Chess: Shyaamnikhil ends 12-yr wait, becomes India's 85th GM
Shyaamnikhil needed just one win and eight draws to complete the long-overdue GM title which he achieved in the tournament
PTI
-
Hailing from Nagercoil in Tamil Nadu this was not an easy ride for the player, who was known as one of the finest talents of his time
Dubai, 13 May
P Shayaamnikhil became India's 85th
Grandmaster by completing his third and final GM norm in the just-concluded
Dubai Police Masters chess tournament, ending a 12-year-wait for the player who
took to the sport as an eight-year-old.
Shyaamnikhil needed just one win
and eight draws to complete the long-overdue GM title which he achieved in the
tournament.
The 31-year-old conjured the
requisite 2500 ELO rating points, the minimum requirement to be a GM, way back
in 2012 with two Grandmaster norms but for the third one, he had to wait for 12
years. "I started playing at the age of eight, my parents taught me but I
could not play any tournament for three years. Winning the under-13 State
championship opened up opportunities for me as I could play Asian and age group
world championship," recalled Shayaamnikhil.
Hailing from Nagercoil in Tamil
Nadu this was not an easy ride for the player, who was known as one of the
finest talents of his time. "He shifted his base to Chennai to pursue
chess despite coming from a modest background and stayed with me," said
his former coach K Visweswaran.
Making his first GM norm in Mumbai
Mayors Cup 2011 and the second one some time later during the Indian
championship as a 19-year-old, Shayaamnikhil completed the rating requirement
in early 2012.
It was Dubai open in 2012 where
Nikhil missed a big chance to score his final norm and then a series of missed
opportunities led to a long draught in his career. "It was only in 2017
that I played tournaments in Europe, till then I was trying to play in Vietnam
or UAE trying to make the final norm but these places are not so easy as the
tournaments are very strong," he said.
The 2022 Commonwealth champion said
that he had come here prepared and missed a norm again in a tournament in
France just before the Dubai Police Masters. "I needed a win in the last
round but I drew again and missed the norm again," he said when asked
about how he felt about three missed opportunities.
"I wanted to play Chess as
enjoyment, I like Mikhail Tal and Garry Kasparov. I would like to dedicate this
to my parents, who have waited a long time for this title, my trainer
Visweswaran sir also helped a great deal," Shyaamnikhil added. "Now
that the title is done, I can play more freely," he concluded.
Leave a Reply
Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *