Volokitin: remove the defender
30.bxc4 removes Black's active rook and ends the tactical sequence.
Nodirbek Abdusattorov is an Uzbek grandmaster, former World Rapid Champion and board-one leader for Uzbekistan. Follow his rise from prodigy records to elite tournament victories, then replay model wins against Caruana, Nakamura, Vachier-Lagrave and Olympiad opponents.
Updated: June 2026. Review rating, ranking and title details after major FIDE lists and elite-event updates.
Preview six positions from the embedded games, identify the critical idea, then open the matching replay to test your calculation.
Volokitin: remove the defender
30.bxc4 removes Black's active rook and ends the tactical sequence.
Vachier-Lagrave: the king hunt lands
28...Bc8+ completes a forcing attack after Black drives the king into the open.
Nakamura: Black breaks through
51...Qxc3+ converts Black's active queen and passed h-pawn into a decisive finish.
Caruana: rook activity decides
97.Rc7+ shows the checking distance and coordination behind a long technical conversion.
Brkic: the rook invades
60.Rc8 demonstrates active-rook technique in an exposed-king ending.
Schitco: king and knight convert
58.Kc7 illustrates how an active king supports the final conversion after promotion.
The replay lab combines elite rapid playoff wins with board-one Olympiad games. Use the selector as a study path: short attacks first, then technical conversions, then Black-piece counterplay.
Choose the kind of lesson you want from Abdusattorov's games.
Early prodigy record
Abdusattorov won the Under 8 World Youth Championship and later qualified for the grandmaster title at 13 years, 1 month and 11 days.
Grandmaster title
FIDE awarded him the grandmaster title in April 2018, confirming one of the fastest junior rises of his generation.
World Rapid Champion
In 2021 he won the World Rapid Championship, defeating Ian Nepomniachtchi in the tiebreak match after a shared first-place score.
Olympiad gold
He played board one for Uzbekistan at the 2022 Chess Olympiad, where the team won gold and he earned individual silver.
Elite top-five strength
By June 2026 he was listed with a 2777 rating, world No. 5 ranking, 2783 peak rating and No. 4 peak ranking.
Major 2025-2026 wins
Recent highlights include London Chess Classic 2025, Tata Steel Masters 2026 and Prague Masters 2026.
Attack
Study Volokitin, Fawzy and Vachier-Lagrave for direct pressure against the king.
Technique
Replay the Caruana, Nakamura and Lazavik games for long practical conversion.
Black counterplay
Use Nakamura, Caruana, Predke and Rodshtein to study Black-piece energy.
Use these answers to connect his record, openings and playing style with the diagrams and replay lab.
Nodirbek Abdusattorov is an Uzbek grandmaster, former World Rapid Champion and one of the leading chess players of his generation. His record combines early prodigy milestones, elite rapid success, Uzbekistan Olympiad leadership and major classical tournament wins. Open the Key milestones cards to compare his title, rating and event breakthroughs in one place.
Abdusattorov is called a chess prodigy because he qualified for the grandmaster title at 13 years, 1 month and 11 days. That early GM pace was followed by a World Rapid title at 17 and a rise into the world top five. Use the Achievement timeline to trace how the prodigy record became elite senior strength.
Nodirbek Abdusattorov was awarded the grandmaster title by FIDE in April 2018. The title came after he had already become one of the youngest players to cross 2400 and one of the youngest names in the top junior lists. Compare the Grandmaster title card with the later World Rapid and Olympiad cards to see the speed of the rise.
Abdusattorov's biggest single achievement is winning the 2021 World Rapid Chess Championship. He became the youngest ever World Rapid Champion and beat Ian Nepomniachtchi in the tiebreak match after a four-way first-place finish. Use the Major trophies section to place that world title beside his Olympiad gold and Tata Steel Masters 2026 win.
Nodirbek Abdusattorov is an elite top-five level grandmaster in 2026, with a June 2026 FIDE rating of 2777 and world ranking No. 5. His peak rating is listed as 2783 and his peak ranking as world No. 4. Use the Key facts panel to review the rating, ranking and peak details together.
Abdusattorov played board one for Uzbekistan when the team won gold at the 44th Chess Olympiad in 2022. His board-one performance brought an individual silver medal and helped turn Uzbekistan into a major team-chess force. Replay the Budapest Olympiad group to study how his later board-one model games convert pressure.
Abdusattorov's style is practical, resilient and tactically sharp, with strong endgame technique and excellent rapid-play nerves. His games often show calm defence followed by sudden counterplay, especially when opponents overextend around his king. Use the Training fit adviser to choose attack, technique, Black counterplay or Olympiad model games.
Start with Maxime Vachier-Lagrave vs Abdusattorov from the CCT Final Playoff 2023 if you want the most spectacular short win. The game ends with a direct king hunt after Black's pieces flood into the attack. Load the CCT Final Playoff replay group and choose the Vachier-Lagrave game to watch the attack unfold.
Abdusattorov vs Fabiano Caruana and Abdusattorov vs Hikaru Nakamura are the best endgame-technique replays in this collection. Both games show elite resistance, king activity and patient conversion rather than a quick tactical finish. Use the Elite endgame technique adviser route to load the correct replay immediately.
Abdusattorov vs Andrei Volokitin best shows his attacking energy from the White side in this collection. The Sicilian structure becomes tactical very quickly, and White's pieces coordinate before Black can stabilise. Choose the Budapest Olympiad replay group and load the Volokitin game to follow the attacking pattern.
Hikaru Nakamura vs Abdusattorov is the clearest Black-piece counterplay model in this replay set. Black uses the London System structure to create kingside pressure, win material and force a decisive finish. Use the Black-piece counterplay adviser route to load the Nakamura game.
