Chess World Cup 2023 Semi-Final As It Happened: Praggnanandhaa defeats Caruana to seal final against Magnus Carlsen
R Praggnanandhaa vs Fabiano Caruana Highlights, Chess World Cup 2023 Semi Final: Praggnanandhaa managed to defeat Fabiano Caruana after four rapid tiebreak games on Monday.
India's Praggnanandhaa defeated Fabiano Caruana tp book a showdown with Magnus Carlsen. (FIDE/Stev Bonhage)
Chess World Cup 2023 Semifinal TIEBREAK Highlights, R Praggnanandhaa vs Fabiano Caruana: India’s R Praggnanandhaa managed to defeat American GM Fabiano Caruana via the tiebreaker to seal his entry into the final of the FIDE World Cup on Monday. After two classical games on Saturday and Sunday and Monday’s two rapid games ended in draws, the Indian managed to defeat American GM Fabiano Caruana in the third game of the tiebreak to put one foot into the final. He then shut the door on Caruana in the final tiebreak game to seal a spot in the final against Magnus Carlsen! Read More
The 18-year-old from India recently defeated compatriot Arjun Erigaisi in a frantic sudden-death blitz showdown after eight previous games failed to find a winner to cement his place in the semifinals.
Out of four Indians, who had made it to the quarterfinals, Praggnanandhaa remains the only Indian in the fray.
INTERACTIVE: You can follow the move-by-move action from the first tiebreak game in the semi-final clash between Praggnanandhaa and Fabiano Caruana below and also click on the notations at the right of the board to retrace the way the game developed:
INTERACTIVE: You can follow the move-by-move action from the second tiebreak game in the semi-final clash between Praggnanandhaa and Fabiano Caruana below and also click on the notations at the right of the board to retrace the way the game developed:
INTERACTIVE: You can follow the move-by-move action from the third tiebreak game (with 10 minutes for each player + 10 seconds increment per move) in the semi-final clash between Praggnanandhaa and Fabiano Caruana below and also click on the notations at the right of the board to retrace the way the game developed:
INTERACTIVE: You can follow the move-by-move action from the fourth tiebreak game (with 10 minutes for each player + 10 seconds increment per move) in the semi-final clash between Praggnanandhaa and Fabiano Caruana below and also click on the notations at the right of the board to retrace the way the game developed:
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Live Blog
Chess World Cup 2023 Semifinal Highlights: Catch all the updates from Rameshbabu Praggnanandhaa's win over Fabiano Caruana at the FIDE World Cup 2023 in Baku.
23:47 (IST)21 Aug 2023
A proud mother
23:13 (IST)21 Aug 2023
R Praggnanandhaa: The OG, original child prodigy, now challenger to World No 1 Magnus Carlsen
In the post-pandemic world, a new tidal wave of Indian teenagers had swamped the chess landscape, but the 18-year-old R Praggnanandhaa remains the OG, the original child prodigy. The other bright young stars – D Gukesh, Arjun Erigaisi, Nihal Sarin – are all walking the path paved by the Chennai boy who goes by the name of Pragg on the global chess circuit.
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On Monday, Pragg nudged a reminder by downing the reigning US chess champion Fabiano Caruana via the tiebreaker to enter the final in Baku, where Magnus Carlsen, the modern day chess genius, another OG, awaits him. Befittingly, Viswanathan Anand, who breathlessly tweeted about Pragg’s progress, would be moved to post: “what a performance”.
"It feels really good to qualify for the Candidates; I really wanted to fix this spot," says the 18-year-old.
22:22 (IST)21 Aug 2023
Praggnanandhaa speaks
"I didn't expect to play Magnus in this tournament at all because the only way I could play him was in the final, and I didn't expect to be in the final… I will just try to give my best and see how it goes!"
22:20 (IST)21 Aug 2023
Is Magnus Carlsen next?
22:19 (IST)21 Aug 2023
An impressive win from the 18-year-old
22:06 (IST)21 Aug 2023
Even Vishy Anand was impressed
21:39 (IST)21 Aug 2023
How it went by in the semifinals!
