Caruana, Yip Repeat As U.S. Champions Once Again
The winners and their trophies, with Rex and Jeanne Sinquefield. Photo: Lennart Ootes/Saint Louis Chess Club.

Caruana, Yip Repeat As U.S. Champions Once Again

Avatar of PeterDoggers
| 78 | Chess Event Coverage

GM Fabiano Caruana and IM Carissa Yip repeated their U.S. Championship victories once again on Friday in St. Louis. Caruana was the first player since GM Bobby Fischer to win four consecutive U.S. titles, earning $67,000, while Yip has now won it three times back-to-back, earning $45,000.

With GM Wesley So trailing by half a point, a playoff was definitely a possibility, but six draws didn't change the standings of the 2025 U.S. Chess Championship. Yip kept fate in her own hands by winning her last game against FM Thalia Cervantes, securing her victory at the 2025 U.S. Women's Chess Championship.

Standings After Round 11: Open

U.S. Championship 2025 Final Standings

Standings After Round 11: Women

U.S. Women's Championship 2025 Final Standings


Open: Six Draws

Round 11 Results: Open

U.S. Championship 2025 Round 11 Results

It hadn't happened before in the tournament, but with six draws, the final day was a bit of an anticlimax in the Open section. The first question was whether GM Levon Aronian would be able to put pressure on the tournament leader with the white pieces.

A draw was fine for Caruana and, although the Petroff or the Berlin would normally be an opening of choice, he went for a topical line (6...Be7) in the Open Ruy Lopez. The reason? This is rather solid too.

Aronian had played the same line as Black in March of this year in the same city and didn't have anything strong prepared. Therefore, the game quickly petered out into a draw.

It surely played a role that Aronian was one and a half points behind and out of contention. "Levon would have probably pushed more if he was within a point of me," Caruana explained his opponent's play. 


The next question was similar: how much pressure could So put on GM Grigoriy Oparin, who often serves as Caruana's second? During his post-game interview, Caruana was a bit worried as his friend had responded inaccurately to So's 9.Nab1 line in the Sveshnikov. 

So could be happy with the outcome of the opening, but didn't make the most of his chances, also later in the game. He just lacked punch on the final day, and afterward explained why:

I actually was not in a playing mood today because I think the death of GM Daniel Naroditsky has still traumatized me. Maybe not only me but also many other players in this event. Of course, his death and then the Kramnik scandal has been like, it's hard to sleep at night.

Oparin could steer the game into a safe haven, helping Caruana to his fifth U.S. title:

So Oparin 2025 U.S. Championship
So was too traumatized to show his best chess against Oparin. Photo: Lennart Ootes/Saint Louis Chess Club.

One of the most interesting games of all the draws was Robson-Sevian. GM Rafael Leitao has analyzed the Game of the Day below.

Robson Sevian 2025 U.S. Championship
Robson vs. Sevian. Photo: Lennart Ootes/Saint Louis Chess Club.

Women: Yip Never Stops

Round  11 Results: Women

U.S. Women's Championship 2025 Round 11 Results

As soon as she was warmed up, Yip just never stopped. Finishing with four wins and 6.5 points in her last seven rounds was just too much for anyone in the field to keep up with. Yip won the tournament convincingly, for the third year in a row and for the fourth time in total.

It should be noted that she was quite a bit worse out of the opening against Cervantes, who first gave away most of her advantage and then blundered an important pawn. Then the rest was technique for the reigning champion.

"I think I'm still a little bit in shock," Yip said after her last game. "Everything happened so quickly, you know. At some point I was two points behind the leaders, and then I just won a bunch of games, and now I'm here."

In a round with three draws and three wins for Black, IM Anna Sargsyan beat IM Alice Lee to secure second place, an excellent result in her debut year. It helped that Lee, who was leading by a full point after round eight, blundered heavily on move 34, but Sargsyan's final move was cute.

"I feel so excited and so happy to get a medal at my first U.S. Championship," said Sargsyan. "You can't imagine the amount of prayers it took me to win these last two rounds. I was so nervous for these two games, especially today."

It was a brave decision by WGM Atousa Pourkashiyan to play such a grueling, 11-round event while being seven months pregnant, but it didn't go too well. With a last-round loss to FM Megan Paragua, GM Hikaru Nakamura's wife finished at the bottom with just two points. In the final game she was worse, then winning, but eventually made the last two mistakes without being in time trouble.

Pourkasiyan Paragua 2025 U.S. Championship
Pourkashiyan also lost her final round game. Photo: Lennart Ootes/Saint Louis Chess Club.

How to review?

You can review the U.S. Championships on the Saint Louis Chess Club YouTube Channel. You can also review the games on our Events Page: Open | Women.

The live broadcast was hosted by WGM Katerina Nemcova and GMs Yasser Seirawan and Maurice Ashley.

The 2025 U.S. Chess Championship and 2025 U.S. Women's Chess Championship were 12-player single round-robins that ran October 12-24 in St. Louis and determined the chess champions of the United States. The time control was 90 minutes for 40 moves, plus 30 minutes to the end of the game, with a 30-second increment from move 1. The Open event had a $250,000 prize fund and $55,000 for first place, while the Women's was $152,000 with $35,000 for first. 


Previous Coverage

Avatar of PeterDoggers
Peter Doggers

Check out Peter’s new podcasts The Chess News Podcast and Masters and Matches! Also, don’t miss Peter’s book The Chess Revolution.

Peter Doggers is Chess.com’s Senior Global Correspondent. Between 2007 and 2013, his website ChessVibes was a major source for chess news and videos, acquired by Chess.com in October 2013. The Guardian’s Leonard Barden described him as “widely regarded as the world’s best chess journalist.”

Company Contact and News Accreditation: 

Email: peter@chess.com FOR SUPPORT PLEASE USE chess.com/support!
Phone: 1 (800) 318-2827
Address: 877 E 1200 S #970397, Orem, UT 84097

More from PeterDoggers
Abdusattorov Wins Again, Extends Lead In London

Abdusattorov Wins Again, Extends Lead In London

Wins For Abdusattorov, Firouzja, McShane In London's 4th Round

Wins For Abdusattorov, Firouzja, McShane In London's 4th Round