Ding Liren

Biography (1992)

Ding Liren, the strongest Chinese player in history, was born in 1992 in Wenzhou, the hometown of China’s first Grandmaster, Ye Rongguang, and former Women’s World Chess Champion, Zhu Chen. His talent became evident at an early age. Guided by experienced coaches from his native "chess city," he became the youngest-ever Chinese champion at 16 and a Grandmaster in the same year, 2009.He also won two back-to-back national titles in 2011 and 2012. At the same time, Ding Liren broke into the top-100 rating list in 78th place with a rating of 2664. Only four years later, in August 2015, he stormed into the top-10 with a rating of 2770. In September 2017, Ding became the first Chinese player to qualify for a Candidates Tournament by reaching the World Cup final. A year later, he broke the 2800 barrier, the first Chinese and the 14th player ever to do so.Ding’s resilience is proven by an unprecedented 100-game unbeaten streak he held in 2017-2018, broken only by Carlsen in 2019. Tough at the board, he is modest and soft-spoken in real life, a trait that has won fans' hearts.Ding came second in the Candidates Tournament 2022, qualifying him for the World Chess Championship 2023 against Ian Nepomniachtchi, as Carlsen declined to defend his title. Ding won the 2023 World Championship match to become the first Chinese player to ever hold the title of (non-Women's) World Chess Champion. After a back-and-forth classical portion that ended tied 7-7, he defeated Ian Nepomniachtchi in rapid tiebreaks, winning in the 4th game as black. Ding's reign was short, as he lost his title to Gukesh Dommaraju a year and a half later.

Notable game

This game was played at the 2015 FIDE World Cup in Baku

Play like a champion!

Black to move.

Examine this position and decide on your next move. To see the correct answer, click the button below.

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# 1 / 3

I thought that some players play too much bullet and blitz, which may influence their play in classical games. They cannot stop playing quickly and sometimes make blunders.

Some of my readings have made me a better player. I remembered how Albert Camus talks about the concept of resistance. The idea is that if you see that you cannot win, do everything in your power to resist. And that memory gave me the determination I needed.

It seems that there is no longer a need for on-the-board chess. There isn’t much of a difference between online chess and on-the-board chess; both are chess.

On Liren

The Guardian

It turns out Ding has a nickname, Silent Storm, and it is as well judged as his final moves in the match. 'Well, I am quiet,' he says, his voice rising barely above a whisper. 'But then over the board...'

EL PAÍS

Ding sees a great connection between philosophy and chess, since both are abstract. “I am both very emotional and rational. And I’m also an art enthusiast. I consider myself an academic, a scholar who really likes to study, and I think I have found new ways to approach chess."

Ian Nepomniachtchi

It's not enough to be a good player and get good positions. You also have to strike and to deliver. He managed to put up a fight, and I should give him very huge credit for that. In some games, he was nearly on the ropes but managed to play very precisely, which saved him many points.

Ding Liren

Maybe people don’t know me so well. Even I don’t know me.

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Read

Kuljasevic Davorin. Ding Liren's Best Games: A Chess Biography of the World Champion

2023

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