Abdusattorov (13) Now second Youngest GM In History

 Abdusattorov (13) Now second Youngest GM In History 


By getting his third grandmaster standard on Sunday Nodirbek Abdusattorov of Uzbekistan turned into the second most youthful grandmaster ever. Just Sergey Karjakin got the title at a more youthful age. 


Abdusattorov played in the Chigorin Memorial in St Petersburg, where he scored 6.5/9 which included successes against GMs S.P. Sethuraman and Evgeny Levin. He got done with draws against GMs Artyom Timofeev and Evgeny Alekseev. 


Abdusattorov's 6.5/9 was sufficient for his rating to cross 2500, and his third grandmaster standard. For that, he required an exhibition rating of in any event 2600, while his TPR was 2629. (Truth be told it would be 2644 for the estimation of his standard, since the 2058 rating of his first-round rival would be changed in accordance with 2200.) 


FIDE likewise requires that "[a]t least two alliances other than that of the title candidate should be incorporated" in the rundown of organizations of his members, and that "[a] limit of 3/5 of the adversaries may come from the candidate's league and a limit of 2/3 of the rivals from one league." 


That last necessity would have been an issue, since eight of Abdusattorov's rivals were from Russia, and one from India. Nonetheless, the accompanying provision in the FIDE Handbook acted the hero: 


1.43e Swiss System competitions in which members remember for each round at any rate 20 FIDE evaluated players take an interest, not from the host league, from at any rate 3 distinct organizations, in any event 10 of whom hold GM, IM, WGM or WIM titles. (...) 


Abdusattorov, conceived 18 September 2004, satisfied all necessities for the grandmaster title on 29 October 2017, at 13 years old years, multi month and 11 days. That was quicker than Parimarjan Negi, who turned into a grandmaster at 13 years, 4 months and 22 days, and Magnus Carlsen, who got the title at 13 years, 4 months and 27 days. 


The record is as yet in the possession of Sergey Karjakin, who turned into a grandmaster when he was 12 years, 7 months and 0 days. Abdusattorov is presently, clearly, the most youthful grandmaster on the planet. He assumed control over that title from Awonder Liang. 


There's one player who actually gets an opportunity to beat Karjakin's record: Praggnanandhaa R. The Indian wonder is 12 years, 2 months and 21 days old, which implies he has a touch over four months left to score three GM standards. Praggnanandhaa indeed likewise played in the Chigorin Memorial, where he scored a disillusioning 2314 execution rating 


Abdusattorov's name stood out as truly newsworthy first when he crushed two grandmasters at nine years old, in 2014 at the Tashkent Open. He scored his first GM standard in a year ago's Chigorin Memorial and afterward proceeded to accomplish his second in Abu Dhabi in August 2017. 


He is by a long shot the greatest Uzbek ability since Rustam Kasimdzhanov, who won the 2004 FIDE Knockout World Championship in Tripoli, and worked for a long time as one of Viswanathan Anand's seconds. Kasimdzhanov, who right now works with Fabiano Caruana, remarked to Chess.com: 


"I truly don't have any acquaintance with him well enough, and am unquestionably just about as dazzled as the remainder of the chess world. His play appears to be developed past his years and it's impossible to tell how far he may go. I had an instructional meeting with him and some different children in Tashkent some time prior, and while obviously he's exceptionally skilled others unquestionably kept his speed; so I'm extremely cheerful of things to come of Uzbekistan's chess.


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