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Nakamura Clinches Bullet Brawl With 42-Game Winning Streak
Photo: Maria Emelianova/Chess.com.

Nakamura Clinches Bullet Brawl With 42-Game Winning Streak

JackRodgers
| 16 | Chess Event Coverage

GM Hikaru Nakamura is one win away from his 30th Bullet Brawl title after stringing together a 42-game winning streak during Saturday's event and claiming the $400 first prize. Nakamura's 75/78 performance earned him a score of 284, 16 points clear of GMs Andrew Tang and Daniel Naroditsky, who will receive $250 and $150, respectively.

The top-scoring women's player was FM Anastasia Avramidou who carried momentum from her 8/11 Olympiad performance for Greece's women's team, while the community event was won by "Macmasterr."

The next Bullet Brawl will take place on Saturday, October 5, 2024, at noon ET/18:00 CEST.

Standings

Rank Fed Title Username Name Rating Score
1 GM Hikaru Hikaru Nakamura 3275 284
2 GM penguingm1 Andrew Tang 3202 268
3 GM DanielNaroditsky Daniel Naroditsky 3199 268
4 GM Oleksandr_Bortnyk Oleksandr Bortnyk 3160 204
5 IM Mykola-Bortnyk Mykola Bortnyk 3081 175
6 GM dropstoneDP David Paravyan 3086 171
7 GM Msb2 Matthias Bluebaum 3120 170
8 IM ELECTRODYNAMIC_DRACULA Havard Haug 2913 153
9 GM hansen Eric Hansen 3001 149
10 GM ChessSharkz Kayden Troff 2961 142
11 IM Kosak12 Jakub Kozakowski 2937 141
12 FM 1800_strength Dachey Lin 2918 138
13 IM mind1mover Vuk Damjanovic 2935 115
14 GM Nitzan_Steinberg Nitzan Steinberg 2931 111
15 FM BardArtem Artem Bardyk 2848 109
16 NM Abund Qingyu Yuan 2834 102
17 FM alreadybroken23 Allaverdi Hamidov 2798 99
18 FM kids2010 Pawel Sowinski 2786 98
19 FM anasta10 Anastasia Avramidou 2733 97
20 FM GoltsevDmitry2000 Dmitry Goltsev 2802 97
(Full final standings here)

In the wake of an Olympiad dominated by India's teams, American chess fans have been left wondering whether the inclusion of Nakamura would have made the race for gold in the open section a tighter one.

Had Nakamura played on board one or two, GM Ray Robson would have been pushed out of the squad. Image: chess-results.com.

Despite this, Nakamura has made it abundantly clear that streaming and online events take precedence over most over-the-board events. Nakamura's coverage of a chess game between Manny Pacquiao and internet personality IShowSpeed garnered more views than any Olympiad recaps.

With his latest title, Nakamura has won more than 40 percent of Bullet Brawls since the tournament's inception and has continued to assert his dominance over the world's best in the 1+0 time control.

Is Nakamura the GOAT of online arenas? Photo: Maria Emelianova/Chess.com.

In Saturday's event, Nakamura led from start to finish, courtesy of a 26-game winning streak and the aforementioned 42-game streak later. During the first streak, Nakamura scored dual wins over foes GMs Naroditsky and Tuan Minh Le who would usually cause him problems, but the world number-two was able to capitalize on the few errors that they made.

Nakamura's streak was eventually snapped by the second-place finisher Tang, who tried to include as many legends as possible in his chosen variation against the King's Indian Defense... the Samisch, Bobotsov-Korchnoi-Petrosian Variation. 

The blip was short-lived for Nakamura, though, and he went straight back to his winning ways, converting many of his games in 30 moves or less. Even when the American bluffed, the "Nakamura effect" resulted in his opponents crumbling under pressure.

Popular streamer and inventor of the Caro-Kann Defense: Alien Gambit, CM Volen Dyulgerov (aka "Witty_Alien") was not immune.

While Tang and Naroditsky had to settle for second and third, their scores of 268 would have been good enough to win most other editions of Bullet Brawl this year. For reference, their score eclipsed the winning one set by Naroditsky in the August 10 event by a margin of 26 and shows that winning Bullet Brawl is becoming more difficult every week.

All-Time Leaderboard

*Nakamura's 29th win will be added shortly.

How to review games?
The games from this week's Bullet Brawl can be found here.



Bullet Brawl is an exciting titled arena that features Chess.com's top bullet specialists and takes place weekly on Saturdays. The format is a two-hour arena with a 1+0 time control; the prize fund is $1,000.

Much like Titled Tuesday and Arena Kings, Bullet Brawl often features top GMs, including Hikaru Nakamura, Daniel Naroditsky, Andrew Tang, Tuan Minh Le, and many more!


Previous coverage:

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