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Rameshbabu Praggnanandhaa
R Praggnanandhaa 
Photo by Frans Peeters  

Number of games in database: 1,308
Years covered: 2014 to 2025
Last FIDE rating: 2758 (2688 rapid, 2717 blitz)
Overall record: +270 -144 =312 (58.7%)*
   * Overall winning percentage = (wins+draws/2) / total games in the database. 582 exhibition games, blitz/rapid, odds games, etc. are excluded from this statistic.

MOST PLAYED OPENINGS
With the White pieces:
 Sicilian (95) 
    B90 B40 B51 B30 B47
 Reti System (68) 
    A06 A04 A05
 Queen's Pawn Game (62) 
    A45 D02 D00 E00 A40
 Giuoco Piano (55) 
    C50 C53
 Ruy Lopez (44) 
    C65 C77 C78 C67 C85
 King's Indian Attack (39) 
    A07 A08
With the Black pieces:
 Sicilian (101) 
    B30 B31 B33 B22 B41
 Queen's Pawn Game (67) 
    E10 A45 D02 A46 D04
 Ruy Lopez (63) 
    C78 C70 C60 C77 C80
 Nimzo Indian (45) 
    E32 E46 E20 E21 E33
 English, 1 c4 e5 (42) 
    A20 A21 A28 A22 A29
 English (40) 
    A15 A13 A18 A10 A14
Repertoire Explorer

NOTABLE GAMES: [what is this?]
   Carlsen vs R Praggnanandhaa, 2023 1/2-1/2
   Carlsen vs R Praggnanandhaa, 2022 0-1
   Bachmann vs R Praggnanandhaa, 2016 0-1
   Mishra vs R Praggnanandhaa, 2022 0-1
   Ding Liren vs R Praggnanandhaa, 2024 0-1
   M Lagarde vs R Praggnanandhaa, 2023 0-1
   Sevian vs R Praggnanandhaa, 2023 0-1
   R Praggnanandhaa vs Firouzja, 2022 1-0
   G Jones vs R Praggnanandhaa, 2022 0-1
   R Praggnanandhaa vs Krasenkow, 2021 1-0

NOTABLE TOURNAMENTS: [what is this?]
   London Chess Classic Open (2019)
   Julius Baer Challenger Championship (2022)
   Xtracon Open (2019)
   Kvika Reykjavik Open (2022)
   Tata Steel Masters (2025)
   FIDE World Cup (2023)
   Airthings Masters Div 3 (2023)
   Chessable Masters (2022)
   Meltwater Champions Chess Tour Finals (2022)
   FTX Crypto Cup (2022)
   World Cup (2021)
   Global Chess League (2023)
   Oslo Esports Cup (2022)
   Tata Steel India (2022)
   World Cadets U12 (2016)

GAME COLLECTIONS: [what is this?]
   Praggnanandhaa wins against super GMs by chatushkon64
   To Analyze by SonOfPetrosian
   Rameshbabu Praggnanandhaa by uzeromay

RECENT GAMES:
   🏆 Superbet Blitz Poland
   Aronian vs R Praggnanandhaa (Apr-30-25) 1-0, blitz
   R Praggnanandhaa vs Firouzja (Apr-30-25) 1-0, blitz
   D Gavrilescu vs R Praggnanandhaa (Apr-30-25) 0-1, blitz
   R Praggnanandhaa vs B Deac (Apr-30-25) 0-1, blitz
   R Praggnanandhaa vs V Fedoseev (Apr-30-25) 0-1, blitz

Search Sacrifice Explorer for Rameshbabu Praggnanandhaa
Search Google for Rameshbabu Praggnanandhaa
FIDE player card for Rameshbabu Praggnanandhaa

RAMESHBABU PRAGGNANANDHAA
(born Aug-10-2005, 19 years old) India

[what is this?]

FIDE Master (2013); International Master (2016); Grandmaster (2018); Asian U8 Champion (2013); World U10 Champion (2015); Asian U12 Champion (2016).

Titles

Praggnanandhaa was formerly the youngest person ever to become an International Master. He did so on 29 May 2016 at the age of ten years and ten months and nineteen days, beating by over a year the record previously held by Sergey Karjakin. (1) He won his IM norms by:

- scoring 4.5/9 at the 30th International Festival of Games - Tournament A held in Cannes in February-March 2016

- scoring 5/9 at Aeroflot B in Moscow in March 2016 and

- scoring 6.5 from the first nine rounds of the 9th KiiT International Festival in Odisha in India in May 2016.

