The Hindu (Erode)

Gukesh’s quest to conquer the world reaches its nal stage

The Chennai chess prodigy’s path to success matches that of other elites of the game

- Srinivasan Ramani

Grandmaste­r (GM) D. Gukesh pulled o¥ a phenomenal achievemen­t by winning the prestigiou­s FIDE Candidates Chess Tournament 2024, a.k.a. Candidates, scoring nine points out of 14 games. At the young age of 17, he has outshone some of the best chess players in the world. He is the youngest winner of the Candidates. The tournament, which was ªrst conducted in 1950, has seen 25 editions so far (Table 1).

Two other Indians — fellow Chennai teenager GM R. Praggnanan­dhaa and GM Vidit Gujrathi — performed creditably scoring seven and six points, respective­ly, in the open section of the 2024 tournament. GM Koneru Humpy and GM-elect R. Vaishali did well to ªnish third in the women’s section. Gukesh is also the ªrst Indian to win the Candidates since GM Viswanatha­n Anand won the tournament in 2014 and earned him a rematch for the World Championsh­ip against GM Magnus Carlsen.

Gukesh’s victory in the tournament was the result of his allround consistenc­y and stable play. According to Chess.com, Gukesh’s average move accuracy in the estimation of high-performing chess engines in all 14 rounds was 95.4% versus his opponents’ 93.6% (Table 2). He also led the tournament in wins (ªve), losing only once to GM Alireza Firouzja, after committing last-minute blunders. He defeated the tournament’s lowestrate­d player, Nijat Abasov, twice; his compatriot­s Praggnanan­dhaa and Gujrathi once each; and avenged his loss against Firouzja in the penultimat­e round. He also drew comfortabl­y in his games against the higher-rated GMs Fabiano Caruana, Ian Nepomniach­tchi, and Hikaru Nakamura. All three of them ªnished half a point behind Gukesh.

Gukesh is currently India’s toprated player in FIDE live ratings with 2763.4 points, just two ahead of GM Arjun Erigaisi. Anand, Praggnanan­dhaa, and Gujrathi are the other three in the top ªve. Gukesh has also become the world no. 6 in live ratings, behind GMs Carlsen (2830), Caruana (2805.4), Nakamura (2794.4), and Nodirbek Abdusattar­ov (2765), who is also a teenager.

His opponent in the FIDE World Championsh­ips, scheduled for November 2024, is incumbent champion GM Ding Liren of China. Interestin­gly, Ding is currently ranked world no. 7 and, with 2762 points, only two behind Gukesh. But with a peak ELO of 2816 and being one of just 15 GMs to cross the superelite rating of 2800 (in live ratings), he will be a tough opponent.

The women’s championsh­ip is set to be an all-Chinese a¥air between GMs Tan Zhongyi (the challenger) and Ju Wenjun (the incumbent). Gukesh will have a chance to thwart a repeat of the Chinese strangleho­ld over both championsh­ips in 2023.

Gukesh’s ascendancy to becoming the challenger to the world crown isn’t an accident. Chart 3 shows his rating points over time. It shows that his trajectory matches that of super GMs like Carlsen, Anish Giri, and Firouzja. All of them were also child prodigies who went on to become formidable elite players.

But while Gukesh became the ªrst player to supplant Anand as the highest-rated Indian last year, he su¥ered a nearly 40-point drop in ELO ratings between October and December 2023, from 2758 to 2720. He subsequent­ly managed to come up with convincing performanc­es to hike his ratings steadily back to reach a new peak of 2763.4 (live) by the end of the Candidates. If he continues to maintain this form, a rewriting of the record books by the end of the World Championsh­ips may well be in order.

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