Chao b Li
FIDE ID 8604436
About
Overview
Li Chao (registered in FIDE databases as "Li, Chao b") is an elite Chinese chess Grandmaster born on April 21, 1989, in Taiyuan, Shanxi, China. Representing China (CHN), he was awarded the Grandmaster title in 2007. A major force in Chinese and international chess, he attained a career-high classical FIDE rating of 2758 in June 2016 and peaked at World No. 14 in August 2015. He is highly distinguished as an individual tournament competitor—having won the 2013 Asian Chess Championship—and as an elite team player, representing his country in multiple Chess Olympiads, culminating in a team gold medal in 2018. He is also recognized for his frequent role as a second to his childhood friend and compatriot GM Wang Yue.
Biography & Major Career Milestones
Li Chao began playing chess at the age of six. He made rapid progress through the youth ranks, representing China at the World Youth Olympiad (U16) in 2002 and 2004. In both events, China took team gold, with Li securing an individual gold medal on board four during the 2004 tournament. In 2005, he finished equal fourth (sixth on tiebreaks) at the World Junior Chess Championship in Istanbul with 8.5/13, earning his first Grandmaster norm.
He earned his second GM norm at the 2007 Aeroflot Open in Moscow and his third on July 14, 2007, at Lake Sevan in Martuni, Armenia. This achievement made him China's 23rd Grandmaster at the age of 18. Unusually, Li skipped the International Master (IM) title entirely, achieving the GM requirements directly.
During late 2007, Li enjoyed a series of rapid tournament victories. He won the Scandinavian Chess Tournament in Täby, Sweden, with an outstanding 8.5/9 score, followed shortly by victory at the 4th Dato' Arthur Tan Malaysia Open in Kuala Lumpur with 9/10. In November 2007, he won the President Gloria Macapagal Arroyo Cup in Manila. In 2008, he tied for first at the 10th Dubai Open and won the 2nd Philippine International Open in Subic Bay on tiebreaks.
Li won the Corus Chess Tournament Group C in Wijk aan Zee in January 2010 with 10/13. In April 2010, he won the Doeberl Cup in Canberra, Australia, a title he would win again in 2013. In August 2011, he recorded one of the most dominant performances of his career at the 26th Summer Universiade in Shenzhen, China. In a field featuring 22 Grandmasters, Li scored 8.5/9 to take the individual gold medal, finishing two full points clear of the field with a tournament performance rating of 2993. In October 2011, he won the Indonesia Open Chess Championship in Jakarta on tiebreaks.
In May 2013, Li won the Asian Chess Championship in Manila, which qualified him for the 2013 FIDE World Cup. His strong run in open and closed international invitationals continued with undefeated victories at the 2014 Reykjavik Open and the 2015 Cappelle-la-Grande Open. By 2015 and 2016, his rating crossed the 2750 mark, maintaining a place in the global top 15.
Elite Team & Event Performance
- 2008 Chess Olympiad (Dresden): Represented China as the first reserve board, scoring 4.5/7.
- 2008 First Asian Club Chess Cup (Al-Ain): Represented the Al-Ain Club of the UAE, scoring 5.5/6 (91.7%) to secure individual gold on board one.
- 2010 Chess Olympiad (Khanty-Mansiysk): Represented China on the reserve board, scoring 6/10.
- 2011 Asian Cities Championship (Jakarta): Represented Shijiazhuang, winning both team and individual gold medals.
- 2012 Chess Olympiad (Istanbul): Represented China as the reserve board, scoring an undefeated 6/7 with a 2794 performance rating.
- 2016 Chess Olympiad (Baku): Represented China on board three, scoring 3.5/7.
- 2018 Chess Olympiad (Batumi): Represented China on board four. He scored 5/8 (including a critical penultimate-round win against Poland's Kamil Dragun), helping China secure the team gold medal on tiebreaks over the United States.
- Chinese Chess League Division A: Long-time leading player for the Beijing team.
Playing Style, Material Tendencies & Endgame Profiling
Li Chao is classified as a highly concrete, dynamic computer-era calculator. Rather than following strictly orthodox positional paths, he frequently steers games toward highly asymmetrical, double-edged middlegames. This was famously noted by World Champion Magnus Carlsen during the 2015 Qatar Masters, who commented that Li's game dynamics were exceptionally difficult to anticipate or categorize conventionally.
His middlegame planning is characterized by active piece play, direct counter-attacks, and a high tolerance for structural compromises. Rather than avoiding weaknesses, Li is comfortable accepting isolated pawns or compromised king safety if it guarantees rapid development and active pieces. This dynamic preference is highly visible when he wields the Black pieces in the Grünfeld Defense, where he consistently aims for unbalanced, tactical skirmishes.
In the transition from the middlegame to the endgame, Li relies on concrete tactical solutions rather than passive defense. When defending inferior positions, he prefers active piece counter-attacks over rigid fortress setups. His endgame strength lies in active rook-and-pawn endings and minor-piece endgames where he can utilize king activity and coordinate passed pawns. He excels at converting micro-advantages in queenless middlegames by maintaining constant coordination and tactical tension.
Opening Repertoire & Theoretical Move Orders
1. As White
Li Chao utilizes both 1.d4 and 1.e4, maintaining a broad, theoretically dense repertoire.