21:30 (IST)21 Aug 2023
Praggnanandhaa's rise and rise, sets up final vs Carlsen!
21:25 (IST)21 Aug 2023
Emergence of India's chess prodigies, a tale of a kind!
21:15 (IST)21 Aug 2023
An insane moment for Indian chess!!!
21:13 (IST)21 Aug 2023
RB Ramesh is a proud coach today
21:04 (IST)21 Aug 2023
Praggnanandhaa defeats Fabiano Caruana to enter the final!!!
WOW, what a tournament the Indian wunderkid is having!
21:01 (IST)21 Aug 2023
Vishy Anand predicted this outcome almost an hour back!
20:54 (IST)21 Aug 2023
Meanwhile, here's the moment Pragg won the previous tiebreaker
20:53 (IST)21 Aug 2023
FIDE World Cup LIVE: We have 50 moves on the board!
Fabiano making moves with three seconds on the board! Remember: If it is a draw, RPagg goes to the final!
20:52 (IST)21 Aug 2023
FIDE World Cup LIVE: Closer and closer
20:39 (IST)21 Aug 2023
Here are the first 33 moves between Fabiano Caruana and Praggnanandhaa:
FIDE World Cup LIVE: Fourth tiebreak game between Praggnanandhaa and Caruana crosses 20 moves each
Caption
20:20 (IST)21 Aug 2023
And we're off in the fourth tiebreaker
Tension writ large on facades of both players!
20:08 (IST)21 Aug 2023
🚨🚨 PRAGG WINS THIS TIEBREAK 🚨🚨
After two classical game and two rapid games ended in draws, India's #Praggnanandhaa managed to defeat Caruana in the third game of the tiebreak.
He now only needs a draw in the fourth tiebreak game!
19:58 (IST)21 Aug 2023
FIDE World Cup LIVE: Praggnanandhaa has an advantage after all!
The Indian is up two pawns now! For once in this whole tie, he has a hefty advantage.
19:55 (IST)21 Aug 2023
FIDE World Cup LIVE: A win for Praggnanandhaa starting to appear on horizon
The Indian is already a pawn up, but he's placed his pieces in a way that he could go up two pawns... that would spell trouble for the American GM.
19:50 (IST)21 Aug 2023
No one's going for walks today in the middle of the game! Both players rooted to their chairs.
19:45 (IST)21 Aug 2023
FIDE World Cup LIVE: Praggnanandhaa is up a pawn
However, Caruana has two more minutes on the clock!
19:29 (IST)21 Aug 2023
Massive prize money for both players
While Aleksandra Goryachkina is taking home a cool $50,000 prize her defeated opponent, Nurgyul Salimova, will make $35,000. Besides the money, both players will also earn a spot in the Candidates Tournament.
19:27 (IST)21 Aug 2023
WE HAVE A WOMEN'S WORLD CUP CHAMPION!!
19:26 (IST)21 Aug 2023
FIDE World Cup LIVE: Pragg to start with white pieces
Buckle up, this is going to get frantic!
The winner of the tiebreak plays World No 1 Magnus Carlsen in the FIDE World Cup final!
19:08 (IST)21 Aug 2023
What happens next...
If the two tie-break games with time control of 25 minutes for each player + 10 seconds does not find a winner, the players will play two more games with a time control of 10 minutes for each player + 10 seconds increment per move, starting from move 1.
If that also does not find a winner, there will be two more games with time control of 5 minutes for each player + 3 seconds increment per move, starting from move 1.
If that also does not find a winner, single game with a time control of 3 minutes + 2 seconds increment per move, starting from move 1 shall be played to determine the winner.
19:06 (IST)21 Aug 2023
Here are all the 53 moves from the second tiebreak game between Praggnanandhaa vs Fabiano Caruana that ended in a draw
19:01 (IST)21 Aug 2023
ANOTHER DRAW!!!
18:55 (IST)21 Aug 2023
FIDE World Cup LIVE: Pragg up more material
Pragg now has an extra pawn and one mroe bishop on the board.
