Javokhir Sindarov | ||||||||||||||||||
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Country | Uzbekistan | |||||||||||||||||
Born | Tashkent, Uzbekistan [1] | 8 December 2005|||||||||||||||||
Title | Grandmaster (2019) | |||||||||||||||||
FIDE rating | 2684 (April 2024) | |||||||||||||||||
Peak rating | 2701 (December 2023) | |||||||||||||||||
Ranking | No. 50 (April 2024) | |||||||||||||||||
Peak ranking | No. 35 (December 2023) | |||||||||||||||||
Medal record
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Javokhir Sindarov ( Uzbek: Жавоҳир Синдаров/Javohir Sindarov; born 8 December 2005) [2] [3] is an Uzbek chess prodigy. [4] He earned the title of grandmaster in October 2018, at the age of 12 years, 10 months and 5 days.
Sindarov was awarded the title of International Master in October 2017. [5] He achieved his first grandmaster (GM) norm at the Alekhine Memorial in June 2018. [2] He achieved the second at the World Junior Chess Championship in September, improving his rating to 2500 in the process. In October 2018, he scored his third GM norm at the First Saturday tournament, becoming the second-youngest grandmaster in history at the time. [2] [3] The title was awarded by FIDE in March 2019.
He qualified for the Chess World Cup 2021. Ranked 121st, he caused a major upset by defeating 8th-ranked Alireza Firouzja in tiebreaks in the second round, and made it to the final 32 before being knocked out in the fourth round by Kacper Piorun. [6] [7]
In the Chess World Cup 2023, Sindarov again caused a major upset, defeating the tournament's 10th seed Maxime Vachier-Lagrave in the third round. [8]