<p>Bhubaneswar: Nine-year-old Delhi boy Aarit Kapil has become the youngest Indian to beat a chess <a href="https://www.deccanherald.com/tags/grandmaster">Grandmaster</a> as he emerged victorious against Raset Ziatdinov of United States in the ninth and penultimate round of the KIIT International open tournament here.</p>.<p>At 9 years, 2 months and 18 days, Aarit is the youngest Indian and third in the world to beat a GM under the classical time control.</p>.<p>The youngest player in the world to beat a GM is Indian-origin Singapore boy Ashwath Kaushik who won against Jacek Stupa of Poland when he was just 8 years and six months old earlier this year.</p>.World Chess Championship: Gukesh takes lead in 11th game as Ding Liren blunders.<p>Ziatdinov, 66, is certainly past his prime if the game was any indication. As is usually the case when an experienced GM plays against a youngster, Ziatdinov did many things right positionally to get the upper hand thanks to his better pawn structure.</p>.<p>To Aarit’s credit, he fought on after standing slightly worse with his white pieces. It was a long-drawn endgame wherein Ziatdinov made the final mistake and lost a knight on Sunday.</p>.<p>The resulting position just needed decent calculation and the young lad from Delhi had no troubles whatsoever in converting his advantage in to a well-deserved win. The game lasted 63 moves.</p>.<p>While the victory places Aarit among the elite young talents, it remains to be seen how he performs in upcoming tournaments. The next challenge awaits him in form of under-13 national championship to be held at Durgapur later this month, followed by his own age group event, the under-9 nationals in Pune.</p>.<p>Meanwhile, Grandmaster Boris Savchenko of Russia won the KIIT tournament, settling for a draw with India’s Sayantan Das in the final round. Savchenko scored 8.5 points out of a possible 10.</p>.<p>The top three youngest players to beat a Grandmaster: </p><p>1. <strong>Ashwath Kaushik (Singapore)</strong> – 8 years 2 months </p><p>2. <strong>Leonid Ivanovic (Serbia)</strong> - 8 years 11 months </p><p>3. <strong>Aarit Kapil</strong> – 9 years 2 months. </p>
<p>Bhubaneswar: Nine-year-old Delhi boy Aarit Kapil has become the youngest Indian to beat a chess <a href="https://www.deccanherald.com/tags/grandmaster">Grandmaster</a> as he emerged victorious against Raset Ziatdinov of United States in the ninth and penultimate round of the KIIT International open tournament here.</p>.<p>At 9 years, 2 months and 18 days, Aarit is the youngest Indian and third in the world to beat a GM under the classical time control.</p>.<p>The youngest player in the world to beat a GM is Indian-origin Singapore boy Ashwath Kaushik who won against Jacek Stupa of Poland when he was just 8 years and six months old earlier this year.</p>.World Chess Championship: Gukesh takes lead in 11th game as Ding Liren blunders.<p>Ziatdinov, 66, is certainly past his prime if the game was any indication. As is usually the case when an experienced GM plays against a youngster, Ziatdinov did many things right positionally to get the upper hand thanks to his better pawn structure.</p>.<p>To Aarit’s credit, he fought on after standing slightly worse with his white pieces. It was a long-drawn endgame wherein Ziatdinov made the final mistake and lost a knight on Sunday.</p>.<p>The resulting position just needed decent calculation and the young lad from Delhi had no troubles whatsoever in converting his advantage in to a well-deserved win. The game lasted 63 moves.</p>.<p>While the victory places Aarit among the elite young talents, it remains to be seen how he performs in upcoming tournaments. The next challenge awaits him in form of under-13 national championship to be held at Durgapur later this month, followed by his own age group event, the under-9 nationals in Pune.</p>.<p>Meanwhile, Grandmaster Boris Savchenko of Russia won the KIIT tournament, settling for a draw with India’s Sayantan Das in the final round. Savchenko scored 8.5 points out of a possible 10.</p>.<p>The top three youngest players to beat a Grandmaster: </p><p>1. <strong>Ashwath Kaushik (Singapore)</strong> – 8 years 2 months </p><p>2. <strong>Leonid Ivanovic (Serbia)</strong> - 8 years 11 months </p><p>3. <strong>Aarit Kapil</strong> – 9 years 2 months. </p>