior commitments and an overall larger total prize pool across the full event circuit.

Vachier-Lagrave also says he finds it “very, very likely” that most players would choose the GCT event if they were forced to pick one. Travel prospects and safety concerns in the Middle East now also factor into the players’ decision-making, making the matter even more fraught.

Esports World Cup
Esports World Cup

But for some players including Carlsen, who abdicated his classical world championship title to focus on other chess ventures, and Nakamura, who revolutionized chess streaming at the top level, the emergence of alternative competitions with large prize pools is worth more than the prestige of traditional events. Carlsen has already confirmed he’ll be at the EWC in August; it is expected that Nakamura, too, will return.

And despite the mess, some people in chess believe this clash is a net positive. “The professional chess calendar has never been busier, and that’s simply a reflection of how much the sport has grown in recent years,” Chess.com’s Brancato tells FOS. If players are forced to choose, there are enough strong grandmasters around to fill both events if needed.

As the royal game grows, and more independent and prestigious events emerge, the chess world could go even more the way of LIV and the permanent golfing conflict it has introduced, with its separate federations and titles.

But as far as the open letter signatories are concerned, it doesn’t have to be this way—fans deserve the absolute elite to attend both events, and while they’d clearly prefer not to breach contracts, the chance to compete for each of the massive prize pots would be nice, too.

Chess.com and the GCT both confirmed that the two organizations are now in direct communication, looking to avoid any scheduling conflicts for next year and beyond. But they’re still playing chicken, and the players need a solution for this year. Otherwise a summer chess schism becomes unavoidable—with fans and both tournament organizers missing out on the best possible competition, and the grandmasters having to delve into legal theory rather than opening preparation. 

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