Gutsy Gukesh becomes youngest world chess champion
Taking forward the incredible legacy of the great Viswanathan Anand, Gukesh became only the second Indian to clinch the coveted prize after the iconic player, who owned the crown five times in his career
PTI
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Gukesh became only the second Indian to clinch the coveted prize. PHOTO: PTI
Singapore, 12 Dec
Indian Grandmaster D Gukesh on
Thursday became the youngest world chess champion at 18 years after beating
title-holder Ding Liren in the last game of a nerve-wracking showdown to herald
a new era of dominance by the country's chess players.
Taking forward the incredible
legacy of the great Viswanathan Anand, Gukesh became only the second Indian to
clinch the coveted prize after the iconic player, who owned the crown five
times in his career.
After settling into
"semi-retirement", the 55-year-old Anand, incidentally, played a
pivotal role in shaping Gukesh at his chess academy in Chennai.
Gukesh secured the requisite 7.5
points as against 6.5 of his Chinese rival after winning the 14th and last
classical time control game of the match that seemed headed for a draw for most
part. As winner, he will walk away with a whopping USD 1.3 million (approx Rs
11.03 crore) from the 2.5 million prize purse.
"I was dreaming this moment
for the last 10 years. I am happy that I realised the dream (and made it) into
reality," the soft-spoken Chennai-lad told reporters after the historic
triumph here.
The triumph was expectedly hailed
across India with Prime Minister Narendra Modi hailing it as "historic and
exemplary". "This is the result of his unparalleled talent, hard work
and unwavering determination," Modi posted on X.
The reticent teenager grinned
widely and raised his arms in celebration after the victory, a stark contrast
from the poker face he usually sports while playing. Once the feeling settled
in, a tear or two also escaped his eyes, showing a rare moment of
vulnerability. "I got a bit emotional because I was not expecting to
win," he added.
Even on Thursday, when the analysts
had proclaimed that the match, in all likelihood, would go into a tie-breaker,
Gukesh's face hardly gave anything away as he gained the upper-hand.
It was a momentary lapse of
concentration by Liren in what seemed a drawn endgame and as it happened, the
entire chess world was left in a state of shock. The players were just left
with a rook and a bishop and Gukesh had two pawns against one trying to make a
foray without much success. However, the ability to keep pushing for more gave
Gukesh a distinct advantage over the Chinese and the latter simply collapsed to
give the title to Gukesh.
Before Gukesh's feat on Thursday,
the legendary Garry Kasparov of Russia was the youngest world champion when he
won the title at the age of 22, dethroning Anatoly Karpov in 1985.
Gukesh had entered the match as the
youngest ever challenger to the world crown after winning the Candidates
tournament earlier this year. "Every chess player wants to live this
dream. I am living my dream," said Gukesh.
Gukesh, who won the 14th game
against Liren after 58 moves in four hours, is the 18th world chess champion
overall.
If Thursday's game was also drawn,
winner was to be decided in shorter duration tie-breaks on Friday.
Gukesh had won the third and 11th
rounds before Thursday's decisive game, while the 32-year-old Liren emerged
victorious in the opening and 12th games. All other games were drawn in the
match.
"I came here suddenly and I
lost the first game itself. Luckily while going back I had Vishy Sir (Anand) in
the lift and he said 'I had only 11 games left you have 13'," Gukesh
recalled, while shining a light on the contribution of his mentor.
Anand was citing his 2006 first
match over Veselin Topalov that he had eventually won after losing the first
game. Interestingly, Anand had won that match in the last Classical (12th)
game, with black pieces. Anand lost the title to Norwegian maverick Magnus
Carlsen back in 2013.
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