logo
'Greatest female chess player of all time' Judit Polgar hails Divya Deshmukh, Indian chess after Women's World Cup history

'Greatest female chess player of all time' Judit Polgar hails Divya Deshmukh, Indian chess after Women's World Cup history

First Post2 days ago
Judit Polgar, who is considered the greatest female chess player of all time, and world No.2 Hikaru Nakamura celebrated Divya Deshmukh's historic Women's Chess World Cup win on social media and pointed out the rapid growth of Indian chess. read more
The legendary Judit Polgar, considered the greatest female chess player of all time, hailed Indian chess and Divya Deshmukh after the 19-year-old clinched the FIDE Women's World Cup 2025 title, beating compatriot Koneru Humpy on Monday in Batumi, Georgia.
It was a historic result as Divya became the first Indian to win the Women's Chess World Cup trophy and also earned the Grandmaster title as a result of winning the mega event. The teenager from Nagpur is India's fourth woman chess player to earn the title of a Grandmaster.
STORY CONTINUES BELOW THIS AD
Also Read | Divya fights back tears, shares emotional hug with mother after FIDE Women's World Cup win
Praising Divya for a thrilling win over the reigning Women's World Rapid Chess Champion Humpy, Polgar, the only woman chess player to be ranked in the world top 10 and achieve a rating of over 2700, praised Divya, the Indian chess prodigy, and also pointed out how Indian chess continues to grow leaps and bounds.
Polgar, Nakamura praise Divya on social media
'Congrats to @DivyaDeshmukh05, who has clinched the 2025 Women's Chess World Cup title, defeating her compatriot Koneru Humpy in a tense tiebreak. Indian chess is just unbelievable! But do not forget: it has reasons,' Polgar wrote on X.
Congrats to @DivyaDeshmukh05 🇮🇳, who has clinched the 2025 Women's Chess World Cup title, defeating her compatriot Koneru Humpy in a tense tiebreak.
Indian chess is just unbelievable!
But do not forget: it has reasons.😉#ChessConnectsUs #India
📷 FIDE / Anna Shtourman &… pic.twitter.com/eebNVB2sLA — Judit Polgar (@GMJuditPolgar) July 28, 2025
World No.2 Hikaru Nakamura of the United States also mentioned the rapid growth of Indian chess while celebrating Divya's historic victory.
'Huge congrats to @DivyaDeshmukh05 for both winning the Women's World Cup but also going from no-norms to the GM title in one big jump!! Indian chess is knocking it out of the park these days,' he wrote on X.
Huge congrats to @DivyaDeshmukh05 for both winning the Women's World Cup but also going from no-norms to the GM title in one big jump!! Indian chess is knocking it out of the park these days. #FIDEWorldCup #FIDEWomenWorldCup #ChessWorldCup #IndianChess pic.twitter.com/HnIUeouIUa — Hikaru Nakamura (@GMHikaru) July 28, 2025
STORY CONTINUES BELOW THIS AD
Divya reflects on becoming Grandmaster
'I think it was fate, me getting the grandmaster title this way. Before the tournament, I didn't even have one norm. I was thinking that I could maybe earn a grandmaster norm here. And at the end, I became a grandmaster,' Divya said after the match, reflecting on becoming a Grandmaster at 19.
'This means a lot, but there's a lot more to achieve. I'm hoping this is just the start.'
Also Read | How Divya outfoxed Humpy, scripted history by winning FIDE Women's Chess World Cup
As a result of winning the Chess World Cup, Divya took home a prize money of $50,000 (Rs 41.6 lakh), while Humpy was awarded $35,000 (Rs 29.1 lakh).
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Tharun and Lakshya Sen advance to Macau Open quarterfinals with big wins
Tharun and Lakshya Sen advance to Macau Open quarterfinals with big wins

