Home Chess Montenegrin Championship: Denis Kadric captures first title

Montenegrin Championship: Denis Kadric captures first title

by

Press release by FIDE

Grandmaster Denis Kadrić is the newly crowned Montenegrin Chess Champion. The second seed scored an impressive 9/11 in a strong field and claimed his first national title after finishing third in each of his three previous appearances.

The championship, an 11-round Swiss tournament, was organized by the Chess Federation of Montenegro and held at the National Library “Radosav Ljumović” in Podgorica from February 10-19, with sponsorship provided by the Ministry of Sports and Youth. The total prize fund amounted to €15,000. Arbiters Zoran Peruničić and Momčilo Pekić carried out their duties smoothly and professionally.

As many expected, the event turned into a close race, with the winner decided only in the final round. Kadrić and FM Oleg Jaksin had a great start, both winning four straight games before clashing in round five. Jaksin prevailed, but his lead was short-lived as he lost in the next round, allowing IM Aleksandar Tomic, FM Jovan Milovic and Kadrić to catch up. In round seven Kadrić and Milovic scored victories and pulled away.

The new joint leaders locked horns in round eight. Kadrić emerged victorious, took the sole lead and preserved it to the very end. Heading into the final round a half point ahead of GM Nikola Đukić, he drew with the 2025 Champion and top seed Nikita Petrov and claimed the title, as his main rival also split the point with FM Nemanja Vukcevic.

Đukić and Milović finished a half point behind the champion, tying for second place. Tiebreak criteria awarded the silver medal to Đukić and the bronze to Milović, who also serves as President of the Chess Federation of Montenegro and recalled his days as a youth representative for Yugoslavia.

Montenegrin Chess Championship 2026

A final group photo with the tournament winners | Photo: Chess Federation of Montenegro

Đukić delivered a stable performance and improved his rating, scoring seven wins and three draws, with his sole loss coming in the fourth round against eventual champion Kadrić. Playing with determination and flair, Milović notched eight wins, one draw, and two losses to secure his first podium finish at the national championship.

Special prizes were awarded to Nikolina Koljević as the tournament’s most successful female player, and to Peko Đurović as the top junior. Rating category prizes went to Nikola Popović (under 1700), Mito Đukanović (under 2000) and Božidar Kisić (under 2200).

Photos: Šahovski savez Crne Gore (Facebook page)

Milovic 0-1 Kadric

Final standings

Rk. SNo Name Typ FED Rtg Pts. TB1 TB2
1 2 GM Kadric, Denis MNE 2540 9 0 71,5
2 3 GM Djukic, Nikola MNE 2494 8,5 0 72
3 12 FM Milovic, Jovan MNE 2295 8,5 0 69
4 4 FM Yaksin, Oleg MNE 2396 8 0 73
5 1 GM Petrov, Nikita MNE 2572 7,5 1 72
6 5 IM Kalezic, Blazo MNE 2395 7,5 2 69,5
7 11 IM Tomic, Aleksandar MNE 2308 7 0 73
8 8 FM Pecurica, Milos MNE 2328 7 0 65,5
9 6 FM Vukcevic, Nemanja MNE 2370 7 0 65
10 15 Draganic, Veljko MNE 2287 7 0 65
11 10 GM Ivanovic, Bozidar MNE 2324 7 0 62
12 13 IM Podlesnik, Bogdan MNE 2289 6,5 0 67,5
13 9 GM Nikcevic, Nebojsa MNE 2325 6,5 0 65,5
14 20 Scekic, Veljko MNE 2210 6,5 0 64,5
15 7 CM Skvortsov, Andrei MNE 2330 6,5 0 61
16 21 FM Kisic, Bozidar MNE 2197 6,5 0 61
17 14 FM Vlatkovic, Milos MNE 2287 6,5 0 60,5
18 16 FM Sukovic, Andrej MNE 2272 6,5 0 60,5
19 19 FM Djurovic, Peko U20 MNE 2216 6,5 0 59
20 24 Zizic, Djordje U20 MNE 2124 6,5 0 58,5

…62 players

All available games


EXPAND YOUR CHESS HORIZONS
Data, plans, practice – the new Opening Report In ChessBase there are always attempts to show the typical plans of an opening variation. In the age of engines, chess is much more concrete than previously thought. But amateurs in particular love openings with clear plans, see the London System. In ChessBase ’26, three functions deal with the display of plans. The new opening report examines which piece moves or pawn advances are significant for each important variation. In the reference search you can now see on the board where the pieces usually go. If you start the new Monte Carlo analysis, the board also shows the most common figure paths.


Source link

You may also like

Leave a Comment