Yes, Abdusattorov has beaten Magnus Carlsen, most famously during the 2021 World Rapid Championship. That victory was part of the tournament run that made him the youngest World Rapid Champion. Use the Major trophies section to connect the Carlsen rapid win with the World Rapid title story.
Yes, Abdusattorov beat Fabiano Caruana and Hikaru Nakamura in the supplied CCT Final Playoff 2023 replay set. He defeated Caruana with White, Caruana with Black, Nakamura with Black and Nakamura with White across the playoff games included here. Open the CCT Final Playoff replay group to compare all four elite-player wins.
The replay lab includes Ruy Lopez, Italian Game, London System, Caro-Kann, Queen's Gambit and Sicilian-style structures. That mix makes the collection useful for studying both 1.e4 and 1.d4 plans without turning the page into pure opening theory. Use the Opening routes cards to jump from the games into the matching ChessWorld opening guides.
Club players can learn initiative, practical defence, king activity and the importance of converting small advantages from Abdusattorov's games. His wins often avoid flashy overreach and instead build pressure until the opponent's position cracks. Start with the Training fit adviser, then replay one attacking win and one technical win.
No, Abdusattorov is not only strong in rapid chess. His World Rapid title is famous, but his classical record includes Tata Steel Masters 2026, Prague Masters 2026, Olympiad leadership and elite top-five rating strength. Use the Achievement timeline to separate the rapid breakthrough from the later classical results.
Study the Abdusattorov games by choosing one theme first: attack, endgame technique, Black counterplay or Olympiad board-one play. Pausing before checks, captures and pawn breaks turns the replay lab into a practical calculation exercise. Use the Training fit adviser to pick a focused route before opening the replay selector.
This Abdusattorov profile should be reviewed after major FIDE rating lists, elite tournament wins and world championship cycle results. His ranking, peak rating and trophy list can change quickly because he is still an active elite player. Use the Key facts panel as the quick checklist for future updates.
Nodirbek Abdusattorov was born on 18 September 2004 in Tashkent, Uzbekistan. His rise from a young Uzbek talent to world champion and elite grandmaster is central to his player story. Use the Achievement timeline to follow that progression.
Abdusattorov represents Uzbekistan in individual and team competition. He became the country’s board-one leader during its emergence as an international chess power. Use the Olympiad replay group to study his national-team games.
Abdusattorov was 17 when he won the 2021 World Rapid Championship. The result made him the youngest World Rapid Champion at the time and confirmed his strength against established elite players. Use the Major trophies panel for the event context.
Abdusattorov beat Ian Nepomniachtchi in the tiebreak match for the 2021 World Rapid title. The playoff followed a four-way tie on points and rewarded his speed, calculation and composure. Use the Training adviser’s attack route to practise the same forcing-move discipline.
The embedded 2024 Olympiad games show Abdusattorov continuing as Uzbekistan’s board-one anchor in Budapest. His wins demonstrate both direct attack and technical conversion against varied opposition. Open the Budapest Olympiad replay group to compare those models.
Vachier-Lagrave vs Abdusattorov is the shortest forcing attacking model in this collection. Black’s sequence of checks drives the white king forward before 28...Bc8+ ends the game. Start with the Vachier-Lagrave diagram and then open its replay.
Abdusattorov vs Caruana is the clearest long rook-ending test in the replay lab. The game lasts 97 moves and rewards active rooks, checking distance and patient king movement. Use the Caruana turning-point diagram before replaying the full conversion.
Abdusattorov vs Ivan Schitco is the strongest promotion-race example in the Olympiad group. White advances the a-pawn, promotes with check and then activates the king to finish the conversion. Use the Schitco diagram to inspect the resulting ending.
The Volokitin game teaches how rapid development and central pressure can make an exchange sacrifice concrete. Abdusattorov coordinates both rooks and the queen before 30.bxc4 removes Black’s last active rook. Open the Volokitin diagram and calculate the final sequence first.
Against Nakamura’s London System, Abdusattorov creates kingside activity instead of accepting a passive structure. The queen, knight and h-pawn combine until 51...Qxc3+ forces the decisive finish. Use the Nakamura diagram and Black-counterplay adviser route together.
The collection includes Ruy Lopez, Italian, Sicilian, London and Queen’s Pawn structures. Abdusattorov adapts his plans to both open tactical positions and slower strategic centres. Use the Opening routes cards after identifying the structure in a replay.
The supplied games show Abdusattorov meeting 1.e4 with 1...e5 and the Caro-Kann, while also handling London and other Queen’s Pawn structures. His choices prioritise sound development with room for active counterplay. Compare the Nakamura and Predke replays for two different Black systems.
The six diagrams turn long PGNs into specific calculation checkpoints. Each board is generated from the exact embedded game position and links directly to its replay. Use one diagram as a prediction exercise before revealing the next moves.
A beginner should name every check, capture and threat in the diagram before opening the replay. This keeps the exercise concrete without requiring deep opening knowledge. Start with the short Vachier-Lagrave king hunt or Volokitin finish.
An advanced player should stop before every critical pawn break and calculate two candidate continuations. The Caruana, Brkic and Predke games provide the deepest strategic and endgame tests. Select Advanced in the adviser for the appropriate study instruction.
Abdusattorov combines fast calculation with practical risk control and resilient defence. He creates difficult decisions for opponents without depending on unsound attacks. Compare the CCT playoff games with the adviser’s counterplay and technique routes.
Study Vachier-Lagrave vs Abdusattorov for forcing attack, then Abdusattorov vs Caruana for patient conversion. The contrast covers tactical urgency and long-term technique in one session. Use the two matching diagram buttons to load both games.
Use the course route to practise candidate moves, pawn breaks and conversion plans, then test the same decisions in your own ChessWorld games.
or create a ChessWorld username
Already have an account? Log in