The Pandemic Effect: How Young Will Grandmasters Become?
The game of chess is witnessing a fascinating trend. New research by Chess.com shows that grandmasters are now achieving their titles at an earlier age than ever. Will the chess world see 10- or 11-year-olds becoming grandmasters in the next few years?
In the past year, we've seen a surge in children scoring extraordinary results. Records that would've seemed unbreakable only five to 10 years ago aren't as shatterproof as we once thought, and it's just a matter of time until they are broken again. "Child's play" as some say.
Here are some examples:
- FM Faustino Oro (Argentina). Became the youngest ever 2300-rated player, at nine years and three months last year, and is the youngest ever to score an IM norm.
- WCM Bodhana Sivananandan (England). Won the World Youth Championship Girls under 8 in classical, blitz and rapid scoring 33/33, becoming England's first youth chess champion in 25 years. She's currently the world's highest-ranked player under 9 years.
- Ashwath Kaushik (Singapore). Broke the record for youngest player to defeat a grandmaster in classical chess, one month after Leonid Ivanovic broke the previous record from 2012.
- Roman Shogdzhiev (Russia). Beat five grandmasters in the 2023 World Rapid & Blitz Championship.
Youngest players to defeat a grandmaster:
# | Year | Player | Rating | Age | Opponent | Rating2 |
1 | 2024 | Ashwath Kaushik | 1892 | 8 years, 6 months, 11 days | Jacek Stopa | 2351 |
2 | 2024 | Leonid Ivanovic | 1865 | 8 years, 11 months, 7 days | Milko Popchev | 2193 |
3 | 2012 | Awonder Liang | 1832 | 9 years, 3 months, 20 days | Larry Kaufman | 2406 |
4 | 2011 | Hetul Shah | 1817 | 9 years, 6 months | Nurlan Ibrayev | 2407 |
5 | 2014 | Nodirbek Abdusattorov | 2057 | 9 years, 7 months, 27 days | Andrey Zhigalko | 2600 |
6 | 2022 | Aaron Mendes | 1970 | 9 years, 10 months, 0 days | Razvan Preotu | 2445 |
7 | 2019 | Abhimanyu Mishra | 2120 | 9 years, 10 months, 28 days | James Tarjan | 2402 |
8 | 2024 | Reyaansh Chakrabarty | 1925 | 9 years, 11 months, 22 days | Darryl Johansen | 2350 |
9 | 2023 | Faustino Oro | 2325 | 10 years, 0 months, 0 days | Federico Perez Ponsa | 2527 |
10 | 2017 | Marc' Andria Maurizzi | 1841 | 10 years, 1 month, 17 days | Fabien Libiszewski | 2542 |
11 | 2015 | Vincent Keymer | 2371 | 10 years, 2 months, 30 days | Alexandr Karpatchev | 2472 |
12 | 2023 | Sergey Sklokin | 1550 | 10 years, 3 months, 20 days | Vahe Baghdasaryan | 2259 |
13 | 2016 | Praggnanandhaa R | 2339 | 10 years, 5 months, 9 days | R. R Laxman | 2435 |
14 | 2018 | Bharath Subramaniyam | 2196 | 10 years, 7 months, 17 days | Deepan Chakkravarthy | 2531 |
15 | 2017 | Gukesh D | 2236 | 10 years, 7 months, 21 days | Venkatesh | 2439 |
(This list was updated March 13 to include Sergey Sklokin.)
The results appear to be a part of a new trend as shown by Chess.com research that looks at the age of players who secure the grandmaster title.
While the average age for players achieving the most prestigious title in chess was 30 between 1975-1979, it dropped to 22.8 between 2020 and 2024. The highest age for a new GM was 32.8 in 1977. More then four decades later, in 2021, the average age is down to a record low of 20.9.
10 players are currently pending approval for the GM title in 2024. The average age is down to 21.4, the second lowest to date.
The Pandemic Effect
So why are we seeing an explosion of even younger talents? Prodigies like Oro, Shogdzhiev, Sivananandan, Ashwath, and Ivanovic all share a common thread: they learned chess during the pandemic. GM Hikaru Nakamura finds this trend "very uplifting to hear" in a recent video about Shogdzhiev.
"This is something I think we are going to be seeing more of as time goes along. A lot of kids trickling towards IM, GM and maybe even the highest level as well. Players who have been starting to play during the pandemic," he said.
Former world number-four GM Peter Leko, who became the youngest ever grandmaster at 14 in 1992, tells Chess.com that this makes perfect sense.
"The technology is developing. All the online access, and during the pandemic we saw this [chess] boom that heavily contributed. The ones who started to play chess suddenly now have so much information."
The ones who started to play chess suddenly now have so much information.
—Peter Leko
The former world championship challenger says learning chess is like learning a language. The earlier you start to pick it up, the easier it is to learn and the stronger you can become. And the more natural talent you can develop in yourself.
"When you are reaching your 20s, it becomes much harder to keep on developing. You have to pick up so much more material when you become older. It's much easier to handle that when you are younger. I perfectly see the connection between the pandemic and the rising stars at the very early age."
Leko On Mishra: Developing Very Nicely
Having worked closely with German superstar GM Vincent Keymer since he was a promising youngster, Leko has followed the rise of the new generation.
He himself was dedicated to become a professional chess player at the age of nine, studying the game for up to 10 hours a day. "My life was chess," he says. While he needed to move to Kesckemet, the Hungarian city known for its great chess community with international tournaments, that factor is no longer as crucial for developing as a chess player.
In the 90s, when Leko was growing up and chasing his title, top players had to rely on the Chess Informants, a compilation of top games that came out every four to six months. "You knew already any of the days, it can come. Then the heart was already pumping, 'Oh my god, the next couple of weeks I will have tons of work to do!'"