18:49 (IST)21 Aug 2023
FIDE World Cup LIVE: Both players battling on gamely
Fabi has an additional knight, while Pragg has an additional bishop on the clock!
18:48 (IST)21 Aug 2023
FIDE World Cup LIVE: Pragg and Caruana getting low on time now
After 31 moves from both players, Pragg has around 2:30 seconds on the clock. His opponent has even less, 1:30 and counting.
18:13 (IST)21 Aug 2023
FIDE World Cup LIVE: 17 moves in the book between Pragg and Caruana
FIDE World Cup LIVE: And we're off in the second tie-break games
Pragg playing iwth white pieces this time around.
17:47 (IST)21 Aug 2023
The 55th move from Caruana --- to move his pawn to f4 --- was a mistake and it allowed the Indian to wriggle out of defeat
17:46 (IST)21 Aug 2023
Watch the frantic end to the Pragg-Caruana game
17:39 (IST)21 Aug 2023
FIDE World Cup LIVE: Eval bar thinks Caruana is winning
50 moves on the board now. And Pragg is now making moves with three seconds left on the clock at times. Insane chess!!!
17:35 (IST)21 Aug 2023
FIDE Women's World Cup LIVE: Both players will be coming back out for the second game
17:31 (IST)21 Aug 2023
FIDE Women's World Cup: First game ends in a draw
Nurgyul Salimova and Aleksandra Goryachkina agree to a draw!
17:23 (IST)21 Aug 2023
FIDE Women's World Cup LIVE: Nurgyul Salimova holds the upper hand
She might be the rank underdog in the women's final, but Salimova is already edging ot a win in the first tiebreak game.
Of course, Goryachkina will have another rapid game to equalise.
But what a story this will be if Salimova manages to clinch victory.
16:59 (IST)21 Aug 2023
FIDE Women's World Cup LIVE: What a contrast in the women's final
Aleksandra Goryachkina is the World No 3.
Her rival Nurgyul Salimova is World No 47!!
Goryachkina's rating is 2557, while her opponent is rated over 150 points lower at 2403.
And while the 24-year-old Goryachkina is a GM, 20-year-old Salimova is an IM.
16:50 (IST)21 Aug 2023
FIDE World Cup LIVE: After 15 moves...
No exchange of pieces yet on the board between Pragg and Caruana. Although white had gained a lot of space on the queen's side. Meanwhile, the two advanced pawns on the fifth rank are well supported by a pawn chain, the knights and the two bishops.
16:43 (IST)21 Aug 2023
FIDE World Cup LIVE: just a reminder...
India's Praggnanandhaa is playing with black pieces in the first tiebreak game. He'll play white in the second.
16:36 (IST)21 Aug 2023
FIDE World Cup LIVE: 10 moves on the board between India's Praggnanandhaa and Fabiano Caruana
FIDE Women's World Cup LIVE: Just a reminder to those following our blog...
Aleksandra Goryachkina and Nurgyul Salimova are also playing a tiebreaker to decide the women's world cup winner!
16:30 (IST)21 Aug 2023
FIDE World Cup LIVE: We're under a minute away from the start
Two rapid games coming up first.
16:17 (IST)21 Aug 2023
FIDE World Cup LIVE: How the tiebreaker works
If the two classical games do not throw up a winner, two tie-break games shall be played with time control of 25 minutes for each player + 10 seconds increment per move, starting from move 1.
If that also does not find a winner, the players will play two more games with a time control of 10 minutes for each player + 10 seconds increment per move, starting from move 1.
If that also does not find a winner, there will be two more games with time control of 5 minutes for each player + 3 seconds increment per move, starting from move 1.
If that also does not find a winner, single game with a time control of 3 minutes + 2 seconds increment per move, starting from move 1 shall be played to determine the winner.
The game with 3 minutes + 2 seconds increment per move is repeated until there's a winner.
16:16 (IST)21 Aug 2023
Hola
And we're back with our liveblog for the tiebreaker between India's Praggnanandhaa and Fabiano Caruana.
