Counterattacking study guide
Teimour Radjabov: King's Indian Fighter, Prodigy and World Cup Winner
Teimour Radjabov is the Azerbaijani grandmaster who shocked Garry Kasparov as a teenager, revived elite interest in the King's Indian Defence and later won the 2019 FIDE World Cup. Study him for practical counterattack, defensive resourcefulness and fighting chess with Black.
Born
12 March 1987, Baku
Title
Grandmaster, 2001
Peak rating
2793, November 2012
Peak ranking
World No. 4, July 2012
Major win
2019 FIDE World Cup
Study theme
King's Indian counterplay
Quick answer: why study Teimour Radjabov?
Study Radjabov if you want to defend actively, create counterplay and make opponents solve practical problems. His best-known games show that Black can survive pressure, muddy the waters and then seize the initiative.
The practical shortcut is simple: do not wait passively in a cramped position. Find the pawn break, piece sacrifice or counter-threat that forces the opponent to think again.
Explore this Radjabov guide
Teimour Radjabov career milestones
2001: Grandmaster at 14
Radjabov became one of the youngest grandmasters in chess history and quickly entered elite events.
2003: Beats three champions with Black
He defeated Kasparov, Anand and Ponomariov with the black pieces in the same year.
2012: World No. 4 level
Radjabov reached a peak rating of 2793 and a peak ranking of world number four.
2019: FIDE World Cup winner
He won the World Cup and qualified for the Candidates cycle.
Six Teimour Radjabov positions to study first
Each position shows a practical turning point. Open the matching replay to see how Radjabov created or converted the opportunity.
Kasparov 2003: practical disruption
The knight sacrifice changes the character of the game and forces new decisions.
Sequence: 19.Ng5 O-O-O 20.Nxe6 fxe6 21.Be2 Ngxe5
Shirov 2007: King's Indian fire
The kingside pawn storm becomes a forcing tactical weapon.
Sequence: 28.gxh5 Qh4 29.Rc6 g5 30.Rxd6 g4
Anand 2003: counterattack with check
Black's activity turns central tension into a direct attack.
Sequence: 20.Rd2 Be6 21.f4 Qxf4 22.Rf2 Qxf2+
Blitz attack: 16.Nf6+
White's centralised knights produce a short, memorable finish.
Sequence: 13...Qa4 14.Be2 Nc6 15.Nxe6 g5 16.Nf6+
The passed pawn promotes with check
Radjabov's advanced f-pawn survives exchanges and decides the game.
Sequence: 31.Rh5 f2+ 32.Kf1 Qxg2+ 33.Kxg2 f1=Q+
The queen lands on h7
The prodigy-era attack reaches the king with a forcing queen invasion.
Sequence: 29...Kf7 30.Qg5 gxf6 31.Qxh6 Nd7 32.Qxh7+
Teimour Radjabov Replay Lab
Choose a game and study one Radjabov habit: King's Indian counterplay, practical sacrifice, active defence or prodigy tactical confidence.
Teimour Radjabov lesson finder
Choose the skill you want, then jump straight into a matching replay.
Starter lesson: choose a Radjabov theme, then update the recommendation.
Teimour Radjabov's playing style explained
Radjabov is a practical counterattacker who accepts space disadvantages or structural risk when they give him active breaks and difficult problems for the opponent. His best games show resistance turning into initiative rather than passive defence.
Active defence
He looks for a pawn break, exchange or counter-threat before the opponent can consolidate.
King's Indian timing
Moves such as ...f5, ...g5 and ...g4 work because his pieces are ready to support the attack.
Practical complications
He is willing to enter unclear positions when the defender's task becomes harder than the attacker's.
Long-term resilience
The World Cup and Candidates results show that his fighting identity extends beyond tactical miniatures.
Openings connected to Teimour Radjabov
Practical Radjabov lessons for club players
Create a second problem
When defending, search for a threat that makes the opponent calculate instead of improving freely.
Prepare the pawn break
Check piece support and king safety before launching ...f5, ...g5 or another freeing move.
Judge compensation concretely
Risk is justified by activity, targets and forcing moves—not by the hope that confusion alone will work.
Study complete games
Replay the opening and defensive phase so the counterattack is understood in context.
Teimour Radjabov FAQ
Biography and career facts
Who is Teimour Radjabov?
Teimour Radjabov is an Azerbaijani grandmaster, former child prodigy, 2019 FIDE World Cup winner and one of the best-known modern King's Indian Defence specialists. Start with the quick facts panel, then open the Kasparov 2003 replay to see the game that made him famous.
