The Injury and Attempts to Continue
Alireza Firouzja suffered an ankle injury after Round 3 of the Super Chess Classic Romania 2026 (part of the Grand Chess Tour) in Bucharest. The exact circumstances of how the injury occurred were not publicly disclosed by tournament organizers, though GM Anish Giri mentioned after their Round 3 game that both players were "very shaky" during the match and that he heard Firouzja "even fell over".
Fortunately, medical evaluation confirmed the ankle was not broken or fractured. However, the injury was severe enough that Firouzja could not play his scheduled Round 4 game against Fabiano Caruana.
Accommodation Efforts
This impressed me about the organisers on how they made really extraordinary efforts to allow Firouzja to continue playing. After consulting with his doctor, team and the organizers, Firouzja decided to play from a specially arranged hotel room with the agreement of his opponents and in the presence of an arbiter. Extraordinary and of course made good chess content for the media as pictures of a grandmaster playing from a bed in a high stakes chess tournament is rare and only 2 other incidents in the history of chess come close like Tal playing a friendly game vs Fischer in a hospital bed and Tony Miles playing on a bed because of a back injury.
For his Round 5 match against Javokhir Sindarov, Firouzja played from bed wearing a T-shirt and sports shorts, with his injured right foot elevated on a pillow and wearing a protective boot. A small table with a chess board and clock was positioned in front of him while Sindarov sat across from him in the hotel room. Despite being under serious pressure throughout the game, Firouzja managed to salvage a draw.
🔄 Rescheduled clash: The postponed Round 4 game against Caruana was rescheduled for the rest day (Tuesday). Firouzja again appeared wearing a protective boot and played from bed in the hotel setup. However, he made a critical mistake on move 37 and lost the game.Fabiano Caruana later commented on the surreal experience:
“It had kind of vibes of a World Championship match, except my opponent was on the bed, in a cast.”
Final Withdrawal
After completing five rounds with a score of 1 out of 5, Firouzja made the difficult decision to withdraw before Round 6. In his statement, he said:
"Unfortunately, due to an ankle injury sustained during the event, I have decided to withdraw from the tournament. Thank you to the organisers for their support and accommodations, and thank you to everyone following the games. I wish the players and organisers the best for the rest of the tournament."Since Firouzja withdrew after Round 5, his past results counted toward tournament standings, and his remaining opponents were awarded forfeit wins with a full point. Tournament officials thanked Firouzja for his efforts to continue competing despite the injury and wished him a speedy recovery.
Controversy Over Withdrawal
FIDE CEO Emil Sutovsky criticized the withdrawal as "unfair to Praggnanandhaa and Sindarov", suggesting that players who faced Firouzja in his injured state may have been disadvantaged compared to those who received forfeit points after his withdrawal.
The incident sparked debate about fairness, medical accommodations, and tournament regulations.
My 2 cents: it's a delicate balance between player welfare and competitive integrity. And if given to the chess community I think it would be 50-50 split. I agree with Sutovsky here in that none of the people who got a free point would have gotten it that easily against the World no. 9 (draw maybe but not all wins).


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