00:58 (IST)21 Aug 2023
Our chess reading list:
As we bring this live blog to a close for today, here are some links for chess pieces you might be interested in:
CArlsen is asked about extending his hand to an invisible person at the start of the game. He says with a smile: "It was just a joke."
21:44 (IST)20 Aug 2023
FIDE World Cup LIVE: Magnus Carlsen speaks
The World No 1 is asked about losing a piece in the endgame: "I blundered. I was playing on because I thought there was absolutely no risk. And I thought that I finally triangulated and got in a winning position. It was quite a rude awakening to see the 56.d6 move cause I always though that I would go and pick up the pawn with the king. When he played it, I immediately saw his idea. Fortunately, it did not take me long to realise the position was an easy draw after."
21:32 (IST)20 Aug 2023
FIDE World Cup LIVE: Here's what to expect in the tiebreaker
If the two classical games do not throw up a winner, two tie-break games shall be played with time control of 25 minutes for each player + 10 seconds increment per move, starting from move 1.
If that also does not find a winner, the players will play two more games with a time control of 10 minutes for each player + 10 seconds increment per move, starting from move 1.
If that also does not find a winner, there will be two more games with time control of 5 minutes for each player + 3 seconds increment per move, starting from move 1.
If that also does not find a winner, single game with a time control of 3 minutes + 2 seconds increment per move, starting from move 1 shall be played to determine the winner.
The game with 3 minutes + 2 seconds increment per move is repeated until there's a winner.
20:55 (IST)20 Aug 2023
FIDE World Cup LIVE: Pragg and Caruana agree to a draw!!!
So we will have a tiebreaker tomorrow to decide who will seal the second spot in the FIDE World Cup final!
20:51 (IST)20 Aug 2023
FIDE World Cup LIVE: After 44 moves from both players, here's what the board looks like between Pragg and Caruana
20:42 (IST)20 Aug 2023
FIDE Women's World Cup LIVE: Heartbreak for Tan Zhongyi
Ukrainian player Anna Muzychuk manages to seal a spot in the Women's Candidates Tournament with a draw against the Chinese player!
20:37 (IST)20 Aug 2023
FIDE World Cup LIVE: MAGNUS ENTERS THE FINAL!!
Magnus Carlsen ekes out a draw against home favourite Nijat Abasov and reaches the final of the FIDE World Cup for the first time in his career. He had won yesterday's game, and that was enough to seal him a final spot.
Arjun Erigaisi lost his best chance to make it to the 2024 Candidates Tournament when he came second-best to younger compatriot R Praggnanandhaa in a marathon blitz round of the quarterfinal at the FIDE World Cup. (PHOTO: FIDE/Anna Shtourman)
Nineteen-year-old Arjun Erigaisi lost his best chance to make it to the 2024 Candidates Tournament when he came second-best to younger compatriot R Praggnanandhaa in a marathon blitz round of the quarterfinal at the FIDE World Cup on Thursday. While it was a bitter pill to swallow, the World No. 32 is not fretting about it. He rather prefers to look at how far he has come in the past five years. The youngster from a family of doctors still has eyes set on Candidates Tournament and is keen on an opportunity to challenge the World Champion. (READ MORE)
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In the post-pandemic world, a new tidal wave of Indian teenagers had swamped the chess landscape, but the 18-year-old R Praggnanandhaa remains the OG, the original child prodigy. The other bright young stars – D Gukesh, Arjun Erigaisi, Nihal Sarin – are all walking the path paved by the Chennai boy who goes by the name of Pragg on the global chess circuit.
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with an Express account.
On Monday, Pragg nudged a reminder by downing the reigning US chess champion Fabiano Caruana via the tiebreaker to enter the final in Baku, where Magnus Carlsen, the modern day chess genius, another OG, awaits him. Befittingly, Viswanathan Anand, who breathlessly tweeted about Pragg’s progress, would be moved to post: “what a performance”.
READ OUR PIECE ON PRAGG
"It feels really good to qualify for the Candidates; I really wanted to fix this spot," says the 18-year-old.