Why should chess players study Radjabov?
Study Radjabov for practical counterattack, King's Indian resilience and the ability to create chances from difficult positions. His games are especially useful if you defend too passively. Use the lesson finder and choose King's Indian counterplay for a matching replay.
What made Radjabov famous in 2003?
In 2003 Radjabov defeated Garry Kasparov, Viswanathan Anand and Ruslan Ponomariov with the black pieces. That combination made him a major elite-chess story while still a teenager. Use the breakthrough replay group to compare all three Black wins.
How old was Radjabov when he became a grandmaster?
Radjabov became a grandmaster in 2001 at age 14, making him the second-youngest grandmaster in history at that time. That prodigy background explains why his early Budapest games are useful training material. Use the young prodigy replay group to study his early tactical confidence.
What is Radjabov's connection with the King's Indian Defence?
Radjabov is strongly associated with the modern revival of the King's Indian Defence. He repeatedly used it against elite players and showed that Black could still generate counterplay at the highest level. Use the King's Indian counterplay replay group to study that identity.
What is Radjabov's connection with the Schliemann-Jaenisch Gambit?
Radjabov was one of the rare elite players willing to use the Schliemann-Jaenisch Gambit in the Ruy Lopez, making it a practical surprise weapon rather than just a sideline. Use the adviser branch on fighting openings, then compare with the King's Indian games for shared counterattacking logic.
What was special about Kasparov vs Radjabov 2003?
Radjabov beat the world number one with Black at Linares, using a courageous practical sacrifice to unbalance the game. The sacrifice was debated, but the practical lesson is clear: create hard defensive problems when the opponent expects control. Use the first diagram after 21...Ngxe5.
Was Radjabov's win against Kasparov sound?
The sacrifice itself has been debated, and the game became controversial because Kasparov later blundered in a complex position. For study, the value is not engine purity but practical disruption. Use the Kasparov diagram to see how 21...Ngxe5 changed the character of the game.
How did Radjabov beat Anand in 2003?
Against Anand at Dortmund, Radjabov used active Black play, piece activity and passed-pawn threats to create a tactically dangerous position. It is a model of counterattack against elite opposition. Use the Anand diagram after 22...Qxf2+ to study the practical turning point.
How did Radjabov beat Ponomariov in 2003?
Against Ponomariov at Wijk aan Zee, Radjabov used King's Indian-style pressure and active pieces to keep White's king under long-term stress. It belongs in the same 2003 breakthrough story. Use the breakthrough replay group and compare it with the Kasparov and Anand games.
Playing style and openings
What is Radjabov's playing style?
Radjabov is a practical counterattacker: he is comfortable defending, accepting structural risk and then striking when the opponent overextends. His best games often become messy on purpose. Use the lesson finder and choose practical defence under pressure.
Is Radjabov a good model for Black?
Yes. Radjabov is especially valuable for Black players who want active counterplay rather than passive solidity. His King's Indian and Sicilian games show how to challenge White's space. Use the King's Indian and Sicilian replay groups to study both routes.
Is Radjabov a good model for White?
Yes, but his White games are less famous than his Black counterattacks. His wins over Karjakin, Bu Xiangzhi and several Budapest opponents show tactical ambition and endgame persistence. Use the White-side strategic wins group to balance the study.
What openings should I study through Radjabov?
Start with the King's Indian Defence, then add the Sicilian and Schliemann-Jaenisch themes. The bigger lesson is how to create practical counterplay from unbalanced structures. Use the Replay Lab optgroups to choose by opening family.
What can club players copy from Radjabov?
Club players can copy his willingness to create problems. Do not just defend a worse position; look for pawn breaks, counter-sacrifices and awkward choices for the opponent. Use the Shirov and Anand replays to see that mindset in action.
What should club players avoid when copying Radjabov?
Do not copy risky sacrifices without understanding the practical compensation. Radjabov's counterplay works because he creates multiple threats and forces difficult decisions. Use the adviser ratings to pick a replay that matches your level of risk control.
What is Radjabov's peak rating?
Radjabov reached a peak rating of 2793 in November 2012 and a peak ranking of world number four. That rating shows he was not only a prodigy story but a long-term elite player. Use the milestone cards, then study the 2007-2008 elite games.
Did Radjabov win the FIDE World Cup?
