Olive Wanjiru vs Anastasiya Sevastsyanchuk
FIDE World Cadet Chess Championships 2024 | Girls U12, 2024 · Result 0–1 · Indian Defense: Knights Variation (A46).
Turn this game into your next win
Replay Olive Wanjiru vs Anastasiya Sevastsyanchuk with deep analysis, save the moments that matter, fold the ideas into your own opening repertoire, and drill the positions until they're second nature. CipherChess turns the games you study into the results you get — free to start.
Start Free on CipherChessMore Games By These Players
Game details
- White
- Olive Wanjiru
- Black
- Anastasiya Sevastsyanchuk (1595)
- Result
- 0–1
- Event
- FIDE World Cadet Chess Championships 2024 | Girls U12
- Year
- 2024
- Opening
- Indian Defense: Knights Variation (A46)
About this chess game
This chess game between Olive Wanjiru and Anastasiya Sevastsyanchuk (1595) was played at FIDE World Cadet Chess Championships 2024 | Girls U12 in 2024 and finished 0–1. The opening was the Indian Defense: Knights Variation (A46). You can replay the full game move by move on the interactive board above, or open it on the CipherChess analysis board to study every move with the Stockfish engine.
Looking for more Olive Wanjiru games or Anastasiya Sevastsyanchuk games? This Olive Wanjiru vs Anastasiya Sevastsyanchuk encounter is one of millions of chess games indexed in the CipherChess mega database. Browse both players' full records, the openings they play most, and head-to-head results, then load any game onto the board to prepare your own lines against the Indian Defense: Knights Variation.
Frequently asked questions
Who won Olive Wanjiru vs Anastasiya Sevastsyanchuk?
Olive Wanjiru vs Anastasiya Sevastsyanchuk (2024) finished 0–1, a win for Anastasiya Sevastsyanchuk.
What opening was played in Olive Wanjiru vs Anastasiya Sevastsyanchuk?
The game opened with the Indian Defense: Knights Variation (ECO A46).
Can I replay this chess game move by move?
Yes. Use the interactive board on this page to step through every move of Olive Wanjiru vs Anastasiya Sevastsyanchuk, or open it on the CipherChess analysis board to review it with the Stockfish engine.