ADVERTISEMENT

Praggnanandhaa’s Chessable Masters dream run ends with loss to Ding Liren in tense final

May 27, 2022 11:43 am | Updated 11:43 am IST - Chennai

Sixteen-year-old chess Grandmaster R. Praggnanandhaa lost to world No. 2 Ding Liren in the tie-break of the 2022 Chessable Masters final, ending his dream run of become the first Indian to reach the event final

Chess Grandmaster R. Praggnanandhaa. File | Photo Credit: Vibhu H.

Young Indian Grandmaster R. Praggnanandhaa went down fighting to world No. 2 Ding Liren in the tie-break of the Meltwater Champions Chess Tour Chessable Masters 2022 online tournament final early on Friday.

ADVERTISEMENT

Praggnanandhaa, the 16-year-old chess prodigy from Chennai, fought back to win the second set after having lost the opener. But then lost the two-game blitz tie-breaker.

Forcing the blitz tie-break

Praggnanandhaa, who had lost the first set 1.5-2.5, hit back to win the second 2.5-1.5 and force the blitz tie-break.

ADVERTISEMENT

The 29-year old Liren used his experience to trump Praggnanandhaa in the second of the tie-break games. After the first blitz game ended in stalemate, the Chinese player won the next in 49 moves to dash Praggnanandhaa's hopes.

Earlier in the second set which he needed to win to force a tie-break, Praggnanandhaa got the all-important victory in the second game in 79 moves.

Your browser doesn’t support HTML5 audio

The next game saw the two dish out a 106-move draw before another stalemate meant the title would be decided by the tie-breaker.

ADVERTISEMENT

After the final, Praggnanandhaa's coach R. B. Ramesh praised his ward's efforts and wrote on Twitter: "Congratulations Ding for beating both Pragg AND the mosquitoes! Proud of you @rpragchess, showed good nerves and character overall in tough situations."

Praggnanandhaa had defeated the highly-rated Dutchman Anish Giri in the semifinal to become the first Indian player to reach the final of a Meltwater Champions Chess Tour event.

He had beaten world No. 1 Magnus Carlsen for a second time during the preliminary phase in which he finished fourth and got past Wei Yi of China in the quarterfinals.

This is a Premium article available exclusively to our subscribers. To read 250+ such premium articles every month
You have exhausted your free article limit.
Please support quality journalism.
You have exhausted your free article limit.
Please support quality journalism.
The Hindu operates by its editorial values to provide you quality journalism.
This is your last free article.

ADVERTISEMENT

ADVERTISEMENT