Sriram Jha
Indian chess grandmaster (born 1976)
Sriram Jha | |
---|---|
Sriram Jha, Warsaw 2022 | |
Country | India |
Born | (1976-07-18) 18 July 1976 (age 48) Madhubani, Bihar, India |
Title | Grandmaster (2010) |
Peak rating | 2511 (January 2010) |
Sriram Jha (born 18 July 1976) is an Indian chess Grandmaster. He competed in the FIDE World Cup 2009, for which he qualified by winning the Asian Zone 3.2 Chess Championship earlier in the same year.[1] Sriram Jha played for the bronze medal-winning India's C team in the Asian Team Chess Championship in 2003. He also represented India in the World U26 Team Chess Cheampionship in 1997.[2] In 2014 he won the Indian championship of rapid chess.[3]
He is married to Indian chess International Master Subbaraman Vijayalakshmi.[4]
References
- ^ "Sriram Jha and Kruttika Nadig claim Asian Zone 3.2 Chess Championship". Chessdom. 17 August 2009. Retrieved 3 September 2016.
- ^ Jha Sriram team chess record at Olimpbase.org
- ^ Sagar Shah (12 May 2014). "Sriram, Venkatesh win Indian Rapid and Blitz". ChessBase. Retrieved 3 September 2016.
- ^ Manisha Mohite (14 February 2010). "How Sriram got inspired by wife Viji for chess battles". www.mid-day.com. Retrieved 3 September 2016.
External links
- Sriram Jha rating card at FIDE
- v
- t
- e
Indian Grandmasters
Chess players for India with the FIDE title of Grandmaster (GM)
- Abhijeet Gupta
- Abhijit Kunte
- Adhiban Baskaran
- Aditya Mittal
- Aditya Samant
- Akshayraj Kore
- Ankit Rajpara
- Anurag Mhamal
- Aravindh Chithambaram
- Arjun Erigaisi
- Arjun Kalyan
- Aryan Chopra
- Ashwin Jayaram
- Bharath Subramaniyam
- Debashis Das
- Deep Sengupta
- Dibyendu Barua
- Diptayan Ghosh
- G. Akash
- Geetha Narayanan Gopal
- Girish A. Koushik
- Gukesh D
- Harika Dronavalli
- Harsha Bharathakoti
- Harshit Raja
- Himanshu Sharma
- J. Deepan Chakkravarthy
- Karthik Venkataraman
- Karthikeyan Murali
- Karthikeyan Pandian
- Koneru Humpy
- Koustav Chatterjee
- Krishnan Sasikiran
- Laxman Rajaram
- Leon Luke Mendonca
- M. R. Lalith Babu
- Magesh Chandran Panchanathan
- Mitrabha Guha
- Neelotpal Das
- Nihal Sarin
- P. Iniyan
- Parimarjan Negi
- Abhimanyu Puranik
- Pentala Harikrishna
- Pranav Anand
- Pranav V
- Pranesh M
- Pravin Thipsay
- Prithu Gupta
- Priyadharshan Kannappan
- Prraneeth Vuppala
- Rahul Srivatshav Peddi
- Raja Rithvik R
- Ramachandran Ramesh
- Raunak Sadhwani
- R Praggnanandhaa
- R Vaishali
- S. L. Narayanan
- S. P. Sethuraman
- Sahaj Grover
- Sandipan Chanda
- Sankalp Gupta
- Saptarshi Roy
- Saptarshi Roy Chowdhury
- Sayantan Das
- Shardul Gagare
- Shyaam Nikhil P.
- Shyam Sundar M.
- Srinath Narayanan
- Sriram Jha
- Stany G.A.
- Subramanian Arun Prasad
- Sundararajan Kidambi
- Surya Shekhar Ganguly
- Swapnil Dhopade
- Swayams Mishra
- Tejas Bakre
- Thejkumar M. S.
- Vaibhav Suri
- Venkatesh M. R.
- Vidit Gujrathi
- Vignesh N. R.
- Visakh N. R.
- Vishnu Prasanna V.
- Viswanathan Anand
- See also: List of chess grandmasters
- List of Indian chess players § Grandmasters
- Chess in India
- Category:Indian chess players
This biographical article relating to an Indian chess figure is a stub. You can help Wikipedia by expanding it. |
- v
- t
- e