Indian chess sensation Praggnanandhaa Rameshbabu has officially won the FIDE Circuit 2025 title, confirming his place in the prestigious 2026 Candidates
Tournament on Monday, Dec 8, marking yet another milestone in the meteoric rise of the 20-year-old grandmaster.
Praggnanandhaa first surged ahead in the FIDE Circuit rankings in May, overtaking reigning World Champion Ding Liren and never relinquishing control thereafter. His consistent performances throughout the year kept him ahead of an experienced and highly competitive pool of challengers.
As the season neared its conclusion, several of his closest competitors - including Anish Giri, Fabiano Caruana, Matthias Bluebaum, and Javokhir Sindarov - secured their Candidates tickets via alternative qualification paths, reducing the pressure on the leaderboard race. Vincent Keymer, meanwhile, had no classical tournaments left that could improve his tally. This set the stage for a thrilling final chase between Praggnanandhaa and Nodirbek Abdusattorov.
🇮🇳 Praggnanandhaa R has won the FIDE Circuit 2025, securing a spot in the 2026 Candidates Tournament!
— International Chess Federation (@FIDE_chess) December 8, 2025
👏 Congratulations to @rpraggnachess, who deservedly earned one of the eight slots in the 2026 Candidates. The young Indian has been the best FIDE Circuit player throughout the… pic.twitter.com/AsT52Ky4mO
Knowing the qualification scenario was still mathematically open, Praggnanandhaa made a strategic late entry into the London Chess Classic Open. His goal: lock in enough circuit points to make his position unreachable regardless of remaining rapid and blitz events. He delivered under pressure, finishing tied first with a strong 7/9 score and adding 8.17 crucial points to his total.
Even Abdusattorov's outstanding run in the London Chess Classic Elite - one of the most impressive TPR performances ever recorded, earning him 19.62 points - was not enough to close the gap. Praggnanandhaa had already built an insurmountable lead.
His qualification caps a remarkable season highlighted by victories at Tata Steel Masters, Superbet Chess Classic Romania, UzChess Cup Masters, and the London Chess Classic Open. He also recorded podium finishes in other elite events, displaying consistency and maturity far beyond his age.
Praggnanandhaa's triumph makes him one of the eight contenders set to compete in the 2026 Candidates - and possibly, the next Indian to chase the world title after Viswanathan Anand.













