Agrawal Vantika – Chessdom https://www.chessdom.com Chess, chess news, live chess games Thu, 08 May 2025 23:32:33 +0000 en-US hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=6.8.1 Asian Women Chess Championship 2025 LIVE https://www.chessdom.com/asian-women-chess-championship-2025/ Wed, 07 May 2025 13:33:53 +0000 https://www.chessdom.com/?p=99109 The Asian Individual Women Chess Championship 2025 is taking place 7-15 May in Al Ain, UAE. The event features IM Leya Garifullina, GM Valentina Gunina, GM Olga Girya, IM Yuxin Song, IM Le Thao Nguyen Pham, IM Medina Warda Aulia, IM Agrawal Vantika, IM Gulrukhbegim Tokhirjonova, WGM P V Nandhidhaa, IM Munguntuul Batkhuyag, IM Rout Padmini, IM Meruert Kamalidenova, WIM Amina Kairbekova, WIM Afruza Khamdamova, WGM Mobina Alinasab, WGM Alua Nurman. The top 10 in the Open section and the top 2 in the Women’s section will qualify for their respective FIDE World Cups. Live games will be daily on Chessdom (Open section live here)

]]>
Chess Olympiad 2024 revisited – 300 million stories https://www.chessdom.com/chess-olympiad-2024-revisited-300-million-stories/ Thu, 03 Oct 2024 23:49:58 +0000 https://www.chessdom.com/?p=94360 By Vlad Ghita


If each heartbeat within the confines of the playing hall tells a story, then we have 300 million stories to tell about the Chess Olympiad 2024. This is my personal account, following 12 days of intense competition, lore-building chess action at the BOK Sports Hall in Budapest, Hungary. It will differ markedly from what others have experienced, but maybe it will provide you with a glimpse into what such a competition entails from this side of the fence. My role at the Olympiad was to chase interesting storylines and speak with players, arbiters, and organizers. I am grateful to Chessdom for trusting me with this task, especially since I am more of a newcomer on the stage, and to my colleagues, with whom I have had many eye-opening exchanges during the Olympiad.

At roughly around 12:30 pm each day, I would meet arbiters at their hotel for lunch. Then we would take either the Metro or shuttle bus to the venue, and enter the building from separate entrances. Quickly catching up with my colleagues in the media room before fancily donning the media accreditation was a daily ritual between 13:30 and 14:00. Media was allowed access within the playing hall strictly from 14:00 until 25 minutes after the round had effectively started. On some days, that start was 15:00 sharp, while on others, the round started between 15:05 and 15:15. Circling around the tables for those precious 25 minutes at the beginning of each round, trying to scour the playing hall for some favorites, was always going to be a challenge on the main floor with nearly 2000 people. Then, once that interval expired, it was time to return to the media room, grab some snacks and drinks, and start writing, mostly Twitter updates. The rush hour was between 18:30 and 19:30 each day, with reporters stepping on each other’s toes to get exclusive interviews in the Mixed Zone. Our work day ended around 20:30 on average, with hangouts that extended into the next day being quite common.

Final standings open: India gold, USA Silver, Uzbekistan bronze (complete standings)

Final standings women: India gold, Kazakhstan Silver, USA bronze at the Women Chess Olympiad 2024 (complete standings)

Gaprindashvili cup: India wins ahead of USA and Armenia (final standings)

Top performer: Gukesh D with 3056 TPR

Then, there was the Olympiad itself! To say that Gukesh D has already cemented his legacy at only 18 years of age with a scintillating 3050 performance rating would be underselling the level of dominance displayed by the young Indian team. Decades after Vishy Anand – the Tiger of Madras – had first announced his arrival on the world stage, we have the Cubs of Chennai leading the charge. There are no signs of stopping with this Indian team, and their level of talent is unprecedented. While other teams could have treated the last round against Slovenia casually, having ensured team gold with a round to spare, the ruthless lineup of Gukesh D, Praggnanandhaa, Arjun Erigaisi, Vidit went all-out and demolished the surprising Slovenian squad by a 3.5-0.5 margin. It was the perfect preview of what chess is going to look like in the next decade. Gukesh D starts as a heavy favorite in his World Championship match against Ding Liren, and most pundits expect him to win the match handily during the classical portion. That Team USA and Uzbekistan managed to secure the silver and bronze medals was hardly surprising, given the abundance of talent on both squads.