Business Standard

time2 minutes ago

  • Business Standard

Tharun and Lakshya Sen advance to Macau Open quarterfinals with big wins

India's Tharun Mannepalli shocked top seed Lee Cheuk Yiu of Hong Kong to enter the quarterfinals of the Macau Open along with compatriot Lakshya Sen here on Thursday. Tharun rallied splendidly to outwit Lee, a world No. 15, 19-21, 21-14, 22-20 in a match that went past the hour-mark. The 23-year-old, holder of world No. 47 ranking, now has reached his second quarterfinals of a Super 300 tournament after entering the last eight at the German Open in February. In the quarterfinals, Tharun will face world No. 87 Hu Zhe An of China. Later, Commonwealth Games champion Lakshya Sen fought past Chico Aura Dwi Wardoyo of Indonesia 21-14, 14-21, 21-17 to enter the last-eight stage. However, Ayush Shetty was ousted after a 18-21, 16-21 loss to Malaysia's Justin Hoh. In the women's singles India's Rakshitha Ramraj went down against Busanan Ongbamrungphan of Thailand 21-14, 10-21, 11-21 in a match that lasted 51 minutes. In the mixed doubles, fifth-seeded Indian duo of Dhruv Kapila and Tanisha Crasto lost to Malaysia's Jimmy Wong and Lai Pei Jing 21-19, 13-21, 18-21. In the men's doubles, Pruthvi Roy and K. Sai Pratheek lost to fourth-seeded Junaidi Arif and Roy King Yap of Malaysia 18-21, 18-21. In later matches, ace second seeded men's doubles pair of Satwiksairaj Rankireddy and Chirag Shetty will meet Japan's Kakeru Kumagai and Hiroki Nishi. In the women's doubles, Priya Konjengbam and Shruti Mishra will tussle against the eighth-seeded Meilysa Puspitasari and Rachel Rose of Indonesia.

Eng V Ind: "Spoiled & Silly" Stokes Slammed, India Hailed  First Sports With Rupha Ramani
Eng V Ind: "Spoiled & Silly" Stokes Slammed, India Hailed  First Sports With Rupha Ramani

First Post

time2 minutes ago

  • First Post

Eng V Ind: "Spoiled & Silly" Stokes Slammed, India Hailed First Sports With Rupha Ramani

Eng V Ind: "Spoiled & Silly" Stokes Slammed, India Hailed | First Sports With Rupha Ramani | N18G The fourth Test between India and England at Manchester was officially a draw. But for Team India, it felt like a victory. It was the fiery final hour that sparked a major controversy. England, led by Ben Stokes, attempted to force India into shaking hands and ending the Test early. A period where two Indian batters were on the brink of historic centuries. What followed was a shocking display of entitlement and arrogance from the English side, triggering a wave of outrage. Rupha Ramani dissects every layer, from the tactical fightback by Jadeja and Washington Sundar, the controversial statements by Stokes, to the rightful backlash led by Gautam Gambhir and others. This wasn't just a cricket clash - it showed the "spoiled kid" and "silly" behaviour England showed. See More

GM Divya says she focused on performance, blocked out distractions
GM Divya says she focused on performance, blocked out distractions

Business Standard

time2 minutes ago

  • Business Standard

GM Divya says she focused on performance, blocked out distractions

Grandmaster Divya Deshmukh has said she was not under any kind of pressure while playing the FIDE Women's World Cup final against compatriot Koneru Humpy as she had "nothing to lose". Divya arrived here on Wednesday from Batumi, Georgia to a reception befitting a world champion, with the young achiever overwhelmed by the affection shown by the the people at the airport. The 19-year-old overcame the 38-year-old Humpy, a two-time World Rapid champion, in the time-controlled tie-break after the two classical rounds ended in draws. This was Divya's biggest success in her career and came after Humpy blundered in the second tie-breaker under time pressure. "I never thought I was in any danger. I guess that the last blunder which she (Humpy) made, handed me the win," Divya told PTI Videos, when asked if she was under pressure in the final. "Since I had no results in my hand, so I was just trying to focus on my performance and wasn't thinking about anything else," said Divya, who entered the event as an underdog aiming to win a Grandmaster norm and ended up becoming a GM. Divya not just won the tournament and earned the GM title, she also secured a spot in next year's Candidates and became richer by USD 50,000. Divya is hoping women's chess will take off in a big way in India following her success. "I am hoping that women will take up the sport in a big way after this success, especially youngsters, and they start dreaming that nothing is impossible. "I don't have a message for the young generation but for their parents and that is they should wholeheartedly support their children because they need them more during their failures, not so much in success," added Divya. On her arrival at the airport on Wednesday night, Divya had credited her success to her parents. "My parents have played the biggest role in my career. Without them I would not have reached here. Credit to my family, my parents, my sister, and my first coach, Rahul Joshi sir. He always wanted me to become the Grandmaster, and this is for him," said Divya, about Joshi, who died in 2020 at just 40 years of age. "My mother and father had a bigger role to play but definitely my whole family, my sister Arya Deshmukh, my grandmother, grandfather...I don't think whatever I will say will be enough (for my parents).

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store