"I didn't expect to play Magnus in this tournament at all because the only way I could play him was in the final, and I didn't expect to be in the final… I will just try to give my best and see how it goes!"
WOW, what a tournament the Indian wunderkid is having!
Fabiano making moves with three seconds on the board! Remember: If it is a draw, RPagg goes to the final!
1 e4 e5
2 Nf3 Nc6
3 Bc4 Bc5
4 c3 Nf6
5 d3 h6
6 b4 Be7
7 Qb3 O-O
8 a4 d6
9 O-O Nb8
10 Nbd2 c6
11 Qa2 d5
12 Bb3 Qc7
13 a5 Be6
14 Re1 Nbd7
15 Bb2 Rfe8
16 h3 Bf8
17 Nf1 a6
18 Rad1 dxe4
19 dxe4 c5
20 Bxe6 Rxe6
21 Qb3 b6
22 Ra1 cxb4
23 cxb4 bxa5
24 bxa5 Rb8
25 Qa2 Bb4
26 Re2 Rb5
27 Rc1 Rc6
28 Rxc6 Qxc6
29 Qa4 Qb7
30 Ng3 Rxa5
31 Qd1 Bf8
32 Kh2 Rb5
33 Qa1 Nc5
Tension writ large on facades of both players!
The Indian is up two pawns now! For once in this whole tie, he has a hefty advantage.
The Indian is already a pawn up, but he's placed his pieces in a way that he could go up two pawns... that would spell trouble for the American GM.
However, Caruana has two more minutes on the clock!
While Aleksandra Goryachkina is taking home a cool $50,000 prize her defeated opponent, Nurgyul Salimova, will make $35,000. Besides the money, both players will also earn a spot in the Candidates Tournament.
Buckle up, this is going to get frantic!
The winner of the tiebreak plays World No 1 Magnus Carlsen in the FIDE World Cup final!
If the two tie-break games with time control of 25 minutes for each player + 10 seconds does not find a winner, the players will play two more games with a time control of 10 minutes for each player + 10 seconds increment per move, starting from move 1.
If that also does not find a winner, there will be two more games with time control of 5 minutes for each player + 3 seconds increment per move, starting from move 1.
If that also does not find a winner, single game with a time control of 3 minutes + 2 seconds increment per move, starting from move 1 shall be played to determine the winner.
Pragg now has an extra pawn and one mroe bishop on the board.
Fabi has an additional knight, while Pragg has an additional bishop on the clock!
After 31 moves from both players, Pragg has around 2:30 seconds on the clock. His opponent has even less, 1:30 and counting.
1 d4 Nf6
2 Bf4 d5
3 e3 Bf5
4 Bd3 Bg6
5 Nf3 e6
6 c4 Bd6
7 Bg3 dxc4
8 Bxc4 O-O
9 Nc3 Nbd7
10 O-O Bxg3
11 hxg3 c5
12 Be2 Qe7
13 Qb3 cxd4
14 Nxd4 Nc5
15 Qa3 Rfe8
16 Rfd1 a6
17 Rac1 Rad8
1 d4 Nf6
2 Bf4 d5
3 e3 Bf5
4 Bd3 Bg6
5 Nf3 e6
6 c4 Bd6
7 Bg3 dxc4
8 Bxc4 O-O
9 Nc3 Nbd7
10 O-O Bxg3
11 hxg3 c5
12 Be2 Qe7
Pragg playing iwth white pieces this time around.
50 moves on the board now. And Pragg is now making moves with three seconds left on the clock at times. Insane chess!!!
Nurgyul Salimova and Aleksandra Goryachkina agree to a draw!
She might be the rank underdog in the women's final, but Salimova is already edging ot a win in the first tiebreak game.
Of course, Goryachkina will have another rapid game to equalise.
But what a story this will be if Salimova manages to clinch victory.
Aleksandra Goryachkina is the World No 3.
Her rival Nurgyul Salimova is World No 47!!
Goryachkina's rating is 2557, while her opponent is rated over 150 points lower at 2403.
And while the 24-year-old Goryachkina is a GM, 20-year-old Salimova is an IM.
