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Updated Jun 6, 2026 · 01:56
Sports India News Updated Jun 6, 2026

Praggnanandhaa Makes History with Stunning Norway Chess Victory

Grandmaster Praggnanandhaa Rameshbabu made history by becoming the first Indian to win the Norway Chess championship. The 20-year-old from Chennai defeated Germany's Vincent Keymer in the 10th and final round to claim the title and $100,000 prize. Praggnanandhaa staged a remarkable comeback from last place after the sixth round, winning four consecutive games. He finished with 18 points, one ahead of overnight leader Wesley So.

Grand comeback: Praggnanandhaa beats Keymar to win Norway Chess, first Indian to do so

Stavanger, June 6

Grandmaster Praggnanandhaa Rameshbabu on Friday night, scripting the greatest ever comeback in a Super Tournament to become the first Indian to win the title in the Norway Chess championship, beating Germany's Vincent Keymer in the 10th and final round of the classical chess event.

With this win, the 20-year-old from Chennai made history, not only claiming the prestigious title but also the top prize of $100,000. In the third game in this round. In the 10th and final round of the event played on Friday, Pragg beat Keymar, Wesley So drew with Alireza Firouzja, and World No.1 Magnus Carlsen defeated reigning World Champion Gukesh Dommaraju to end his home tournament with a win.

Playing with white pieces, Pragg capitalised on some mistakes by Keymar in the middle-game to win on the 45th move and finished the tournament with 18 points from five wins, two losses, and two draws, both of which he won in the Armageddon game.

The former World No.4 finished a point ahead of overnight leader Wesley So of the United States, who, after his final round draw with Firouzja, ended with 17 points from two wins and eight draws, winning six of them in Armageddon. Wesley So bagged 1.5 points to one by Firouzja in the 10th round.

Firouzja, the French player of Iranian origin, ended third with 15.5 points in this event with a special scoring format in which a win fetches a player three points. At the same time, a draw gets each player one point, with an option of bagging a bonus point by winning the Armageddon game. World No. 1 Magnus Carlsen, who lost twice to Praggnanandhaa in this event, ended with 13 points from three wins, four losses, and three draws -- two Armageddon wins.

Keymar ended fifth with 11 points while reigning Classical World Champion Gukesh Dommaraju of India came sixth and last with eight points from one win, five defeats, and four draws -- with two Armageddon wins.

The focus on the final was on Pragg as he was trailing half a point behind overnight leader Wesley So. He jumped into the lead once Welsely So agreed to an early draw with Firouzja. He went on to convert the advantage he gained in the middle game into a clinical win over Keymar, who played some questionable moves, and won the title outright.

Pragg, who had slipped to No. 16 in the World Rankings in the last list released on June 1, came up with a brilliant performance in Norway Chess as he stormed back from the brink to win the prestigious title.

He was sixth and last in the standings after the sixth round but won four games in a row, including his second win over Carlsen and a penultimate round victory, and compatriot Gukesh, which propelled him into contention for the title. This was the first such winning streak in the event since Carlsen's in 2021.

— IANS

Reader Comments

Michael C

Incredible achievement from a 20-year-old. Beating Magnus twice and then clinching the title against Keymer shows how deep the talent pool is in Indian chess right now. The future is bright! 🌟

Aditya G

Honestly, I was worried after Gukesh struggled in this tournament, but Pragg has really stepped up. This win shows that Indian chess is not just about one or two players—we have a whole generation of champions. Proud moment! 🙌

Riya H

The Armageddon wins were the real game-changers. Pragg converted every tiebreak into a win—that's where he truly showed his class. Meanwhile, Gukesh needs to work on his form; last place is not what we expect from a world champion. Just my two paise.

Karthik V

Can we just appreciate the fact that an Indian won Norway Chess? This is not a small tournament—this is where the world's elite play. And Pragg did it with style: beating Carlsen twice, coming from behind, and staying cool under pressure. Massive respect. 🤯♟️

Tiffany B

This is history in the making. First Indian to win Norway Chess, and at just 20 years old! I'm so excited to see what Pragg does next. The Chennai school of chess is on fire right now. 🔥

V We welcome thoughtful discussions from our readers. Please keep comments respectful and on-topic.

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