Divya Deshmukh
Divya Deshmukh (born 9 December 2005) is an Indian chess grandmaster from Nagpur, Maharashtra, who has emerged as one of the leading figures in women's chess through her exceptional performances in international competitions.[1] Deshmukh achieved the Woman Grandmaster title early in her career and earned the full Grandmaster norm in 2025 upon winning the FIDE Women's World Cup in Batumi, Georgia, where she defeated fellow Indian Koneru Humpy 1.5–0.5 in rapid tiebreaks after two classical draws, becoming the first Indian woman to claim the title and securing qualification for the 2026 Women's Candidates Tournament.[2][3] At the age of 18, she dominated the 2024 FIDE World U-20 Girls Championship in Gandhinagar, India, scoring an undefeated 10/11 points and clinching the title with a final-round victory over Bulgaria's Beloslava Krasteva.[4] Her international accolades include the 2023 Asian Women's Chess Championship in Almaty, Kazakhstan, where she scored 7.5/9 points to secure gold ahead of compatriot Mary Ann Gomes.[5] Earlier, at 16, Deshmukh won the 2022 Indian National Women's Senior Championship with an impressive 8/9 score, drawing only in the first and last rounds while defeating seven opponents in a row.[6] Deshmukh played a pivotal role in India's historic double gold at the 45th Chess Olympiad in Budapest in 2024, contributing to the women's team's 19/22 match points by scoring 9.5/11 on board three for an individual gold medal and a performance rating of 2608, which propelled her live rating past 2500.[7] As of November 2025, her FIDE standard rating stands at 2505, ranking her among the top young players globally.[3]Early life
Divya Deshmukh was born on 9 December 2005 in Nagpur, Maharashtra, to parents Jitendra Deshmukh and Namratha Deshmukh, both practising doctors.[8][9] Her family introduced her to chess at the age of four as a recreational activity.[8][10] She attended Bhavan's Bhagwandas Purohit Vidya Mandir in Nagpur, where she maintained strong academic performance alongside her chess pursuits.[11][8] Deshmukh entered her first chess tournament, the L. G. Somalwar Memorial Inter-School and Inter-Collegiate Chess Tournament, at the age of five.[12] By age seven, in 2012, she won her first national gold medal.[10][13]Career
2020–2023: Early rise
Divya Deshmukh began her ascent in international chess during the COVID-19 pandemic, contributing significantly to India's success at the inaugural FIDE Online Chess Olympiad in 2020. At just 14 years old, she played on the girls' board for the Indian junior team, helping secure a joint gold medal with Russia after a tense final where technical issues affected play. Her key performances included a crucial win against China's Zhu Jiner in the quarterfinals, propelling India past the defending champions.[14] In 2021, Deshmukh earned the Woman Grandmaster (WGM) title at the 92nd FIDE Congress, becoming India's 21st female WGM after achieving the required norms and surpassing the 2300 Elo rating threshold earlier that year. This milestone followed strong showings in domestic and international events, solidifying her reputation as a rising talent from Nagpur. Her rapid progress was evident in her Elo gains, reaching over 2350 by mid-2021.[3] Deshmukh's breakthrough came in 2022 when she won the 48th National Women's Chess Championship in Kolkata, defeating top-seeded IM Bhakti Kulkarni in the final round to claim the title outright with 9.5/11. Later that year, at the Chennai Chess Olympiad, she earned an individual bronze medal on the reserve board (board 5), scoring 7/9 and contributing to India's women's team bronze. These achievements highlighted her tactical prowess and composure under pressure in high-stakes team events.[15][16] By 2023, Deshmukh dominated the Asian Individual Women's Chess Championship in Almaty, Kazakhstan, winning gold with an impressive 7.5/9, including six victories and three draws against strong regional competition. That same year, she secured the International Master (IM) title at the 3rd FIDE Council after fulfilling the norms and crossing 2400 Elo. She also triumphed in the women's rapid section of the Tata Steel Chess India tournament, defeating GM Koneru Humpy in the decisive final round to finish with 7/9 as the lowest-rated participant. These victories marked her transition from promising junior to elite contender, with her standard rating climbing to 2426 by year's end.[5][3][17]2024: Olympiad double gold
