Chennai: On Thursday, LR Srihari became India’s 86th Grandmaster after sealing his final norm at the ongoing Asian Individual Championship in Al-Ain, with a round to spare. But ask him about his most memorable moment on the road to the GM title , and he’ll point to a game that he lost.
In the first round of the 2023 Qatar Masters , where he bagged his second GM norm, Srihari, currently a second-year B Com student, was paired with Magnus Carlsen . The Chennai boy was completely outplayed, but that experience left a mark — so much so, it’s still his WhatsApp display picture.
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“The pairings came out at 12:55 pm and we were leaving the hotel at 1:30 pm. I saw I was playing Carlsen, and it was completely out of the blue. Some other player’s flight got delayed, so I got the pairing. I was a bit nervous but not scared. I just wanted to play a good game but ended up playing a really bad one. Still, that loss motivated me for the rest of the tournament and helped me achieve my second norm,” Srihari, who also became the 31st GM from Tamil Nadu, told TOI.
“We didn’t converse much. But that would be one of my favourite moments in my chess career so far — to get a chance to play classical chess over the board with him. I could have played better, but I will cherish this the most.”
And it’s been a long road for the 19-year-old since then. The final norm had eluded him for months, sometimes by the thinnest of margins.
One such heartbreak at the 2024 Dubai Open really stung.
“I personally feel I should have completed this norm last year itself. It was just a lot of unfortunate things and, at some point, it gets frustrating. I came extremely close in the Dubai Open; I had to win the final round. Iwas completely winning, but I made a one-move blunder and lost. I was literally one move away from becoming a GM,” Srihari said.
In the first round of the 2023 Qatar Masters , where he bagged his second GM norm, Srihari, currently a second-year B Com student, was paired with Magnus Carlsen . The Chennai boy was completely outplayed, but that experience left a mark — so much so, it’s still his WhatsApp display picture.
Go Beyond The Boundary with our YouTube channel.
“The pairings came out at 12:55 pm and we were leaving the hotel at 1:30 pm. I saw I was playing Carlsen, and it was completely out of the blue. Some other player’s flight got delayed, so I got the pairing. I was a bit nervous but not scared. I just wanted to play a good game but ended up playing a really bad one. Still, that loss motivated me for the rest of the tournament and helped me achieve my second norm,” Srihari, who also became the 31st GM from Tamil Nadu, told TOI.
“We didn’t converse much. But that would be one of my favourite moments in my chess career so far — to get a chance to play classical chess over the board with him. I could have played better, but I will cherish this the most.”
And it’s been a long road for the 19-year-old since then. The final norm had eluded him for months, sometimes by the thinnest of margins.
One such heartbreak at the 2024 Dubai Open really stung.
“I personally feel I should have completed this norm last year itself. It was just a lot of unfortunate things and, at some point, it gets frustrating. I came extremely close in the Dubai Open; I had to win the final round. Iwas completely winning, but I made a one-move blunder and lost. I was literally one move away from becoming a GM,” Srihari said.
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