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Is chess India’s new cricket? Game’s popularity sees rise of young prodigies who could ‘go all the way’

  • Srihari Lakshminarasimhan is among a young crop of aspirants in India dominating the thriving chess landscape in recent years
  • Chess players and coaches stress the need for increased efforts from schools and parents to support enthusiasts, to boost the game’s ecosystem in India

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Indian chess prodigy Srihari Lakshminarasimhan at the National Senior Chess Championship in New Delhi, India, in 2022. Photo: Handout
Srihari Lakshminarasimhan was grappling with a raging fever of more than 38.9 degrees Celsius (102 degrees Fahrenheit) and a dangerously low platelet count during a crucial chess tournament in the hilly town of Kodaikanal in southern India, when the 19-year-old received a phone call from his father, urging him to withdraw from the competition.

“I will never withdraw … Withdrawing is not the mark of sportsmanship and dampens my fighting spirit,” the teenager had adamantly responded that night.

Powering through intermittent hospital stays and a liquid diet for most of the 10-day tournament in November last year, Lakshminarasimhan’s perseverance proved to be a life-altering experience. The shy and frail-looking teenager came inches away from clinching the title of International Master (IM), and finally entered this elite circle in February.

Indian chess prodigy Srihari Lakshminarasimhan (right) at the Bengaluru International GM tournament on January 18-26, 2024. Photo: Handout
Indian chess prodigy Srihari Lakshminarasimhan (right) at the Bengaluru International GM tournament on January 18-26, 2024. Photo: Handout

In the world of chess, IM is just one step away from the highest status of Grandmaster (GM), and India, home to about 125 IMs and 84 GMs, has witnessed a remarkable surge in such titles. Back in 2007, there were only about 20 GMs in the country.

Lakshminarasimhan represents the young crop of aspirants in India dominating the chess arena in recent years. Chess, a two-player board game created in India about 1,500 years ago, has seen a rapid surge in popularity over the past two decades.

The number of tournaments has increased, the chess ecosystem is strengthening each year, and the country is attracting international events and talent. Players like Lakshminarasimhan are emerging as promising talent in this thriving chess landscape.

Notably, chess is now included in the school syllabus in states such as Gujarat and Tamil Nadu, marking a trajectory similar to India’s sporting landscape in the late ’80s and early ’90s when cricket was gaining popularity. Today, cricket enjoys unparalleled cult status in a country of 1.4 billion people.
Vasudevan Sridharan is an experienced journalist based in South India who writes on current affairs, geopolitical equations, environment, start-ups, and economy. His works have appeared in several Indian and global publications.
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