In June 2024, Deshmukh won the FIDE World U-20 Girls Championship in Gandhinagar, India, scoring an undefeated 10/11 points with a final-round victory over Bulgaria's Beloslava Krasteva.[4] In 2024, Divya Deshmukh played a pivotal role in the Indian women's chess team's historic gold medal victory at the 45th Chess Olympiad held in Budapest, Hungary.[18] As an 18-year-old International Master and a new addition to the team, she competed on board three, participating in all 11 rounds.[18] The Indian team amassed 19 match points, securing the gold by defeating Azerbaijan 3.5–0.5 in the final round after winning nine of their 11 matches.[7] Deshmukh delivered an outstanding individual performance, scoring 9.5 out of 11 points and earning the individual gold medal on board three.[7] Her tournament performance rating reached 2608, highlighted by a crucial victory over Azerbaijan's Govhar Beydullayeva in the decisive final-round game.[7] This achievement marked her first Chess Olympiad appearance and contributed to India's first-ever gold in the women's section, resulting in her "double gold" for both team and individual success.[18] The Olympiad performance propelled Deshmukh over the 2500 Elo rating threshold, elevating her to 11th in the FIDE women's world rankings at age 18.[7]2025: World Cup and Grandmaster title
In 2025, Divya Deshmukh, then a 19-year-old International Master from Nagpur, India, achieved a historic breakthrough by winning the FIDE Women's World Cup, held from July 6 to 28 in Batumi, Georgia.[19][2] The tournament featured 107 players from 46 federations in a single-elimination knockout format with classical time controls of 90 minutes for the first 40 moves, plus 30 additional minutes and a 30-second increment.[2] As the youngest participant and seeded based on her rising Elo rating of around 2463, Deshmukh entered as an underdog but demonstrated exceptional resilience and tactical acumen throughout the event.[2][12] Deshmukh's path to the final was marked by upsets against higher-rated grandmasters. In the early rounds, she eliminated China's GM Zhu Jiner, followed by a victory over India's own GM Harika Dronavalli in a tense match that showcased her endgame precision.[2] She then advanced past former Women's World Champion GM Tan Zhongyi of China in the semifinals, capitalizing on strategic errors in a closely contested classical game.[2] These wins propelled her into the final against compatriot GM Koneru Humpy, a two-time Candidates finalist and India's top-rated female player.[19] The classical portion of the final ended in a 1-1 draw: the first game, played under the Petroff Defense, saw Deshmukh miss a potential winning opportunity after 50 moves, while the second featured a solid Catalan Opening where neither side could break through.[2] The decisive moment came in the rapid tiebreaks on July 28, conducted at 15 minutes plus a 10-second increment per game. Deshmukh, playing White in the first rapid game, secured a draw, but triumphed in the second as Black after Humpy faltered under time pressure with inaccuracies on moves 40 and 41, allowing Deshmukh to convert the advantage into a win.[19][2] This 1.5-0.5 victory made Deshmukh the first Indian woman to win the Women's World Cup and the youngest champion in its history, earning her $50,000 in prize money and qualification for the 2026 FIDE Women's Candidates Tournament.[19][2][12] The World Cup triumph also awarded Deshmukh the Grandmaster title, a rare direct pathway in chess that bypasses the traditional requirements of three GM norms and a 2500 Elo rating.[19][12] Entering the event without any prior GM norms, she became only the fourth Indian woman to achieve the distinction, following in the footsteps of Koneru Humpy, Harika Dronavalli, and R Vaishali, and the 88th Indian grandmaster overall.[2][12] In a post-match interview, Deshmukh reflected on the surreal achievement: "It’s hard for me to speak now… this is just the start," adding that she viewed the title as "fate" given her unconventional route.[19] Her success elevated her to the top 15 in the FIDE women's rating list and solidified her status as a rising star in Indian chess.[12]Performance record
| Year | Tournament | Score | Placement | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 2022 | Indian National Women's Senior Championship | 8/9 | 1st | Drew first and last rounds; won seven in a row.[6] |
| 2023 | Asian Women's Chess Championship (Almaty, Kazakhstan) | 7.5/9 | 1st | Gold medal ahead of Mary Ann Gomes.[5] |
| 2024 | FIDE World U-20 Girls Championship (Gandhinagar, India) | 10/11 | 1st | Undefeated; final-round win over Beloslava Krasteva.[4] |
| 2024 | 45th Chess Olympiad (Budapest, Hungary) | 9.5/11 | Individual gold (board 3) | Performance rating 2608; contributed to team gold.[7] |
| 2025 | FIDE Women's World Cup (Batumi, Georgia) | Winner | 1st | Defeated Koneru Humpy 1.5–0.5 in rapid tiebreaks after two classical draws; earned GM title.[2] |