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16-year-old Indian chess sensation Pragg stuns world No. 1 Magnus Carlsen

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Sixteen-year-old Rameshbabu Praggnanandhaa stunned Magnus Carlsen on Sunday, beating the world No. 1 during the Airthings Masters.

Praggnanandhaa, nicknamed Pragg, belied his age and his experience as he remained cool and collected, while Carlsen appeared to make mistakes to present opportunities to the Indian youngster.

And although the five-time world champion fought to get back into the game, Pragg didn’t give him an opening, eventually holding on for a famous victory in the rapid chess tournament.

When it became apparent a win was certain, the achievement appeared to dawn on Pragg, as he covered his mouth with his hand in shock.

It was Pragg’s first victory over Carlsen, and he became the youngest player to beat Carlsen since the superstar became World Champion in 2013.

He also became only the third Indian grandmaster to win against the Norwegian after Viswanathan Anand and Pentala Harikrishna.

“I’m just very happy,” he said afterwards.

When asked how he was going to celebrate, Pragg – with days of competition remaining in the tournament – was realistic given how late he was playing games being based in India: “I think it’s about just going to bed.”

“It’s about time to go to bed, as I don’t think I will have dinner at 2.30 in the morning.”

Praise
The result was probably not forecast before it began. Carlsen had won three games in a row as he looked to be warming up, while Pragg had finished Day 1 of the Airthings Masters with three straight losses.

However, when the two clashed, the 16-year-old grandmaster looked resolute, eventually beating the chess legend in 39 moves.

“I think yesterday wasn’t so good,” Pragg said after the match. “Today, I think my play was much better, so I hope this continues for the next two days.”

Pragg is one of the most up-and-coming stars of chess and has been tipped for great things from a young age.

In 2016, he became the youngest international master in history at age 10, and many people have predicted that he could be a title contender in the years to come.

His famous victory over Carlsen was the subject of praise from some well-known compatriots.

Five-time world champion Anand tweeted that he was “always proud of our talents,” also saying that it was a “very good day” for Pragg.

Elsewhere, Indian cricket player Sachin Tendulkar – widely considered one of the greatest batters of all time – also congratulated Pragg.

“What a wonderful feeling it must be for Pragg. All of 16, and to have beaten the experienced & decorated Magnus Carlsen, and that too while playing black, is magical!” Tendulkar wrote.

“Best wishes on a long & successful chess career ahead. You’ve made India proud!”

For Carlsen, it was a potentially damaging defeat in his hunt to add yet another trophy to his already prestigious collection.

The 31-year-old contracted Covid-19 in the days before the tournament, and he believes his game is being affected by the after-effects of the virus which he is still feeling.

“It’s been a little bit better today, but the first couple of days I was feeling like I’m OK, but I didn’t have the energy which made it hard to focus because every time I tried to think, I blundered. It was a little bit better today, but still pretty bad.”

Despite his stuttering form, Carlsen has managed to lift himself to second in the Airthings Masters standings, seven points behind leader Ian Nepomniachtchi.

Russian Nepomniachtchi is in prime position to qualify for the next stage of the competition, with eight players making the cut from the round-robin preliminary stage to the knockout which begins on Wednesday.

https://www.cnn.com/2022/02/22/spor...dhaa-magnus-carlsen-chess-spt-intl/index.html
 
A stunning achievement for a 16 year old kid. Magnus Carlsen is the most domineering chess champion in recent times and for a young kid to topple him is phenomenal.

Hope this kid treads Vishy Anand's path.
 
A stunning achievement for a 16 year old kid. Magnus Carlsen is the most domineering chess champion in recent times and for a young kid to topple him is phenomenal.

Hope this kid treads Vishy Anand's path.
He was bookmarked as special since he was 10 years old.
 
Well done to the young boy. Allthough Magnus is still suffering from Covid repercussions this is some achievement.
 
Well done to the young boy. Allthough Magnus is still suffering from Covid repercussions this is some achievement.
Magnus still won 3 consecutive games prior to this game which he lost.
 
Another prodigy from one of Chennai's famed chess academies.

That city produces grandmasters left, right and centre.
 
Happy for him but long, long way to go. Have high expectations from the current batch of Indian youngsters: Pragg, Nihal, Gukesh, Arjun, Raunak, Leon, Iniyan etc. We have a better bunch of youngsters than even mighty Russia. Uzbeks too have a couple of guns right now.

Hope media doesn't put too much pressure on Pragg by drawing comparisons with Vishy. Let the kid breathe.

Pandemic has halted the chess development of many prodigies, a real pity. Otherwise these kind of results would have happened 2 years ago.
 
Another prodigy from one of Chennai's famed chess academies.