In November 2019, Abhimanyu Mishra beat his record by 17 days.

In June 2018, at the age of 12 years 10 months and 14 days, he became the second youngest person after Sergey Karjakin to become a Grandmaster, and along with Karjakin only one of two players at that time to win the title before the age of 13 years. (2) His GM norms were achieved at the:

- World Junior Championship in 2017 (see below)

- Heraklion Fischer Memorial GM Norm tournament in Greece in April 2018 and at the

- 4th Gredine Open in June 2018.

Events

At the 2016 WYCC (U12 cadet's section), Andrew Hong, Nihal Sarin and Vincent Keymer and he all tied (behind Nikhil Kumar who won) with scores of 8.5/11. (3) He scored eight points after 11 rounds at the World Junior Championship (2017) behind Aryan Tari (winner), Manuel Petrosyan (2nd after tiebreaks) and Chithambaram V R Aravindh (3rd after tie-breaks), tying with 3 others at 8 points.

In January 2018, Praggnanandhaa tied for third place with GM Alder Escobar Forero and IM Denys Shmelov in the Charlotte Chess Center's Winter 2018 GM Norm Invitational held in Charlotte, North Carolina, with a score of 5.0/9.

In July 2019, Praggnanandhaa won the Xtracon Chess Open in Denmark, scoring 8.5 of 10.

In December 2019, he became the second-youngest person to be rated 2600 Elo. He did this at the age of 14 years, 3 months and 24 days.

In April 2021, Praggnanandhaa won the Polgar Challenge, the first leg (out of four) of the Julius Baer Challengers Chess Tour, a rapid online event organized by Julius Baer Group and Chess24.com for young talents. He scored 15.5/19, 1.5 points ahead of the next best placed competitors.This win helped him qualify for the next Meltwater Champions Chess Tour on 24 April 2021, where he finished in 10th place with a score of 7/15. including wins against Teimour Radjabov, Jan-Krzysztof Duda, Sergey Karjakin, and Johan-Sebastian Christiansen as well as a draw against World Champion Magnus Carlsen.

Praggnanandhaa entered the Chess World Cup 2021 as the 90th seed. He defeated GM Gabriel Sargissian 2 0 in round 2, and advanced to round 4 after defeating GM Michael Krasenkow in the rapid tiebreaks in round 3. He was eliminated in round four by Maxime Vachier-Lagrave.

Praggnanandhaa, rated 2690, was seeded 31st in the FIDE World Cup (2023). He received a first-round bye, then defeated Maxime Lagarde (No. 98), David Navara (No. 34), Hikaru Nakamura (No. 2), Ferenc Berkes (No. 82), Arjun Erigaisi (No. 23), and Fabiano Caruana (No. 3). In the finals, he faces the No. 1 seed, former World Champion Magnus Carlsen. Praggnanandhaa, who turned 18 on August 10, after the tournament started, is the youngest World Cup finalist ever. He is believed to be the only player ever to face the No. 1, 2, and 3 seeds in a single World Cup.

His older sister Ramesh Babu Vaishali is an International Master.

Sources

(1) http://en.chessbase.com/post/praggn...,

(2) https://en.chessbase.com/post/pragg... and https://chess24.com/en/read/news/pr...

(3) http://www.e2e4.ge/ (2016 U 12 Cadets)

References

https://itunes.apple.com/WebObjects... (15 October 2016 video podcast with "National Master Jerry from Pennsylvania" on ICC) and Wikipedia article: Praggnanandhaa Rameshbabu

Last updated: 2023-08-21 17:24:25

Try our new games table.