Yes. Radjabov won the 2019 FIDE World Cup, defeating Ding Liren in the final after tiebreaks. That result qualified him for the Candidates cycle. Use the career milestones section to connect his prodigy phase with his later World Cup success.
What happened with Radjabov and the 2020 Candidates?
Radjabov qualified for the 2020 Candidates but withdrew over concerns about the coronavirus pandemic. After the event was postponed, the situation became a major chess story, and FIDE later gave him direct entry to the 2022 Candidates. Use the milestone cards for that career arc.
How did Radjabov do in the 2022 Candidates?
Radjabov finished third in the 2022 Candidates Tournament, a strong result after his earlier Candidates controversy. It reinforced his elite match and tournament resilience. Use the world-cup resilience adviser branch for a suitable replay path.
Results, resilience and model games
What team achievements does Radjabov have?
Radjabov won the European Team Chess Championship with Azerbaijan in 2009, 2013 and 2017. That team record is a major part of his career beyond individual tournaments. Use the Azerbaijan team-strength adviser branch to study practical scoring games.
What is Radjabov's best game in this replay set?
The Kasparov 2003 win is the headline game, but the Shirov 2007 King's Indian win is arguably the best thematic counterattacking model. Use the first two diagram boards to compare fame with opening identity.
Which Radjabov game should I watch first?
Watch Kasparov vs Radjabov, Linares 2003 first because it explains his global breakthrough. Then watch Shirov vs Radjabov, Wijk aan Zee 2007 for a cleaner King's Indian study model. Use the Replay Lab's first two groups.
What does the Shirov game teach?
The Shirov game teaches King's Indian counterplay: Black accepts space disadvantage, creates kingside tension and then turns passed-pawn and rook activity into a decisive attack. Use the Shirov diagram after 30...g4 to study the trigger.
What does the Karjakin game teach?
The Karjakin game teaches long-term defensive resourcefulness. Radjabov survives pressure, simplifies into a pawn-race/endgame scenario and queens his own counterplay. Use the Sicilian and rapid attacks group to study that full conversion.
What does the Bu Xiangzhi game teach?
The Bu Xiangzhi game teaches how Radjabov can also play strategic squeeze chess with White. He controls key squares, invades and converts without needing a wild King's Indian. Use the White-side strategic wins group for this quieter side.
Can Radjabov help my King's Indian Defence?
Yes. His King's Indian games show the practical value of ...f5, ...Nh5, dark-square pressure and kingside counterplay. Study them as plans, not just move orders. Use the King's Indian replay group and pause whenever Black changes the pawn structure.
Can Radjabov help my Sicilian Defence?
Yes. His Sicilian games show active defence and tactical resilience, especially against Anand and Karjakin. They are useful for players who want sharp counterplay without losing strategic grounding. Use the Sicilian replay group.
Practical study questions
Is Radjabov more tactical or positional?
Radjabov is both, but his signature is practical counterattack. He often uses positional tension to create tactical chances rather than attacking from nowhere. Use the adviser and choose practical defence under pressure to see this mix.
How should I study this page in one session?
Use a three-game session: Kasparov 2003 for breakthrough, Shirov 2007 for King's Indian identity, and Anand 2003 for elite counterattack. Use the diagrams first, then replay each game from the highlighted position.
What is the best weekly Radjabov training plan?
Use four sessions: one Kasparov breakthrough game, two King's Indian counterplay games, one Sicilian counterattack, and one White-side strategic win. Use the Replay Lab optgroups and write down the pawn break that changed each game.
What is the bottom-line Radjabov lesson?
The bottom-line lesson is practical resistance: even when the position looks uncomfortable, create counterplay and force the opponent to solve new problems. Use the lesson finder, then open a King's Indian or Kasparov replay to train that habit.
When and where was Teimour Radjabov born?
Teimour Radjabov was born on 12 March 1987 in Baku, Azerbaijan. He became a grandmaster at 14 and entered elite tournaments unusually early. Use the milestone cards and Budapest replay group to connect his background with his rapid rise.
Why did Radjabov withdraw from the 2020 Candidates?
Radjabov withdrew because of concerns about holding the event during the emerging coronavirus pandemic. The tournament was later suspended, and FIDE subsequently granted him a place in the 2022 Candidates. Read the career context here, then use the adviser’s resilience route for a practical study game.
How does the lesson finder choose a Radjabov game?
The lesson finder combines your training goal with the practical problem you select. It maps those choices to a real replay and gives counterplay, risk and training ratings. Update the recommendation, then open the suggested game directly from the result.
Continue with King's Indian counterplay
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