No exchange of pieces yet on the board between Pragg and Caruana. Although white had gained a lot of space on the queen's side. Meanwhile, the two advanced pawns on the fifth rank are well supported by a pawn chain, the knights and the two bishops.
India's Praggnanandhaa is playing with black pieces in the first tiebreak game. He'll play white in the second.
1 e4 e5
2 Nf3 Nc6
3 Bc4 Bc5
4 c3 Nf6
5 d3 h6
6 O-O d6
7 Re1 O-O
8 h3 a6
9 a4 Ba7
10 Nbd2 Ne7
Aleksandra Goryachkina and Nurgyul Salimova are also playing a tiebreaker to decide the women's world cup winner!
Two rapid games coming up first.
If the two classical games do not throw up a winner, two tie-break games shall be played with time control of 25 minutes for each player + 10 seconds increment per move, starting from move 1.
If that also does not find a winner, the players will play two more games with a time control of 10 minutes for each player + 10 seconds increment per move, starting from move 1.
If that also does not find a winner, there will be two more games with time control of 5 minutes for each player + 3 seconds increment per move, starting from move 1.
If that also does not find a winner, single game with a time control of 3 minutes + 2 seconds increment per move, starting from move 1 shall be played to determine the winner.
The game with 3 minutes + 2 seconds increment per move is repeated until there's a winner.
And we're back with our liveblog for the tiebreaker between India's Praggnanandhaa and Fabiano Caruana.
As we bring this live blog to a close for today, here are some links for chess pieces you might be interested in:
Bull run on the chessboard: As number of GMs from India surges, casual fans from nation too rising
The bond between teenage prodigy Gukesh and India’s first GM Viswanathan Anand
Magnus Carlsen reveals what he told Praggnanandhaa after Indian teen upset Hikaru Nakamura
PROFILE: D Gukesh, The Boy Who Went Past Viswanathan Anand
‘The name of the game is intimidation’: Hungry Gukesh takes on resurgent Magnus Carlsen
Young Magnus Carlsen building large Lego sets made his father to teach him chess
Magnus Carlsen: ‘We’re at beginning of chess revolution in India which started with Vishy Anand’
GM Srinath Narayanan: There’s a consensus in world of chess that India is a superpower
Meals turn into mentoring sessions as Magnus Carlsen takes India’s teenaged trio under wings
Maybe you'd like to listen to our podcast ?? with five-time world champion Viswanathan Anand on the future of Indian chess.
? Click on this link to be redirected to the Spotify episode. ?
CArlsen is asked about extending his hand to an invisible person at the start of the game. He says with a smile: "It was just a joke."
The World No 1 is asked about losing a piece in the endgame: "I blundered. I was playing on because I thought there was absolutely no risk. And I thought that I finally triangulated and got in a winning position. It was quite a rude awakening to see the 56.d6 move cause I always though that I would go and pick up the pawn with the king. When he played it, I immediately saw his idea. Fortunately, it did not take me long to realise the position was an easy draw after."
If the two classical games do not throw up a winner, two tie-break games shall be played with time control of 25 minutes for each player + 10 seconds increment per move, starting from move 1.
If that also does not find a winner, the players will play two more games with a time control of 10 minutes for each player + 10 seconds increment per move, starting from move 1.
If that also does not find a winner, there will be two more games with time control of 5 minutes for each player + 3 seconds increment per move, starting from move 1.
If that also does not find a winner, single game with a time control of 3 minutes + 2 seconds increment per move, starting from move 1 shall be played to determine the winner.
The game with 3 minutes + 2 seconds increment per move is repeated until there's a winner.
So we will have a tiebreaker tomorrow to decide who will seal the second spot in the FIDE World Cup final!
Ukrainian player Anna Muzychuk manages to seal a spot in the Women's Candidates Tournament with a draw against the Chinese player!
Magnus Carlsen ekes out a draw against home favourite Nijat Abasov and reaches the final of the FIDE World Cup for the first time in his career. He had won yesterday's game, and that was enough to seal him a final spot.