
Hundred years: All-India chess

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


New Indian Express
4 hours ago
- New Indian Express
Jamshedpur FC edge past Tribhuvan Army FC in a five goal thriller
Jamshedpur FC edged past Nepal's Tribhuvan Army FC 3-2 in a five goal thriller to secure a win in the Group C opener which was played here at the JRD Tata Sports Complex. The Nepal Army side came from behind to equalise twice but Nikhil Barla's strike ensured that the Red Miners to start the group stage matches with a win. Sarthak Goloui and Manvir Singh scored the first two goals for Jamshedpur while Captain George Prince Karki and Ananta Tamang scored for Tribhuvan Army FC. Jamshedpur FC Head Coach Khalid Jamil named an all Indian eleven which included new signings Manvir Singh, Jayesh Rane, Nishu Kumar, Sarthak Goloui and Vincy Baretto while Tribhuvan Army Head Coach Meghraj KC named a strong lineup in a 4-4-2 formation with Nawayug Shrestha and skipper George Prince Karki leading the attack line. Sarthak Goloui took advantage of a mistake by the opposition goalkeeper Samit Shrestha who failed to gather a long throw-in by Praful Kumar YV to give Jamshedpur the lead in the fourth minute. The ball fell into the path of Sarthak who slotted the ball into the empty net. Jamshedpur continued to threaten the side from Nepal especially with their set piece routines which were plenty, but could not take their chances to score a second. TAFC took advantage of that and scored the equaliser in the 26th minute through their captain George Prince Karki. The striker received a pass from Gillespye Karki and found the bottom left corner with a low drilled shot, giving no chance for Jamshedpur goalkeeper Amrit Gope. The Red Miners regained their lead within four minutes after Manvir Singh put the finishing touches to a neat team move. C. Hriata released Vincy Barretto into space and the striker dodged the challenge of the defender and released the unmarked Manvir who rounded the goalkeeper and calmly slotted the ball into the open net. Jamshedpur FC 3 (Sarthak 4', Manvir 31', Barla 71') bt Tribhuvan Army FC 2 (George Karki 26', Ananta Tamang 64) SOURCE: Durand Cup Organisers


NDTV
4 hours ago
- NDTV
History Beckons: India's Koneru Humpy To Meet Divya Deshmukh In FIDE Women's Chess World Cup Final
Grandmaster Koneru Humpy held her nerves to score a come-from-behind victory over China'sTIngjie Lei in the tiebreaker to set up an all-Indian summit clash against Divya Deshmukh at the FIDE Women's World Cup in Batumi, Georgia on Thursday. Humpy will clash with Divya Deshmukh in the final starting after a day's rest starting on Saturday. With Humpy winning, both she and Divya have now qualified for the Women's candidates' tournament next year. Having drawn the first two games in the normal time control Humpy had to settle up with another 1-1 draw in the tiebreaker that comprised two games with 15 minutes for both players with an increment. After two draws here, Humpy had to really work hard in the next set of tiebreak games that had 10 minutes for both players with another increment. Lei got in the lad early in the set of these two games and Humpy erred in the middle game to lose a pawn and get in to a difficult endgame. What followed was pretty logical as Lei got in command and even thought the position was closer to a draw Humpy did not find the best defensive resources to equalize. Humpy lost another pawn on the queen side and despite the presence of opposite coloured Bishops in the endgame, white's influence on both flanks tilted things decisively in her favour. It was a win on demand wherein Humpy dominated the next game. The Queen pawn opening was good enough wherein Humpy was in command right from the word go. Humpy won with her superior technique and also her absolute determination to turn the tide in her favour from any given position. In the third set of tie-break games Humpy drew white in the first game and crushed Lei in all departments of the game. Winning this game meant that just a draw was needed for her to get in to the final and in the return game Humpy was at her technical best as she won again out of an Italian opening. If there is one title that has eluded Humpy it's the World Cup and world championship. Apart that Humpy has won everything under the sun.
&w=3840&q=100)

First Post
5 hours ago
- First Post
Humpy sets up historic all-Indian FIDE Women's World Cup final against Divya after beating top-seed Lei
Koneru Humpy defeated world No 3 Lei Tingjie 5-3, prevailing over the Chinese top-seed with a hat-trick of wins in the tie-breaks after the two players drew both of their Classical matches on Wednesday. read more Koneru Humpy in action during the semi-finals of the 2025 FIDE Women's World Cup in Batumi, Georgia. Image credit: FIDE The FIDE Women's World Cup in Batumi, Georgia, is set to witness a historic all-Indian final with Grandmaster Koneru Humpy defeating Chinese top-seed Lei Tingjie in the tie-breaks to win her semi-final showdown with a 5-3 scoreline. Reigning women's world rapid champion Humpy is set to face International Master Divya Deshmukh, who had won the other Sino-Indian semi-final showdown with a victory over veteran GM Tan Zhongyi 1.5-0.5 on Wednesday. World No 3 Lei had earlier dragged the semi-final into the tie-breaks after holding Humpy to a draw in the second Classical game on Wednesday. And she found herself leading 3-2 at one stage of the tie-breaks, before the 38-year-old Indian GM roared back with a hat-trick of victories – two of them with white pieces. STORY CONTINUES BELOW THIS AD 🇮🇳 Humpy Koneru will face 🇮🇳 Divya Deshmukh in the FIDE Women's World Cup 2025 Final! 🔥#FIDEWorldCup — International Chess Federation (@FIDE_chess) July 24, 2025 Only one Indian (GM Harika Dronavalli in 2021) had reached the previous two editions of the prestigious tournament. This edition has witnessed four Indians in the quarter-finals, with two of them going the distance. More to follow