Top

They’re coming

15 April 2008 18:08 PM | Last modified: 11:14

They’re coming. The new generation of chess players. In the last few days, three open tournaments were won by three chess players at an average age of just thirteen years old.

To prevent you from falling from your chair and break something, let’s start with the oldest. In this context, fourteen-year-old (and six months) Wesley So from the Philippines is a veteran. Since December last year he’s the youngest grandmaster on earth - only six players got that title at a younger age: Sergei Karjakin, Parimarjan Negi, Magnus Carlsen, Bu Xiangzhi, Teimour Radjabov and Ruslan Ponomariov.

And this GM title is not just a coincidence, no, So (2540) proved his strenght last week at the Dubai Open. There he won the tournament on tiebreak with 7 / 9, finishing joint first with GM Merab Gagunashvili, GM Ehsan Ghaem Maghami and GM Li Chao.

In the following game he beats the current world juniors champion and best Egyptian player GM Ahmed Adly:


During the Dutch Championship, also held last week, the Intomart GfK Open was held in the same playing hall, and was won by Anish Giri (2401) who is only thirteen years old. He won on tiebreak as well, finishing shared first with GM Mikheil Mchedlishvili.

In doing so, Giri, who is an FM, scored his first GM norm! He’s been living in The Netherlands since this year, after his father found a job there.

His game against Ceko was impressive. A model hedgehog:



The youngest tournament winner in this article is the Ukrainian FM Ilya Nyzhnyk (2397) and he’s only eleven (and a half). Last Sunday he won the Nabokov Memorial in Kiyv, before GM Yuri Kruppa and GM Vysochin Spartak. His score of 8.5 / 11 was also enough for a grandmaster result.

The worst thing about these kids? Their endgame skills! Look at this one:



Here are two videos with Nyzhnyk: in the first he gives a simul, but that was four years ago! In the second one, you can see him getting his prize after he won the Aeroflot Moscow Open B group in February 2007.




Links:

Comments

3 Responses to “They’re coming”

  1. michael on 15 April 2008 18:31 PM

    Peter

    The second video is the prize-giving of the B section of the Moscow Open 2007, not the Aeroflot B

  2. peter on 15 April 2008 18:37 PM

    OK thx.

  3. arne on 15 April 2008 23:28 PM

    Hmm… “Games Nabokov in PGN” … for one moment I thought Chessvibes had actually succeeded in tracking down some real games of the great Russian writer! But alas, after I eagerly downloaded the file, it turned out to be ‘only’ games from the tournament, which, by the way, are no doubt of a much higher level ;-)


Got something to say?





Latest 30 posts:


Anand & Kramnik are looking forward to it, and so are we 12/10, 16:41
Hans-Walter, please invite Mr Larsen next year! 11/10, 18:21
Big surprises in Beijing 11/10, 11:29
Weekly Endgame Study (92) 11/10, 10:00
Svidler retains slim lead 10/10, 10:18
Anand-Kramnik: preview by Artur Jussupow 9/10, 15:47
A 0-0 result in the Bulgarian League 8/10, 18:32
New video interviews from the Bundesliga 8/10, 13:50
ECF Book of the Year: From London to Elista 7/10, 21:28
One week to go 7/10, 15:00
Svidler in sole lead in Moscow 6/10, 20:39
Rybka clinches 2nd Computer World Championship title 6/10, 11:08
A scientific standard for chess writing? 5/10, 19:08
Russian Superfinal: Svidler beats Morozevich, leads with Lastin 5/10, 11:34
Anand interview in Der Spiegel 4/10, 13:30
Weekly Endgame Study (91) 4/10, 10:00
Super start Superfinal 3/10, 22:21
World Mind Sports Games kick off today 3/10, 13:30
Schachbundesliga starts, all games live 2/10, 12:50
“The United States needed a high level chess league” 1/10, 18:00
Austronaut vs school children: 1.d4 Nf6 1/10, 10:00
Topalov tops new FIDE ratings, now officially 30/9, 10:38
Russia takes revenge with rapid and… football 29/9, 12:22
Four-way tie for first at SPICE Cup 29/9, 10:36
Chess is art is chess 28/9, 10:39
Weekly Endgame Study (90) 27/9, 10:00
Bulgarian Chess Federation: “Mr Ilymzhinov, please inform us” (UPDATE) 26/9, 22:27
Attacking à la Tarrasch 26/9, 14:17
Torre’s comeback? 25/9, 14:34
Almasi wins Hungarian Championship 25/9, 9:35

» check the latest coverstories

Bottom