Chess: Wei Yi wins at Wijk aan Zee as former prodigy emerges from shadows

The 24-year-old was a grandmaster at 13 and the youngest ever 2700-rated player at 15, now he has jumped into the world top 10 with a chance to aim for the ultimate peak

China’s Wei Yi, 24, captured first prize last weekend in a competitive field at Tata Steel Wijk aan Zee, the annual Netherlands tournament known as the “chess Wimbledon” due to its ­consistent strength over many decades. Wijk, formerly ­Beverwijk, began in a small way in 1938 and still serves pea soup at its closing ­dinner in memory of its early hungry ­wartime years.

At age 13, Wei was already a grandmaster. At 15, he was, and still is, the youngest in chess history to achieve an elite GM 2700 rating. Then he ­plateaued around 2725, and stayed at that level for the best part of a decade. One reason was a five-year economics and management course at a leading Chinese university, from which he will graduate in July 2024. Another was Covid: he has competed outside China only twice since the pandemic.

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