Chess prodigies are children who play so good chess, that they are able to beat Masters and Grandmasters, often at a very young age. Some of them have become World Champions, others failed to make progress.

The chess world always looks with big expectations to these prodigies. Chess is one of the few sports where children can compete with adults.

The has been a tendency for chess players to gain the Grandmaster title earlier and earlier in their lives. One possible reason for this is that the number of grandmasters on the whole has increased.

List of chess prodigies

  • Michael Adams became an International Master at 15 and a grandmaster at 17
  • Etienne Bacrot
  • José Raúl Capablanca, later World Champion, learned the rules when he was 4 and was a strong player as a child
  • Bobby Fischer, the later World Champion, became US Champion at the age of 15; at 13, he won the "The Game of The Century"
  • Koneru Humpy is said to be the youngest Woman Grandmaster ever, but this is debated.
  • Gata Kamsky had an Elo rating of 2650 at the age of 16
  • Sergey Karjakin, at the age of 12 years and 7 months he became the youngest grandmaster ever. He was the official second (helper) of fellow Ukrainian Ruslan Ponomariov, during the 2002 FIDE Worldchampionship.
  • Luke McShane won the World Under-10 Championship at the age of eight
  • Joel Lautier
  • Peter Leko told he would become Worldchampion before the year 2000, unfortunately it didn't work out that way.
  • Paul Morphy, who at the age of twelve won a match 2.5 - 0.5 against Johann Löwenthal
  • Judit Polgar
  • Ruslan Ponomariov, the current FIDE World Champion
  • Teimour Radjabov, became the youngest Grandmaster at the age of 14 years, until Karjakin broke his record. In the 2003 Linares tournament, he beat Gary Kasparov with the black pieces, although due to a big blunder of Kasparov.
  • Samuel Reshevsky, a Polish boy, learned the rules at the age of 4, and gave simultaneous exhibitions at the age of six. His parents moved to the United States of America where they made a living of the talent of their child.
  • Nigel Short finished joint-first in the British Championship at the age of 14
  • Josh Waitzkin

See also: list of chess players, list of chess world championship matches.

External link

See Prodigy for alternate definitions