HomeNewsTrendsSportsThe rise of Grandmaster R. Praggnanandhaa

The rise of Grandmaster R. Praggnanandhaa

R. Praggnanandhaa became the youngest International Master in the history of the game in 2016 - he was 10 years old then. By the time he was 12 years, he had become a Grandmaster.

August 26, 2023 / 17:29 IST
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R. Praggnanandhaa started playing chess when he was two years old, following in the footsteps of his sister R. Vaishali who later became a Woman Grandmaster in 2018. (Photo via Twitter)
R. Praggnanandhaa started playing chess when he was two years old, following in the footsteps of his sister R. Vaishali who later became a Grandmaster in 2018. (Photo via Twitter)

Less than a day after celebrating the successful landing of Chandrayaan-3 near the south pole of the moon, a large group of Indians returned to YouTube – not to ISRO’s channel but to FIDE’s. They tuned in to watch the wonder boy R. Praggnanandhaa, who had already created history by becoming the first Indian to reach the semi-finals of the Chess World Cup since it switched to single-elimination format. He had now become the youngest to reach the World Cup final. En route, he had beaten second-ranked Hikaru Nakamura and third-ranked Fabiano Caruana.

But now, a colossal challenge awaited him – for he was up against Magnus Carlsen, hailed by many as the greatest chess player of all time, a man who has held the top rank since the time Praggnanandhaa was five. Still, there was hope, for a year and a half ago, a 16-year-old Praggnanandhaa had become the youngest to defeat Carlsen – though compatriot Gukesh D. has since broken the record. Three months later, he beat Carlsen again.

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The initial matches in the 2023 Chess World Cup final were both drawn, and it had come down to tiebreakers, where time was of importance. Praggnanandhaa began well. Subsequent analysis by chess.com suggested that after a centre-board pawn exchange, he held a slight advantage after the 17th move.

But as Praggnanandhaa took his time, the clock ticked, and Carlsen demonstrated why he was the best, responding in a flash almost every time. With less than half a minute to play (Carlsen had two and a half), Praggnanandhaa pushed the a-file pawn to a6.