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3 Indian Chess Players Could Be World Champions One Day

Chess

While India is known for world class cricket players, India’s immensely talented chess players are really becoming a huge success story. Ever since Vishy Anand became chess world champion in 2007, Indians have found a great love for the game of chess and right now a handful of young Indian chess prodigies have made a name for themselves in high class international chess tournaments. This is a particularly good development as right now more and more people entertain themselves with mobile casino apps instead of pushing themselves to compete in a mentally challenging game like chess. Anyway, here are the three Indian chess prodigies we like you to know.

Rameshbabu Praggnanandhaa

While Rameshbabu Praggnandhaa may be a shy teenager, he is actually one of the most talented chess prodigies of his generation. Even when he was just eight years old, he knew that chess was his destiny. His coach, RB Ramesh, had started coaching him at an early age.

Rameshbabu Praggnandhaa has been playing chess since he was a toddler. His parents encouraged him to take up the game because he was a natural at it. As a child, he began to understand its nuances and began to teach his siblings. He and his siblings would spend hours discussing game strategies before big events.

Rameshbabu Praggnandhaa’s impressive chess skills led him to a FIDE Master title at just seven years of age. He is currently the youngest International Master and fifth in the world. Two years ago, he beat Magnus Carlsen in a tournament held by Airthings.

In India, chess talent is growing at a rapid pace. The country has seven ranked players among the world’s top 100. But the country needs more deep-pocketed sponsors to make its talent a global success.

Parimarjan Negi

Parimarjan Negi is an Indian chess prodigy who is currently studying at MIT. He became a grandmaster at the age of thirteen and has been ranked among the world’s top ten players. He has won multiple national championships, including the Asian Youth Championship and the Commonwealth Championship. In addition, he has won a bronze medal in the World Youth Championship and has won the National Sub-Junior Championship. He also won gold in the National under-11 and under-7 championships.

Negi is different from Mishra, who has a different psyche and background. Although both have been hailed as chess prodigies, their stories are very different. Mishra’s first big victory was against 15-year-old GM Leon Luke Mendonca.

India is producing a lot of young chess talent. In addition to Parimarjan, Nihal Sarin, Arjun Erigaisi, Praggnanandhaa R, and Viswanathan Anand are all under the age of 25. These young players could be world champions one day. The future looks bright for Indian chess. And it will be exciting to watch.

The world chess scene is a competitive playground and chess prodigies are at the forefront of it. There are more youngsters becoming grandmasters than ever before. One of these talented youngsters is Parimarjan Negi, who is the youngest GM in the world. He is the son of a microbiologist and a doctor. They started learning the game at an early age.

Pentala Harikrishna

Harikrishna is one of India’s most talented chess players. In 2012, he became the youngest grandmaster in the country. His FIDE rating reached over 2700 in 2013, and he broke into the world’s top ten in November. The youngster has an impressive list of top-level tournament victories. In addition to his chess prowess, Harikrishna is also a college student who majored in sociology and political science at the Andhra Pradesh Open University.

The parents of the chess prodigy introduced him to the game at an early age. His older sister, Vaishali, encouraged him to take up chess. Since then, the two have been winning chess tournaments together and thrashing out strategies. Their mother, who is a GM herself, accompanies them to tournaments and helps them prepare for the competition.

In the Tata Steel Chess India Rapid, Harikrishna finished second, behind the eventual world champion Hikaru Nakamura. However, the reigning world rapid champion Viswanathan Anand, the top seed, lost to Surya Sekhar Ganguly in the final round. In addition to Harikrishna, Nihal Sarin also reached the semifinals, where he drew with five-time world champion Viswanathan Anand.

The emergence of chess Grandmasters in India has been compared to the snowball effect. This phenomenon has resulted in the formation of a national chess super force. Vishy, the first Indian to become a chess Grandmaster, was also an inspiration for the next generation of Indian grandmasters.

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