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London’s Speed Chess Championship (SCC) finals delivered what this format always promises: elite technique under stress, reputations tested by the clock, and championships decided in minutes—not days.

London’s Speed Chess Championship (SCC) finals delivered what this format always promises: elite technique under stress, reputations tested by the clock, and championships decided in minutes—not days. Across two live days at 180 Studios, the 2025 SCC (whose finals were staged in February 2026) ended with Magnus Carlsen defending his title, while teenage GM Denis Lazavik produced the shock result of the weekend by edging Hikaru Nakamura for third place.
Final (Championship match): Magnus Carlsen def. Alireza Firouzja 15–12 to win the 2025 Speed Chess Championship—his fifth SCC title.
Third-place match: Denis Lazavik def. Hikaru Nakamura 13.5–12.5, a razor-thin finish confirmed in Chess.com’s official update.
These outcomes lock in the headline: the king of speed remains Carlsen—for now—but the next wave has arrived, and it can beat the old guard in match conditions.
Speed chess is not “chess, but faster.” The SCC is engineered as an endurance fight—multiple time controls stitched into one continuous match—where rhythm, mouse precision, and emotional control are as decisive as opening knowledge. ChessBase’s live-finals coverage highlights this multi-phase design as the event’s defining pressure mechanism.
In this format, you don’t win by playing one brilliant game. You win by staying accurate when your heart rate is up and your time is nearly gone—again and again.
The bracket into Sunday’s climax was shaped by two contrasting semifinal stories:
Carlsen overwhelmed Lazavik 17–9, a match Chess.com framed as dominance—Carlsen suppressing volatility and never allowing the young specialist to build a momentum run.
Firouzja eliminated Nakamura 15–13 after a late swing that flipped a match many expected Nakamura to close—one of those SCC comebacks where the clock becomes a weapon.
The result was a final that felt inevitable in name—Carlsen vs Firouzja—but newly sharpened by how they got there: one through control, the other through chaos.
Carlsen’s 15–12 victory matters because it wasn’t simply legacy winning on reputation; it was the SCC’s most reliable skill winning on repeatability: converting small edges, avoiding the long blunder streaks that decide speed matches, and staying composed when the pace spikes. Chess.com’s match report confirms the scoreline, the title defense, and Carlsen’s continued hold over the event.
From a narrative standpoint, Firouzja’s presence in yet another SCC final reinforces the modern reality: he remains the most credible long-term challenger to Carlsen’s speed-chess throne—even when the final score says otherwise.
If Carlsen’s win was the expected headline, Lazavik’s third-place victory was the disruptive one.
Lazavik beating Nakamura 13.5–12.5 is significant for two reasons:
It happened in a match format, not a one-off bullet clip—meaning Lazavik sustained performance under changing time controls and match fatigue.
It happened against Nakamura, a player synonymous with speed chess dominance for a decade—making the result a genuine marker of generational shift.
Chess.com’s own update described it as “coming down to the wire”—and that phrasing is not hype. A one-point swing is the smallest distance between a legend stabilizing the narrative and a teenager rewriting it.
Carlsen remains the benchmark. Five SCC titles is not just winning—it is an era.
Firouzja remains the threat. The final scoreline doesn’t erase the fact that he keeps reaching the business end of these events.
Lazavik is no longer “next.” He’s here. Beating Nakamura in a live, high-pressure match is the kind of result that changes who gets taken seriously before the first move is played.
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