GRANDMASTER R Praggnanandhaa came back from behind to beat world champion D. Gukesh 2-1 in the tiebreaker to win the Tata Steel Masters chess tournament at Wijk Aan Zee in Netherlands on Sunday (2).
There was huge drama typical of two young players looking to win each and every game they played in the tournament as they played the tiebreak.
Praggnanandhaa faced the Benoni with reversed colours in the first game of the tiebreak and it seemed like he had equalized easily in the middle game.
However, Gukesh had other thoughts as he kept trying and won, thanks to a blunder by Praggnanandhaa that cost him a full rook.
In a must-win second game of the tiebreaker, Praggnanandhaa employed the Trompowsky opening, and this time Gukesh could claim a slight advantage with his black pieces.
However, by just keeping his position together, Praggnanandhaa patiently waited and capitalized on an unforced error from his opponent to first knock down a pawn and then his technical abilities were enough to see the normal blitz games through with a 1-1 score.
This took the match into sudden-death, where Praggnanandhaa drew white and once again Gukesh was better with some imaginative play on the queen side that netted him a pawn.
The sudden-death had a time control of two minutes and thirty seconds for white against three for black but that did not deter Praggnanandhaa from trying to defend an inferior endgame.
Just while the position looked completely drawn and another game was on the cards, Gukesh lost complete control in the battle of nerves and first lost a pawn then his last remaining knight.
Praggnanandhaa showed perfect technique to take the full point and his maiden victory at the Masters.
For Gukesh, this was the second year running when he tied for first position and lost the tiebreaker. In the previous edition last year, Gukesh had lost to Chinese Wei Yi. (PTI)






Nishan Velupillay #23 of Australia controls the ball during a training session ahead of FIFA World Cup 2026 at Oakland Roots and Soul Sports Club on June 03, 2026 in Alameda, California.Getty Images
Sarpreet Singh #10 of Team New Zealand shoots against Bradley Locko #15 of Team France during the Men's group A match between New Zealand and France during the Olympic Games Paris 2024 at Stade de Marseille on July 30, 2024 in Marseille, France. Getty Images
Samuel Moutoussamy #8 of DR Congo during a training session ahead of the FIFA World Cup 2026 on June 12, 2026 in Houston, Texas. Getty Images
Tahsin Jamshid #24 of Qatar plays the ball during the second half of the international friendly match between Qatar and El Salvador at BMO Stadium on June 06, 2026 in Los Angeles, California.Getty Images
Niall Mason of Doncaster Rovers during the Sky Bet League Two match between Doncaster Rovers and Exeter City at Keepmoat Stadium on April 29, 2017 in Doncaster, England.Getty Images
Zidane Iqbal of FC Utrecht goes forward during the UEFA Europa League 2025/26 League Phase MD3 match between SC Freiburg and FC Utrecht at Stadion am Wolfswinkel on October 23, 2025 in Freiburg im Breisgau, Germany.Getty Images








