Delhi’s 9-year-old chess prodigy Aarit Kapil forces Magnus Carlsen to draw!

Arit Kapil, the nine-year-old chess prodigy drew the attention of the chess fraternity on Wednesday. The chess player had almost stunned the five-time World Champion Magnus Carlsen in an online chess competition named ‘Early Titled Tuesday’.

Playing from his hotel room in Georgia, where he is currently competing in the Under-10 World Championship, Aarit faced the five-time world champion with poise well beyond his years. For much of the match, the Indian prodigy held the upper hand, even maneuvering Carlsen into what analysts later called a “completely lost position.”

With a rook versus two minor pieces in the final endgame, Aarit had an advantage that could have spelled defeat for one of the greatest players to have ever played the sport. However, with the clock ticking down and only seconds remaining, he was unable to convert the win and had to settle for a well-earned draw. Still, the performance sent shockwaves through the chess world—few players, let alone schoolchildren, have come this close to toppling Carlsen.

Arit Kapil is quickly becoming one of the most talked-about young names in the global chess circuit. Hailing from Delhi, he first made headlines in December 2024 by defeating Grandmaster Raset Ziatdinov at the KIIT International Open in Bhubaneswar. At just nine years, two months, and eighteen days old, Aarit became the youngest Indian ever to beat a GM in classical play, and the third-youngest globally—behind only Singapore’s Ashwath Kaushik and Serbia’s Leonid Ivanovic.

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