Now these moves are available just a few mouse clicks away, seconds after they are made on the board. "Any talent who wishes to be a professional chess player and to develop his chess talent is in the best place and in the best era."
Any talent who wishes to be a professional chess player and to develop his chess talent is in the best place and in the best era.
—Peter Leko
Leko brings up Chessable, the online platform that has become an important tool for chess improvement, as a valuable resource. They now live in what he refers to as a "chess bubble" where the talent, the hard work and the interest of the player impact whether a young player makes it to the top.
Another key factor, the former prodigy says, is that they can play non-stop games online against top players."That's one of the most important things. In order to develop, you should be aiming to face as many strong players as possible. It's not about the result. The biggest mistake is to try to find opponents whom you are beating. From just winning, you are not learning. It's much better to lose a lot of games, and the get the chance of improving. The online era is wonderful for this. Sensational stuff."
Will We See Even Younger Grandmasters?
As the graph above showed, the minimum age for new grandmasters has also been dropping. The youngest grandmaster in history is GM Abhimanyu Mishra, who achieved the title at the age of 12 years, four months, and 25 days in 2021, smashing GM Sergey Karjakin's record that stood for 19 years.
Only five players achieved the GM title before their 13th birthday. IM Yagiz Kaan Erdogmus, who turns 13 in June, is well on the way to become the sixth with one norm. Earlier this year, IM Andy Woodward fulfilled the requirements for the GM title, becoming the 10th youngest in history at the age of 13 years years and 8 months.
The World's Youngest Grandmasters:
No. | Player | Country | Age | Year |
1 | Abhimanyu Mishra | United States | 12 years, 4 months, 25 days | 2021 |
2 | Sergey Karjakin | Ukraine | 12 years, 7 months, 0 days | 2002 |
3 | Gukesh Dommaraju | India | 12 years, 7 months, 17 days | 2019 |
4 | Javokhir Sindarov | Uzbekistan | 12 years, 10 months, 5 days | 2018 |
5 | Praggnanandhaa Rameshbabu | India | 12 years, 10 months, 13 days | 2018 |
6 | Nodirbek Abdusattorov | Uzbekistan | 13 years, 1 month, 11 days | 2018 |
7 | Parimarjan Negi | India | 13 years, 4 months, 22 days | 2005 |
8 | Magnus Carlsen | Norway | 13 years, 4 months, 27 days | 2004 |
9 | Wei Yi | China | 13 years, 8 months, 23 days | 2013 |
10 | Andy Woodward | United States | 13 years, 8 months, 28 days* | 2024 |
Leko doesn't rule out that with the rapid development of young kids these days, and as a result of the boom in the pandemic, the chess world will be seeing even 10- or 11-year-olds becoming grandmasters in the future.
However, he feels there is excessive attention on the title itself, rather than developing as a player. Such was the case with Mishra. "When Mishra became the youngest grandmaster, it did not touch me at all. I did not really care. Because okay, so what? Every single record will be broken. It's normal."
Every single record will be broken. It's normal.
— Peter Leko
"But the question for me and much more interesting, is how nicely he is developing afterwards. The reason why I am very impressed by Mishra is that he keeps on improving exactly how a super-talent should be. I don't care about his grandmaster title, but now he has crossed 2600 and is moving towards 2650 at such an early age. This is what impresses me."
Mishra, who turned 15 in February, is currently rated 2627 and ranked 11th among the world's top players under 20 years.
Carlsen On The Early Predictions
The fascination with chess prodigies goes all the way back to the 19th century and the emergence of Paul Morphy, who is said to have learned chess from watching others play. The 20th century saw the rise of legends such as GM Bobby Fischer and GM Garry Kasparov.
In the 21st century, GM Magnus Carlsen was dubbed a chess prodigy from an early age. However, the Norwegian grandmaster is critical to how people predicted that he would become a world champion early on. On a Norwegian podcast last year, he was asked about which players he sees as future world champions.
"I am very, very skeptical to the ones who thought at 13....first of all I think it's nonsense to see that based on that particular game against Kasparov ...."
"I am very skeptical to everyone who claims they can predict early, 'Oh, this guy is going to become world champion.' How can you actually see the difference between a player who can become world champion and just a top 10-20 player, that early?"
"Obviously you'd be an idiot to not realize that I was talented in chess. I had obviously proved that clearly at the time."
How can you actually see the difference between a player who can become world champion and just a top 10-20 player, that early?
—Magnus Carlsen
"But there's something about humans not wanting to believe what you cannot see yourself. Even I can't judge that myself, when I see children, some more years have to pass until I can see whether this person has what is needed to reach the top," Carlsen said, before adding: "Obviously not number one!"
The former world champion used GM Wei Yi, still the youngest player to ever break the 2700 barrier a few months before his 16th birthday, as an example. The Chinese 24-year-old only recently made it into the world's top-10 for the first time after he almost made it as a 17-year-old.
Leko: Important To Protect The Kids
Leko agrees with his former rival that people prematurely tends to hype young players. "It's absolutely correct what Magnus is saying. You shouldn't be expecting things."
The Hungarian highlights the importance of patience and giving time to develop. Other factors, such as luck and support from your country, also play a role in how far one can reach.
"We are trying to create very big stars, but it's also important to protect the kids," he says, before giving an advice to young players: "Just keep on doing what you love. Don't think that if you are beating grandmasters, you are becoming one. This is already sensational, it's just a part of the development. Any kind of development will have difficult moments."
We are trying to create very big stars, but it's also important to protect the kids.
—Peter Leko