HomeNewsTrendsSportsR. Praggnanandhaa vs Magnus Carlsen: Mind games, embracing the chaos and the Indian wave

R. Praggnanandhaa vs Magnus Carlsen: Mind games, embracing the chaos and the Indian wave

R. Praggnanandhaa vs Magnus Carlsen was an epic matchup of the generations - Carlsen was already a Grandmaster when Pragg was born.

August 26, 2023 / 08:20 IST
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Pragg’s rise is an outcome of the changes he has made to his game in the last one-and-a-half years or so.
Pragg’s rise is an outcome of the changes he has made to his game in the last one-and-a-half years or so. (Illustration by Suneesh K.)

In the end, we came close to a fairy-tale ending but not close enough. Even as the live feed crashed under the weight of over 150,000 people watching – an Eden Gardens stadium-worth of fans distributed across the globe – 18-year-old Grandmaster Rameshbabu Praggnanandhaa went down to Magnus Carlsen in the final of the FIDE Chess World Cup. “Pragg” as he is universally known, had disposed of the world No. 3 and then No. 2 in preceding tiebreakers. Could he now dethrone the final boss of the game? It was not to be as, in a complicated Italian Game, even as Pragg tried crashing through, Carlsen defended precisely and was able to counterattack with his knights.

The mini-match had begun with lots of drama. “It’s all about mindgames,” declaimed Grandmaster Peter Leko, as game one of the finals was about to start. Praggnanandhaa had arrived early and was waiting at the table, like a young kid in the examination hall waiting for the question paper to be handed out. In the background the digital clock counted down the moments to lift-off. The world No. 1 Carlsen nonchalantly arrived exactly one second before zero flashed on the screen. It was an epic matchup of the generations - Carlsen was already a Grandmaster when Pragg was born.

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Even after Pragg made his first move, Carlsen took his time, adjusting his pieces, flicking away non-existing dust on the board and writing down the move carefully in the scoresheet. He was making Pragg wait. Building on the tension he knew his young opponent would be feeling.

And that is what caused GM Leko, who was commentating, to exclaim at this fascinating spectacle. However, as the game unfolded it was clear that Pragg, who essayed the English opening, knew its wrinkles and folds. Grandmaster Naroditsky, who was the other commentator, was all praise - when the high-tension encounter ended in a draw, he would say that it was a game filled with “teachable moments” and pointed to Pragg’s style, a “uniquely mature universality”.

Such accolades bear testament to Pragg’s rise; now ranked world No. 20, he is knocking on the doors of a very exclusive club. ***