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Ding Liren becomes China's first world chess champion

Ding's triumph signalled China's rise as a major player on the global chess scene

Published: Mon 1 May 2023, 12:42 AM

Updated: Mon 1 May 2023, 7:26 PM

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  • AFP

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Chinese chess grandmaster Ding Liren. — AFP

Chinese chess grandmaster Ding Liren. — AFP

Ding Liren became China's first world chess champion on Sunday after a rapid-play tie-break victory over Russia's Ian Nepomniachtchi in Kazakhstan.

Ding, 30, takes over as winner of the World Chess Championship from Norway's Magnus Carlsen, who chose not to defend his title after a 10-year reign.


He and Nepomniachtchi had finished on seven points each after the 14 first-stage games played in the Kazakh capital Astana, each having won three, the other eight ending in draws.

For the tie-break stage of the match, also in Astana, the contenders had only 25 minutes to make their moves, plus an additional 10 seconds for each move played.

Playing a first batch of four games, Ding clinched victory by winning the fourth after three draws.

Both players reacted emotionally, Nepomniachtchi getting up from the table quickly after shaking hands to concede defeat and shaking hands again before leaving the hall. Ding sat in front of the board, his face resting on one hand as he tried to compose himself.

"I'm quite relieved," said Ding, in comments posted after the match by FIDE, the International Chess Federation.

"The moment Ian resigned the game was a very emotional moment. I couldn't control my feelings. I know myself, I will cry and burst into tears. It was a tough tournament for me."

Although Ding is rated higher than Nepomniachtchi in the faster formats of the game, he had played very little such chess in official competitions since January 2020.

He had held his nerve to come back from behind three times during the 14-match classical play series: each time Nepomniachtchi won a game to take the lead, Ding eventually levelled the score with a win of his own.

Carlsen, considered one of the greatest players of all time, had held the World Chess Championship title since 2013 and will remain the world's top-rated player.

The two-million-euro ($2.2-million) prize would have been split 60-40 between the winner and the runner-up if the match had been decided in the initial 14-game series. Because it reached the tiebreak stage, the prize money will be split 55-45.

No Chinese player had ever previously won the competition, in which men and women can compete.

But China has dominated women's tournaments since the 1990s and Ding's triumph signalled the country's rise as a major player on the global chess scene.

Ju Wenjun is the reigning world champion in women's chess and will face compatriot Lei Tingjie in July to defend her title.

China also won the Chess Olympiad, the game's most important international competition, in 2014 and 2018, with Ding playing a major role in his nation's success on both occasions.

Saturday's final game in the 14-game series between Ding and Nepomniachtchi had demonstrated once again that at this level chess is as much a question of nerves as it is a battle of minds.

Both players seemed to be feeling the pressure, making uncharacteristic mistakes in their play, while failing to take full advantage of the other's errors.

Although Nepomniachtchi pushed hard to convert a slight advantage into a win, he finally had to settle for a draw in what was the longest game of the tournament: 90 moves played over more than six and a half hours.

Sunday's action followed a similar trend, with the games likely to be most remembered for their dramatic circumstances rather than the quality of play.

Nepomniachtchi appeared to acknowledge this in his comments after the match.

"I guess I had a chance and many promising positions," he said, in comments posted by FIDE. "Probably I should have tried to finish everything in the classical portion, because it was a matter of one or two precise moves."

Born in Wenzhou, which has become known as China's "chess city", Ding burst onto the scene in 2009 when he became the country's youngest chess champion at national level.

He then became the highest-ranked Chinese player in the world rankings, reaching a high of second place in 2021.

The Covid-19 pandemic held back Ding's progress and he initially failed to obtain a visa for competitions leading to qualification for the Candidates Tournament, which players must win to challenge the world champion.

The disqualification of Russia's Sergey Karjakin from all tournaments organised by the International Chess Federation, which took a pro-Ukraine position following Moscow's conflict with Ukraine, freed up a space at the 2022 Candidates Tournament which Ding took as the highest-ranked non-qualifier.

He finished second at the tournament, but Carlsen's decision to step aside from the World Chess Championship allowed him to compete against Nepomniachtchi in Astana.



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