 page 1 of 53; games 1-25 of 1,308  PGN Download
Game  ResultMoves YearEvent/LocaleOpening
1. R Praggnanandhaa vs N R Visakh 1-0582014World Junior ChampionshipB40 Sicilian
2. S Gagare vs R Praggnanandhaa  1-0582014World Junior ChampionshipA20 English
3. R Praggnanandhaa vs K P Surya  ½-½352014World Junior ChampionshipB51 Sicilian, Canal-Sokolsky (Rossolimo) Attack
4. B Ider vs R Praggnanandhaa  1-0782014World Junior ChampionshipE06 Catalan, Closed, 5.Nf3
5. R Praggnanandhaa vs S Pastar 1-0232014World Junior ChampionshipB40 Sicilian
6. V Antonio vs R Praggnanandhaa  1-0642014World Junior ChampionshipC50 Giuoco Piano
7. R Praggnanandhaa vs E Ronka  ½-½762014World Junior ChampionshipB12 Caro-Kann Defense
8. P Iniyan vs R Praggnanandhaa  1-0702014World Junior ChampionshipD50 Queen's Gambit Declined
9. R Praggnanandhaa vs V Pranavananda 1-0402014World Junior ChampionshipB15 Caro-Kann
10. A L Muthaiah vs R Praggnanandhaa 0-1762014World Junior ChampionshipD01 Richter-Veresov Attack
11. R Praggnanandhaa vs V Borisenko  1-0452014World Junior ChampionshipB40 Sicilian
12. R Praggnanandhaa vs B Deac  0-1492014World Junior ChampionshipB40 Sicilian
13. U R Sahoo vs R Praggnanandhaa  1-0362014World Junior ChampionshipD55 Queen's Gambit Declined
14. S Das vs R Praggnanandhaa  1-02720147th Chennai Open -15C70 Ruy Lopez
15. R Praggnanandhaa vs Deepan Chakkravarthy J  0-14520152nd Kolkata GM OpenB28 Sicilian, O'Kelly Variation
16. M Gagunashvili vs R Praggnanandhaa  ½-½8620158th Mayors Cup OpenD37 Queen's Gambit Declined
17. R Praggnanandhaa vs V Neverov  0-14420168th Chennai OpenB94 Sicilian, Najdorf
18. H Hayrapetyan vs R Praggnanandhaa  ½-½402016Aeroflot Open BD85 Grunfeld
19. R Praggnanandhaa vs P Potapov  0-1422016Aeroflot Open BB01 Scandinavian
20. N Ziaziulkina vs R Praggnanandhaa  1-0502016Aeroflot Open BC78 Ruy Lopez
21. R Praggnanandhaa vs M Arabidze  1-0662016Aeroflot Open BB28 Sicilian, O'Kelly Variation
22. S Melia vs R Praggnanandhaa  0-1392016Aeroflot Open BC28 Vienna Game
23. Balashov vs R Praggnanandhaa  ½-½272016Aeroflot Open BD85 Grunfeld
24. R Praggnanandhaa vs L Babujian  1-0342016Aeroflot Open BC53 Giuoco Piano
25. R Praggnanandhaa vs P Schreiner  0-1552016Aeroflot Open BC55 Two Knights Defense
 page 1 of 53; games 1-25 of 1,308  PGN Download
  REFINE SEARCH:   White wins (1-0) | Black wins (0-1) | Draws (1/2-1/2) | Praggnanandhaa wins | Praggnanandhaa loses  

Kibitzer's Corner
< Earlier Kibitzing  · PAGE 4 OF 9 ·  Later Kibitzing>
Nov-22-17
Premium Chessgames Member
  beatgiant: <morfishine>
You won't be silent if he ever plays Nikolas Theodorou because a "pragmatist vs theorist" pun is inevitable.
Nov-22-17  dwavechess: currently third, two rounds left
Nov-23-17
Premium Chessgames Member
  perfidious: <beatgiant: <morfishine> You won't be silent if (Pragg) ever plays Nikolas Theodorou because a "pragmatist vs theorist" pun is inevitable.>

No-one would miss that chance. (laughs)

Nov-23-17  aliasniamor: He most likely needs 2 wins if he wants to become the World junior champion which would grant him the GM title. He already had a great event and a first GM norm is something he can be proud of. I'm sure he can grab a second norm before march and the deadline for the record, but to get the third as well could prove harder. GL anyway to him
Nov-25-17  LucB: Excellent performance at the World Junior! Almost 2690 (2nd highest after A. Tari), and a half-point behind the leaders.

That DOES qualify for a first GM norm, yes?

