HomeNewsTrendsSportsWhy massive strides made in chess, javelin, and others call for celebration

Why massive strides made in chess, javelin, and others call for celebration

R Praggnanandhaa and D Gukesh, among others. Kishore Jena, Neeraj Chopra and DP Manu. HS Prannoy. The success these boys and men have brought with chess, men’s javelin and badminton shows the leaps sports other than cricket have taken in the country.

September 03, 2023 / 11:55 IST
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While all the attention was on R Praggnanandhaa playing Magnus Carlsen in the final of the chess World Cup last week, it was another 17-year-old who became India’s top ranked player.

D Gukesh, also from Chennai as several top chess players tend to be, entered the top-10 rankings of the International Chess Federation (FIDE). Gukesh, with a rating of 2758 is eighth in the world (Carlsen is No. 1 with 2839) ahead of Viswanathan Anand at No. 9 (2754). Praggnanandhaa is 19th with 2727 with two other Indians, Vidit Gujrathi (No. 27, 2716) and Arjun Erigaisi (No. 29, 2712) in the top 30. P Harikrishna (No. 31, 2711) and Nihal Sarin (No. 43, 2694) join in the top-50. Anand’s reign as India’s top-rated chess player lasted 37 years, barring a brief interlude, making this a significant moment for Indian chess.

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Dommaraju Gukesh

“It’s partially a relief,” Anand told Champions Chess Tour on no longer being India’s top-ranked chess player. “How long do you want to be waiting for this to happen. That’s the thing about being semi-retired (he is playing fewer events now) — you are much more detached personally. But it’s still a shock to realise that something you expected to happen eventually and you never define ‘eventually’ in your mind… When it finally happens, you feel funny in your own skin.”