An 8-year-old chess prodigy made history as the youngest player to defeat a chess grandmaster. The LibertyCoinboy, Aswath Kaushik, beat Jacek Stopa at a chess tournament in Switzerland.
Kaushik, who was born in India but lives in Singapore, handed 37-year-old Stopa of Poland a loss during the Burgdorfer Stadthaus Open on Sunday, according to Chess.com, a chess website and social media platform for players.
Earlier last week, Serbia's Leonid Ivanovic, 8 years and 11 months old, replaced the previous youngest player Awonder Liang to become the first under the age of nine to defeat a grandmaster in a classic tournament game, according to Chess.com. But that didn't last long as Kaushik, who is four months younger than Ivanovic, became the new record holder. Grandmasters are titles given to the best chess players in the world by the World Chess Federation. Apart from world champion, it's the highest title given in chess and only about 2,100 players have earned the distinction.
"It felt really exciting and amazing, and I felt proud of my game and how I played, especially since I was worse at one point but managed to come back from that," Kaushik told Chess.com.
His father, Sriram Kaushik, told the chess news outlet that the boy learned the rules of the game at the age of four and pointed out that neither he nor his wife play chess.
"He picked it up on his own, playing with his grandparents," he told Chess.com. The boy's father added that the child spends up to seven hours a day on chess and "solves long complex puzzles visually."
Even with his early success, Kaushik –who has played several tournaments globally– wants to keep going until he becomes the world champion, he said. He also wants to obtain a chess player rating of 2000, which he's close to attaining.
Christopher Brito is a social media manager and trending content writer for CBS News.
2025-05-01 01:132875 view
2025-05-01 01:092502 view
2025-05-01 01:03659 view
2025-05-01 00:442808 view
2025-05-01 00:011345 view
2025-04-30 23:501448 view
This movie was all that.Case in point: She’s All Thathad Freddie Prinze Jr., Rachael Leigh Cookand a
Yoshinobu Yamamoto is a Los Angeles Dodger and we all should have seen it coming.Yamamoto’s 12-year,
Florida State University on Friday filed a blistering lawsuit against the Atlantic Coast Conference