That city produces grandmasters left, right and centre.

Right now training in Westbridge Anand Chess Academy, him, Nihal, Gukesh, Arjun, Raunak, Vaishali and a couple of more kids are being personally trained/mentored by Vishy Anand. That's why Vishy rarely plays these days, he is preparing these kids for something big.

GM Ramesh too has been coaching Pragg for 10+ years as well, legends like Kramnik, Polgar, Gelfand have been coming to Chennai to train 15-20 promising kids. Microsense MD/founder Mr. Kailasanathan has been a generous sponsor for these prodigies, he also organizes camps for them in chess centres like Moscow, Paris, Budapest.
 
Right now training in Westbridge Anand Chess Academy, him, Nihal, Gukesh, Arjun, Raunak, Vaishali and a couple of more kids are being personally trained/mentored by Vishy Anand. That's why Vishy rarely plays these days, he is preparing these kids for something big.

GM Ramesh too has been coaching Pragg for 10+ years as well, legends like Kramnik, Polgar, Gelfand have been coming to Chennai to train 15-20 promising kids. Microsense MD/founder Mr. Kailasanathan has been a generous sponsor for these prodigies, he also organizes camps for them in chess centres like Moscow, Paris, Budapest.

Yes, Chennai is the epicentre of Indian chess, much like Hyderabad is the badminton capital of India.
 
Do people actually watch this?
Are these things televised?
Are there sponsors?

Yes.

Mostly streamed online but televised in Russia and some of the Eastern European countries. Russia has a dedicated chess channel. Even Philippines has one I read, Norway's NRK (state owned broadcaster like BBC) gives live TV coverage, also there is Serbia, must be more out there. Selected tournaments are shown on India's Doordarshan (DD) with live commentary/analysis, especially those where Indians play.

Yes there are sponsors and patrons. Pay is good especially in these kind of events where top GMs play. Last year's title match between Carlsen and Nepo had a prize money of 2 million euros with a 60:40 split for winner/loser. Big tournaments have historically been sponsored by the likes of Intel, Siemens, Microsoft, TATA, Unibet, Kaspersky etc. Several top 20 players are millionaires, outside the elite bracket pay isn't that great, players outside top 50 generally have to do coaching/streaming to supplement income, especially true in the West. But some chess streamers on twitch have made big bucks, like the Botez sisters.
 
There are 4 Indians in the fray here LOL. Whats going on?? Chess24 is pretty much Magnus'. Not to be cynical but trying to attract over the huge swaths of online Indian Chess fans??
 
Pretty shocking blunder by Magnus. I thought it was draw for sure.

Anand did a blunder once against Carlsen I remember being so annoyed then and lol now this , wonder if its the pressure!
 
Pretty shocking blunder by Magnus. I thought it was draw for sure.

Probably Magnus’s slow and gradual decline may start from here? Usually, these kinda blunders are not expected from a top player in top form.
 
Chess rivals settle long-running cheating dispute

A Norwegian world champion and the US prodigy who unexpectedly beat him have resolved a year-long cheating row that rattled the world of chess.

Magnus Carlsen accused Hans Niemann of foul play after he lost in the Sinquefield Cup in September.

Mr Niemann sued his rival, the online platform Chess.com, and a second grandmaster for defamation.

Chess.com now says the row is settled, Mr Niemann's account is restored and Mr Carlsen accepts there was no cheating.

The agreement seeks to end a year of recriminations and unfounded claims that began when Mr Carlsen, the world number one, said Mr Niemann, then 19, had cheated to beat him at the tournament in St Louis, Missouri.

Mr Niemann admitted that he had cheated twice in online matches on Chess.com aged 12 and 16, but denied he had done so in the Sinquefield Cup or any in-person game.

The website suspended his account after his admission, then said in a report that it had evidence he had "likely" cheated in about 100 online matches.

Crucially, however, the same report said it had found no evidence of cheating in the tournament against Mr Carlsen.

The accusations led to outlandish speculation on social media over how Mr Niemann could possibly cheat in person.

Theories included tiny microphones and even the use of items that could be embedded in the body which could pass coded instructions.

Mr Niemann filed a $100m (£79m) defamation lawsuit in October against Mr Carlsen, Chess.com, and Hikaru Nakamura, a US grandmaster who Mr Niemann accused of "amplifying and attempting to bolster Carlsen's false cheating allegations".

That case was later dismissed, leading to out-of-court discussions to resolve the issue.


BBC
 

Chess: Magnus Carlsen loses on home turf in Norway to 18-year-old Indian​

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Good to see.

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And now beats the world champion D Gukesh.

Prag will end up being the best of India.
 
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