Indian chess grandmaster R. Praggnanandhaa celebrating his Norway Chess 2026 victory with trophy after defeating Vincent Keymer.
Indian chess grandmaster R. Praggnanandhaa celebrating his Norway Chess 2026 victory with trophy after defeating Vincent Keymer.
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Praggnanandhaa wins Norway Chess 2026 title

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Indian Grandmaster R. Praggnanandhaa defeated Vincent Keymer in the final round on June 5 to claim the Norway Chess 2026 title in Oslo, finishing with 18 points and becoming the first Indian champion.

R. Praggnanandhaa secured the victory at Deichman Bjorvika after winning four classical games in a row. This included defeats of Alireza Firouzja, Magnus Carlsen and D. Gukesh. The 20-year-old had slipped to last place mid-tournament after two consecutive losses. He then climbed the standings with a strong finish. “I didn’t think about this when I lost two games in a row—I just wanted to play chess,” Praggnanandhaa said after the win. Wesley So ended second on 17 points after a draw with Firouzja. Praggnanandhaa also beat Carlsen earlier in the event for a double victory over the world number one. Magnus Carlsen defeated Gukesh in the final round to finish with 13 points.

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Initial reactions on X celebrate Praggnanandhaa's historic victory as the first Indian to win Norway Chess 2026, praising his four-game winning streak, clutch wins against Carlsen and others, and grit in turning around the tournament.

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Dramatic chess match illustration: Javokhir Sindarov defeats R Praggnanandhaa in FIDE Candidates 2026 round three, tying for lead.
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Sindarov defeats Praggnanandhaa in Candidates round three

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Uzbekistan's Javokhir Sindarov beat India's R Praggnanandhaa in round three of the FIDE Candidates 2026 in Cyprus, joining Fabiano Caruana in the lead with 2.5 points. Caruana defeated Wei Yi after the Chinese grandmaster blundered. In the women's section, Bibisara Assaubayeva and Kateryna Lagno secured wins.

Indian grandmaster Praggnanandhaa Rameshbabu claimed the open title at Norway Chess 2026 after a dramatic comeback. Kazakh player Bibisara Assaubayeva secured the women's crown with a dominant performance. The tournaments concluded in Oslo on June 5.

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Wesley So earned second place at the Norway Chess 2026 tournament in Oslo after defeating Magnus Carlsen twice. Indian player R Praggnanandhaa claimed the title with 18 points to So's 17.

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