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TFC Gukesh Dommaraju 18th World Champion Celebration

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3 DAYS, WILL BE 3 ROUNDS AND THE FINAL BETWEEN THE BEST NINE PLAYERS.

Bio
The player's full name is Gukesh Dommaraju and they confirmed to Chess.com that they prefer to be called by their first name, Gukesh.

Indian GM Gukesh Dommaraju is the current world chess champion, defeating GM Ding Liren in the FIDE World Championship on December 12, 2024. He is the youngest undisputed world champion in chess history, at 18 years and six months old, shattering the previous record of 22 years and seven months which was set by GM Garry Kasparov in 1985. Gukesh became the challenger to the world championship in April 2024 by winning the 2024 FIDE Candidates Tournament with a score of 9/14, making him the youngest-ever Candidates Tournament winner.

A chess prodigy, Gukesh earned the GM title at 12 years, 7 months, and 17 days of age—narrowly missing GM Sergey Karjakin’s record by 17 days. In July 2022, he achieved a live rating of 2700, the fourth-youngest player ever to do so. In September 2023, he was ranked eighth in the world and first in India—ending GM Viswanathan Anand's 37-year reign as India's top-rated player.

Gukesh learned to play chess when he was seven years old. It’s rather late compared to other prodigies. For example, two of the most famous chess sensations in history, GMs Karjakin and Magnus Carlsen, both learned how when they were five years old. Some learn even earlier.

Nevertheless, Gukesh, who hails from Chennai, India—the same city as GM Viswanathan Anand—can partly thank his environment for thriving so early. He was introduced to chess by his school, which is part of the Velammal group of schools across Chennai responsible for talents like GMs Murali Karthikeyan, Aravindh Chithambaram and, most famously, Praggnanandhaa R. Gukesh’s first coach at the school, Mr. Bhaskar, helped the youngster become a FIDE-rated player within six months of learning the game.

Two years later, while being trained by Mr. Vijayanand, Gukesh found success at the international level. At the 2015 Asian School Chess Championships, he won the under-9 section and also earned the candidate master (CM) title. Gukesh topped his first major win with plenty of success in 2018. At the Asian Youth Chess Championships, he won five gold medals: under-12 individual classical, under-12 individual rapid and blitz, and under-12 team rapid and blitz. Even more important in the same year, Gukesh captured the under-12 title at the World Youth Championships with 10/11 points.

Around this time, Gukesh was busy fulfilling IM norms as an 11-year-old. The first came at the First Friday tournament in Puchong, Malaysia, in October 2017, which took place weeks after he had started training with noted Indian GM Vishnu Prasanna (a longtime second of Indian GM Baskaran Adhiban). Gukesh’s second IM norm was at the Moscow Open in 2018. Finally, Gukesh gained his third and final IM norm on March 10, 2018, by scoring 7/9 at the Cappelle la Grande Open. He became an international master at 11 years, nine months and nine days old.

Almost immediately, Gukesh started working on his quest to become the youngest grandmaster in history. In April 2018, after winning the Asian under-12 youth title, he earned his first GM norm at the Bangkok Open. Good luck was on the prodigy’s side, as Gukesh beat GM Nigel Short in the tournament simply because Short forgot to press his clock in a superior position. His second GM norm came at the Orbis 2 GM event when Gukesh scored 7.5/9 points and gained 21 rating points. Although he had a chance to get his final GM norm at the Sunway Sitges Chess Festival in December 2018—which would have made him the youngest grandmaster in history—he drew his must-win, ninth-round game, missing the norm by half a point.

I was disappointed for two days,” Gukesh told ESPN. “Then I moved on.” His coach helped him gain perspective on the failed record-setting attempt. “I tried to not get him too attached to chasing the GM title,” Prasanna said. “I told him it won't be the greatest-ever achievement there is, and that there are many around us who have achieved far more challenging goals.”

Second-youngest Grandmaster In History (2019)
On January 15, 2019, Gukesh became the second-youngest chess grandmaster in history by scoring his third GM norm at the 17th Delhi International Grandmaster Open. He was 12 years, 7 months and 17 days old at the time, which means he missed Karjakin’s record by just 17 days.

Gukesh has fared well in tournaments following his historic accomplishment as the second-youngest grandmaster of all time.

Two months after earning the title, the 13-year-old shared second place in the ninth HD Bank Open that took place in March 2019 in Ho Chi Minh City, Vietnam. Gukesh finished with a tournament performance rating of 2700 and 7/9 points. He was a half-point behind Wang Hao, who needed only a draw in the final round to take the event in sole first place.

Gukesh started 2020 impressively. His first tournament win came in February at a tournament to celebrate the 110th anniversary of the Hillerod Chess Club in Denmark. Starting as the second seed, Gukesh scored 8/9 points and edged out the top-seeded Chinese GM Chongsheng Zeng.

The momentum stayed for Gukesh’s next tournament. A week after the Hillerod Chess Club event, Gukesh scored 7.5/9 at the Cannes Chess Festival 2020. He went undefeated and took first place, earning a performance rating of 2667. Gukesh finished a half-point ahead of GMs Zeng Chongsheng and Lamard Guillaume. The event offered more of a test for Gukesh than the previous event, as the Cannes Open fielded more than 10 GMs.

ukesh's strong junior career continued in 2023 with a victory in the Junior Speed Chess Championship. In the eight-player knockout event, he defeated IM Emin Ohanyan, GM Pranav V, and GM Raunak Sadhwani to claim the crown. In July, he crossed the 2750 FIDE rating barrier, the youngest player ever to do so. He won the Chennai Masters in December, putting him in line to reach the 2024 Candidates Tournament.

Gukesh entered the Candidates Tournament, which began on April 4, 2024, as one of the underdogs. After round five, however, he was tied for first place. A loss to GM Alireza Firouzja in the seventh round turned out to be a mere bump in the road, although, by round 11, Gukesh had still yet to regain a share of first place. That changed with two straight victories in rounds 12 and 13 over GM Nijat Abasov and then in the rematch against Firouzja.

In the runup to the World Championship, Gukesh played the first board for India at the 45th Chess Olympiad in September. He scored 9/10 and reached a 2794 rating (fifth in the world) as India won gold, while also winning the individual gold medal himself.

The World Championship between Gukesh and Ding Liren, a best-of-14 match which ran from November 25 to December 12, 2024, was a back-and-forth affair. Gukesh lost the first game but came back to win the third contest. A series of intense and draws followed until Gukesh broke through and won the 11th game, but Ding immediately came back and tied the match in game 12. The next game was a draw, setting up a 14th game where another draw would lead to rapid tiebreaks, but a decisive game would end the match. The tiebreaks appeared imminent until Ding's 55th move, and three turns later, Gukesh was the world champion.

All the factors for continued success have been there for Gukesh. He comes from a widely respected school in India (the Velammal School). He has top-class coaching from Prasanna. And his father, an ENT surgeon, has made and continues to make career sacrifices to accompany his son to tournaments.

"I was dreaming this moment for the last 10 years. I am happy that I realised the dream (and made it) into reality. I've been dreaming about this and living this moment since I was 6 or 7. Every chess player wants to live this moment. I'm living my dream. I'd like to thank God from candidates till the championship," 

PTI quoted Gukesh as saying to reporters after the historic triumph in Singapore.

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