Key Points

Divya Deshmukh made history by becoming the first Indian woman to win the FIDE Women's World Cup. She credited her family and first coach Rahul Joshi for her success. The 19-year-old defeated Koneru in a nail-biting final decided by tiebreaks. An emotional Deshmukh celebrated with her mother, marking a milestone in Indian chess.

Key Points: Divya Deshmukh Credits Family and Coach After FIDE World Cup Win

  • Divya Deshmukh becomes first Indian woman to win FIDE Chess World Cup
  • Credits coach Rahul Joshi and family for her success
  • Defeats Koneru 2.5-1.5 in tense final
  • Emotional victory marks her rise as India's 4th woman grandmaster
2 min read

I want to give credit to my sister, family and coach: 2025 FIDE Women's World Cup winner Divya Deshmukh

Chess prodigy Divya Deshmukh thanks family and coach Rahul Joshi after historic FIDE Women's World Cup victory over Koneru.

"I want to give credit to my sister, my whole family, and my first coach, Rahul Joshi – Divya Deshmukh"

Nagpur, July 30

Divya Deshmukh, winner of the 2025 FIDE Women's World Cup, expressed her happiness for the people gathered to welcome her at the Nagpur Airport and gave credit for her victory to her first coach, Rahul Joshi, her Family and sister.

She returned home on Wednesday and was given a rousing welcome by her family and supporters, who gathered at the Nagpur Airport to receive her.

Divya, a 19-year-old rising sensation in the world of chess, became the first Indian woman to clinch the Chess World Cup after overwhelming Koneru on Monday evening in the final via tiebreaks. She became just the fourth Indian woman grandmaster and overall the 88th in the nation to clinch that title.

"I am happy. I feel very good to see that so many people have gathered here to welcome me. My heart is very happy. I want to give credit to my sister, my whole family, and my first coach, Rahul Joshi," Divya said to the media.

During the tense contest, a string of inaccuracies in the second rapid game contributed to Koneru's downfall. She found herself a pawn down in the rook endgame, which played out in Divya's favour. The veteran allowed the situation to sink in and resigned on the 75th move and fell short in a gripping final with a score of 2.5-1.5.

Divya failed to capitalise on the two windows that Koneru left open for her with her inaccurate moves. However, on the third time, Koneru inflicted more damage on herself by capturing the f pawn on move 69, which changed the tide in Divya's favour towards the final moments of the contest.

This time around, Divya made no mistake, played the right moves and forced Koneru to resign after six moves. Her eyes welled up with tears as she began to grasp the scale of her victory.

She tried to compose herself, but soon became overwhelmed with emotions again after embracing her mother in a heartfelt moment.

- ANI

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Reader Comments

P
Priyanka N
As a chess mom myself, I know how much sacrifice goes behind such achievements. The family support, early morning practice sessions, missing school events - it's all worth it when our daughters make India proud like this! 👏
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Rahul R
While I'm happy for Divya, I wish media would also highlight the struggles of Koneru who fought hard. Indian media always focuses only on the winner. Both players displayed exceptional skills in this grueling match.
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Sarah B
The emotional moment with her mother got me teary-eyed! In a country where girls are often discouraged from sports, stories like Divya's show what's possible with family support. More parents should take note!
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Karthik V
Nagpur is becoming the chess capital of India! First Vidit Gujrathi and now Divya Deshmukh. The city's chess culture deserves recognition. Maybe other cities should learn from their coaching system.
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Neha E
At 19, she's achieved what many dream of in a lifetime! But I hope she gets proper rest now - the pressure on young athletes can be brutal. Wishing her many more successes ahead 💫

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