Praggnanandhaa triumphs at Norway Chess in historic first for India
No Indian, including Anand and Gukesh, had won Norway Chess before Praggnanandhaa.
PTI
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R Praggnanandhaa clinched the Norway Chess title with a decisive final-round win to finish on 18 points (PTI)
Oslo, 6 June
Grandmaster R Praggnanandhaa etched his name in the history books as he became the first Indian to win the prestigious Norway Chess title with a final-round victory over Germany's Vincent Keymer here, capping off a brilliant campaign in style.
Praggnanandhaa,
who began the final round in second place with 15 points on Friday, delivered
when it mattered the most, securing a classical win worth three full points to
finish on 18 points and clinch one of the most coveted trophies in elite chess.
In doing
so, the 20-year-old Chennai player achieved a feat that had eluded even Indian
chess legend Viswanathan Anand and reigning world champion D Gukesh among
others, since the tournament's inception in 2013.
Competing
in Norway Chess for only the second time, Praggnanandhaa endured a slow start
in the elite six-player field before gathering momentum in the second half of
the event to secure four wins on the trot.
His
campaign was highlighted by a remarkable achievement -- defeating seven-time
Norway Chess champion and World No. 1 Magnus Carlsen twice in classical chess
-- a rare accomplishment that underlined his determination to bounce back from
the disappointment of an underwhelming Candidates Tournament in Paphos earlier
this year.
As
reigning world champion, Gukesh fell out of contention in the closing stages.
Praggnanandhaa ensured that India's challenge remained alive, ultimately
carrying it all the way to the title.
The result
was made possible after American Grandmaster Wesley So, who led the standings
with 15.5 points heading into the final round, was held to a draw in his
classical game against Alireza Firouzja, sending their contest into an
Armageddon tie-break.
That
outcome opened the door for Praggnanandhaa, who knew that a classical victory
over Keymer would propel him to the top of the standings and secure a landmark
title.
Although
Wesley So went on to win the Armageddon tie-break, the victory was worth only
1.5 points, taking his tally to 17 points -- one short of Praggnanandhaa's
winning total of 18.
Alireza,
who had also entered the final round with title hopes, finished third with 15.5
points.
A beaming
Praggnanandhaa revealed after the match that a pep talk from his mother back
home in Chennai had lifted his spirits.
"She
told me that June would bring good luck," he said with a smile -- a
prediction that came true.
"I
was speaking to my mother on June 1, before Alireza's game, and she was telling
me, 'It's a new month, you'll play well!' It's just one of those things that
mum always says, and then these four games I won. She knew something, I
guess," said Praggnanandhaa.
Praggnanandhaa
went on to string together four consecutive victories after that.
Even
Carlsen, the record seven-time Norway Chess champion, was effusive in his
praise for Praggnanandhaa, describing the Indian youngster's performance as
"superb" throughout the tournament.
Such
wholehearted admiration is not something the Norwegian legend hands out lightly
-- especially not to a rival in the same generation as Gukesh -- underscoring
just how impressive Praggnanandhaa's title-winning campaign had been.
"That's
pretty insane. That's as clutch as it gets, and it just shows that it would
have been possible for me as well with a similar finish, but yeah, that's
incredible. It shows you the volatility of the system, and he is an incredible
fighter, and it's fun to see him get rewarded for that," Carlsen told the
broadcaster.
Praggnanandhaa
later admitted, during his second visit to the "confession box", that
he had missed a strong continuation that could have wrapped up the game much
sooner. Despite letting that opportunity slip, he remained determined to keep
probing.
His
persistence eventually paid off as the pressure began to tell on Keymer. In an
endgame that had appeared roughly balanced, the German faltered with a series
of inaccuracies, culminating in the weakening 30...h5? which fatally exposed
the g5 square and tilted the game decisively in Praggnanandhaa's favour.
Meanwhile,
Gukesh's disappointing campaign continued as his third appearance in the
tournament ended without the breakthrough he had hoped for in a year when he is
set to defend his world title against challenger Javokhir Sindarov.
In the
final round, Carlsen, playing with the white pieces, defeated the 20-year-old
Indian in a classical game to collect three full points. However, the victory
was not enough to propel the Norwegian great into title contention, as he
finished fifth in the standings with 13 points.
Results
(Round 10):
Open:
Alireza Firouzja (Fra, 15.5) lost to Wesley So (USA, 17); Magnus Carlsen (Nor,
13) bt D. Gukesh (Ind, ); R. Praggnanandhaa (Ind, 18) bt Vincent Keymer (11).
Women: Zhu
Jiner (Chn, 16) by Koneru Humpy (Ind, 9); Ju Wenjun (Chn, 13.5) bt Bibisara
Assaubayeva (Kaz, 16.5); Anna Muzychuk (Ukr, 15) bt Divya Deshmukh (Ind, 10).
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