Nov-25-17  markz: Yes, he get a 11-game GM norm, which is better than the 9-game one.
Dec-04-17
Premium Chessgames Member
  ketchuplover: please enlighten us grasshopper. thank you
Dec-06-17  Whitehat1963: This kid might have a bright future indeed, in about four or five more years. By then, he might break the world’s top 20 or even top 10. Who holds the record as the youngest player to break into the world’s top 10. I’m assuming it belongs to Carlsen or Fischer. Kramnik and Kasparov might also be high on that list. But I can’t help wondering at what age people like Capablanca, Morphy, Reshevsky, Tal, and others might have broken into the world’s top ten. Anyone have a clue?
Dec-07-17  sac 4 mate: Chessmetrics has a pretty handy tool for ranking players by age for the pre-Elo eras if you're interested in "youngest-ever" type of records. If we're talking about official FIDE lists only, Carlsen first cracked the top 10 on the April 2008 list aged 17 years and 3 months, and seems to be the youngest to achieve that distinction. Before him, it was Kramnik, who hit the top 10 in January of 1993 six months before he turned 18, and might still hold the record if FIDE had computed its rating lists as frequently as they do today (they only did them twice a year back then). A year earlier, Kamsky also made the top 10 a few months before his 18th birthday.
Jan-12-18  todicav23: According to Wikipedia "Fischer became the youngest person ever to qualify for the Candidates (8 players) and the youngest ever grandmaster at 15 years, 6 months, 1 day". So we can assume that Fischer was top 10 (or at least very close) at 15 years and 6 months.
Jan-24-18
Premium Chessgames Member
  alexmagnus: Qualifying for a single event doesn't make one a top player yet. Just as becoming a challenger in 2016 didn't make Karjakin world number two.
Jan-24-18  todicav23: <alexmagnus: Qualifying for a single event doesn't make one a top player yet. Just as becoming a challenger in 2016 didn't make Karjakin world number two.> There was no accepted Rating System in 1958. "Qualifying for the Candidates" was probably the best criteria at the time for determining top 10 players. And it was not a single event. There was a complete cycle to determine the challenger for the World Title.

The Elo System is not an absolute measure of strength. In a sense, Karjakin was in Top 2 at the time because he won a tournament where all strong players, except the World Champion, were present.

Jan-24-18
Premium Chessgames Member
  alexmagnus: <In a sense, Karjakin was in Top 2 at the time because he won a tournament where all strong players, except the World Champion, were present.>

But it was <one> tournament. It's like saying Caruana was #1 when he played at Sinquefield 2014. And don't say the one was for WC and the other one wasn't, good form doesn't care about which tournament it is, it just happens.

And I'm not saying Elo is perfect. But determining position based on one event (and a full WC cycle is still one event, just a longer one) is even less perfect.

Jan-26-18
Premium Chessgames Member
  ketchuplover: Looks to me like Mr.P will not set a new record for youngest GM so far.
Jan-26-18  WorstPlayerEver: Hmm.. I guess he's overworked.
Jan-27-18
Premium Chessgames Member
  alexmagnus: It looks like he just draws everyone (one win and four draws at Gibraltar now. The win against a 2152, the draws against players rated between 2340 and 2681).
Jan-31-18
Premium Chessgames Member
  ketchuplover: He has until March 9 (Fischer's birthday) to set a new record.
Feb-01-18
Premium Chessgames Member
  ketchuplover: Today's loss does not help :(
Feb-01-18
Premium Chessgames Member
  alexmagnus: Well, he performed at Gibraltar just as expected by rating (gained 0.1 points).
Feb-08-18
Premium Chessgames Member
  ketchuplover: What is his upcoming schedule? tyia
Feb-20-18
Premium Chessgames Member
  ketchuplover: Best wishes at the Aeroflot Open
Feb-26-18
Premium Chessgames Member
  ketchuplover: At least he's not losing too much lately :)
Feb-28-18  SueursFroides: After a hard loss against GM Lysyj in round 2, Praggnanandhaa has been very solid to make 4/9 in a very strong "Aeroflot open".
Feb-28-18
Premium Chessgames Member
  alexmagnus: He won't become GM by drawing all games :D
Feb-28-18  SueursFroides: ketchuplover, that's right, but maybe he needs to draw a lot of games to improve later ;) "Aeroflot" is not the easiest way to won a lot of games for a 12 yo kid^^
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