R. Vaishali is the latest to rise with a Grandmaster title. Chess in India has come a long way since Viswanathan Anand arrived on the scene during the early eighties. A sport that hardly passed muster for long became a hot topic once this genius began to make wonders on the chess board. As Pravin Thipsay, India’s first Commonwealth Chess champion, was to tell a newspaper sometime back in the seventies, the interest of an Indian player was to gain points more than winning an event. It was only around this time that an international tournament came to India for the first time, and more followed, giving the opportunity for the Indians to interact with foreign players and watch their moves closer and learn. Much has happened since, and the man who galvanised it all was none other than Anand, who himself began his journey when just 6 years old and slowly but surely rose to enviable heights as the seasons passed by. The five-time world champion-tag holder, nothing more need be said of his greatness, but what he has done for Indian chess is just unbelievable.

Anand was the first Grand Master from India, and that came in 1988. A year before, he became the first Asian to be crowned World Junior Champion. We are in 2023, and with the latest success by Vaishali, India now has 84 Grand Masters and lies fifth in the world in terms of the number of GMs in the country! She is only the third woman in India to get this coveted title after Koneru Hampi and Harika Dronavalli, and this success comes after a gap of 12 years. Why this is significant is that Vaishali’s younger brother R. Praggnanandhaa, or Pragg as he is popularly known, is already a GM, and it is the first time that the sport is seeing a brother-sister GM combination! Not only that, both these players have qualified for the respective Candidates’ tournament, which is the qualifying event for the World Championship, and that is another first for these chess siblings. How much joy this must have brought for this family of prodigies from Chennai!

It is said their father, Rameshbabu, a Bank Manager and a chess lover, had introduced the children to the sport to wean them away from too much TV-watching. Not before long, the kids were up to the challenges the new sport threw up, and then the next step was to channel their talent through a chess academy. Like Anand did, they too grew up with each win pushing up their passion for chess. Indeed, both Vaishali and Pragg’s careers have been nothing short of spectacular thus far. Bronze in the Olympiad and silver in the Asian games are some of the high points in their medals tally overall as they continue their relentless march. Fine-tuned by R.B. Ramesh, a GM himself, the two have also done their coach proud even as they continue to rewrite history.

Vaishali’s first big move came last month when she beat three former World champions to win the Women’s Grand Swiss tournament held at the Isle of Man, and that enabled her to qualify for the women’s candidates’ tournament. Then a few days ago, this strong-willed girl showed her prowess with two consecutive victories in the El Llobregat Open tournament in Spain that saw her sail past the 2500-mark ELO rating to earn the GM title. These were her early goals when chess had become a serious subject of interest for her, and nothing could hide the sense of achievement on her face after gaining both the Candidates entry and GM status. Considering that she had earned her first GM norm in 2019 and the second in 2022 before taking the third this year in October, it was some wait but a wait worth it as she was to exclaim, looking back.

If Anand’s pursuit of excellence was much of his own work, the Chennai siblings Vaishali and Pragg are healthy rivals in their own way within the family that helped both to gain strength in their chosen sport. What more remarkable can the story be? With father Rameshbabu lending his help in arranging travels and mother Nagalakshmi the one to oversee and accompany the children all over, this is a chess family that does the pursuit of excellence jointly! After winning tournaments here and there, nationally and internationally, the two have now reached the stage where they are ready for the biggest tournament together!

Vaishali and Pragg have thus come into that special list of super siblings in Indian sport. The others which come to mind immediately are cricketers Irfan and Yusuf Pathan, Vijay Amritraj and Anand Amritraj in tennis, Mohinder and Surinder Amarnath again in cricket, P K Banerjee and Prasun Banerjee in football and yes hockey legend Dhyan Chand and brother Roop Singh. Where the two will place themselves in this group based on achievements only time will tell, but optimism is high considering the way they have been progressing. Both are ambitious and have been working hard. Vaishali had played a big role in India winning the bronze medal in the chess Olympiad in Chennai (Mammalapuram), where she had also won an individual bronze. In April next year, Vaishali will be off to Canada for the Candidates, and that will be a big moment to look forward to. The confidence she has gained in becoming the GM will be on show there, and hopefully, she will come up with another outstanding feat!

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R. Vaishali, a Grandmaster out to make it big

5 1
06.12.2023

R. Vaishali is the latest to rise with a Grandmaster title. Chess in India has come a long way since Viswanathan Anand arrived on the scene during the early eighties. A sport that hardly passed muster for long became a hot topic once this genius began to make wonders on the chess board. As Pravin Thipsay, India’s first Commonwealth Chess champion, was to tell a newspaper sometime back in the seventies, the interest of an Indian player was to gain points more than winning an event. It was only around this time that an international tournament came to India for the first time, and more followed, giving the opportunity for the Indians to interact with foreign players and watch their moves closer and learn. Much has happened since, and the man who galvanised it all was none other than Anand, who himself began his journey when just 6 years old and slowly but surely rose to enviable heights as the seasons passed by. The five-time world champion-tag holder, nothing more need be said of his greatness, but what he has done for Indian chess is just unbelievable.

Anand was the first Grand Master from India, and that came in 1988. A year before, he became the first Asian to be crowned World Junior Champion. We are in 2023, and with the latest success by Vaishali, India now has 84 Grand Masters and lies fifth in the world in terms of the number of GMs in the country! She is only the third woman in........

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