Against 1...Nf6 and 1...d5 systems, he frequently employs the Catalan Opening, seeking long-term Catalan bishop pressure:
When opening with 1.e4, his preferred weapon against 1...e5 is the Scotch Game:
In Closed Game structures where Black aims for the Slav Defense, Li typically relies on solid systems featuring early e3 developments, bypassing sharper gambit variations in favor of stable positional pressure:
2. As Black
As Black, Li Chao meets 1.e4 almost exclusively with the highly robust Petrov's Defense, reflecting a core strategic preference shared by several elite Chinese grandmasters:
Against 1.d4, Li's primary defensive weapon is the Grünfeld Defense. He welcomes the massive center White receives in the Exchange Variation, relying on rapid flank counter-attacks:
Against Catalan or Queen's Indian setups, he often utilizes the Bogo-Indian Defense to exchange the dark-squared bishop and establish solid, asymmetrical central pawn chains:
Links
Recent games 622
| Date | Color | Opponent | Result |
|---|---|---|---|
| 2026-04-19 | Wen Yang(2574) | 1/2-1/2 | |
| 2026-04-19 | Xiangrui Kong(2499) | 1/2-1/2 | |
| 2026-04-19 | Xiangyu Xu(2619) | 1/2-1/2 | |
| 2026-04-19 | Guohao Li(2340) | 0-1 | |
| 2026-04-19 | Yinglun Xu(2508) | 1-0 | |
| 2026-04-19 | Chengzhang Li(1867) | 0-1 | |
| 2026-04-19 | Bu Xiangzhi(2666) | 1/2-1/2 | |
| 2025-11-24 | Lu Shanglei(2643) | 0-1 | |
| 2025-11-24 | Lu Shanglei(2643) | 1/2-1/2 | |
| 2025-11-24 | Yue Wang(2623) | 1/2-1/2 | |
| 2025-11-24 | Yue Wang(2623) | 0-1 | |
| 2025-11-24 | Yue Wang(2623) | 1/2-1/2 | |
| 2025-11-24 | Yue Wang(2623) | 1/2-1/2 | |
| 2025-11-22 | Andreikin,D(2710) | 1-0 | |
| 2025-11-22 | Ding Liren(2734) | 0-1 | |
| 2025-11-22 | Lu Shanglei(2643) | 1-0 | |
| 2025-11-05 | Savva Vetokhin(2572) | 1/2-1/2 | |
| 2025-11-05 | Erzhan Zhakshylykov(2392) | 0-1 | |
| 2025-11-05 | Sumiya Bilguun(2442) | 1-0 | |
| 2025-11-05 | Bakhrom Bakhrillaev(2425) | 1-0 | |
| 2025-11-05 | Yihan Meng(2456) | 1/2-1/2 | |
| 2025-11-05 | Zhandos Agmanov(2471) | 0-1 | |
| 2025-11-05 | Mafaaz Khalid(2118) | 1-0 | |
| 2025-11-05 | Maksim Tsaruk(2515) | 1/2-1/2 | |
| 2025-11-05 | Yiye Wang(2438) | 1/2-1/2 | |
| 2025-11-05 | David Naimov(1500) | 0-1 | |
| 2025-10-27 | Yi Xu(2465) | 1-0 | |
| 2025-10-27 | Yuan Chen(2415) | 1/2-1/2 | |
| 2025-10-27 | Tong(QD) Xiao(2545) | 1-0 | |
| 2025-10-16 | Yue Wang(2621) | 1/2-1/2 | |
| 2025-10-16 | Yue Wang(2621) | 1/2-1/2 | |
| 2025-09-27 | Zhang Pengxiang(2567) | 0-1 | |
| 2025-09-27 | Zhang Pengxiang(2567) | 0-1 | |
| 2025-09-27 | Wei Yi(2753) | 0-1 | |
| 2025-09-27 | Wei Yi(2753) | 1-0 | |
| 2025-09-27 | Wei Yi(2753) | 1/2-1/2 | |
| 2025-09-23 | Chenxi Zhao(2501) | 1/2-1/2 | |
| 2025-09-23 | Yiye Wang(2438) | 1-0 | |
| 2025-09-23 | Wei Yi(2753) | 1/2-1/2 | |
| 2025-09-23 | Bu Xiangzhi(2684) | 1/2-1/2 | |
| 2025-09-23 | Chun Yung Samuel Lam(2065) | 0-1 | |
| 2025-09-23 | Yi Xu(2465) | 1/2-1/2 | |
| 2025-09-23 | Yue Wang(2627) | 1/2-1/2 | |
| 2025-09-23 | Minghui Xu(2441) | 1-0 | |
| 2025-09-23 | Zhang Pengxiang(2567) | 1-0 | |
| 2025-08-27 | Qi b Chen(2468) | 1/2-1/2 | |
| 2025-08-27 | Yue Wang(2627) | 1/2-1/2 | |
| 2025-08-27 | Xiangrui Kong(2479) | 1/2-1/2 | |
| 2025-08-27 | Xiangyu Xu(2612) | 1/2-1/2 | |
| 2025-08-27 | Xiongjian Peng(2518) | 1/2-1/2 |