World Chess Championship info: World Chess Championship 2024 will be in Singapore / World Chess Championship 2024 is sponsored by Google / Tickets for the World Championship

In the other section, there’s the casual and unassuming brilliancy of the Indian women’s squad. Anchored by the fast-climbing Divya Deshmukh, who has just crossed 2500 on the live ratings list, India swept thru the field for the first 7 rounds, only to stumble against Poland in Round 8 and avoid disaster in the next round against USA. They righted the ship towards the end, and clinched the gold medals that were unattainable in Chennai 2022. Kudos to their entire squad, led by the experienced coach Abhijit Kunte to a deserved overall win. I watched the team’s mannerisms closely to understand where leadership originates from. While Vantika and Harika look fully focused and rarely stroll around to take a look at their teammates’ boards, Divya would sometimes lean back far in her chair, tilt her head upwards, and scan the boards with a quiet confidence. I expect her to be a mainstay at the top for at least a decade from now onwards.

Board medals: Gold for Zhu Jiner, Carissa Yip, Diviya Deshmukh, Agrawal Vantika, Dana Kochavi

Kazakhstan was one of my personal dark horse candidates for a medal and I wrote about it in one of the tournament previews. Missing two of its strongest players, Zhansaya Abdumalik and Dinara Saduakassova, but backed by strong government and private support led by Timur Turlov, the nation from Central Asia was even in contention for gold until the very last minute. What will remain immortalized is the sheer happiness on Xeniya Balabayeva’s face after making the final draw against Irina Krush and clinching silver for her squad. Later during the evening, at the end of the closing ceremony, they did exactly what you would expect a group of teenagers to do. While official photographers were lining up to capture their moment of glory, the girls found a secluded area of the playing hall and shot whimsical videos with the selfie camera on Bibisara Assaubayeva’s phone to be posted and widely reposted on Instagram later.

From team USA, Carissa Yip and Alice Lee are the kind of players who smile at you widely before the round, as captured in the official photos by FIDE, while on the board they turn into silent assassins, squeezing every little inch of the board. With a rare tactical oversight in round 11, it looked as if Alice Lee would lose a crucial encounter to IM-norm-scoring Alua Nurman of Kazakhstan. However, eventually team USA drew the match against Kazakhstan and narrowly eked out in front of Spain for the bronze medals.

Final report: India win double gold at the Olympiad

Still, it wasn’t all roses at the Olympiad. Due to heavy rains all around Central Europe, we had the Danube levels rising dangerously, at some point triggering a red warning within the city of Budapest. While this was just one of the many unusual situations at this year’s Olympiad, it pinpoints the ultimate truth, which is that we are just little pawns in nature’s game. While the Danube issue was widely circulated around social media, some remained a bit more hidden under the surface. For example, the army of volunteers, donning orange shirts, felt at times like the terracotta army in the service of an almighty emperor. In order for things to improve at future Olympiads, a minimum requirement should be fluent knowledge of English, rather than a misguided attempt to enforce dictatorial rule. Journalists should be allowed to do their job, not hounded at every step. This extends even further for security personnel at the venue.

Then, the shuttle service was a disaster. From delegations left without reliable airport transfer, to starting the rounds late because of missing buses at the agreed time, and then the iconic Magnus Carlsen riding a rental bike to the venue, the Local Organizing Committee scores extremely poorly on the logistic aspect. While most bids for a FIDE Olympiad are ranked objectively based on the proximity of official hotels to the playing venue as one of the important criteria, a bigger emphasis should be placed on the availability of appropriate transportation. It would have been far easier, and likely more enjoyable for participants, had they been provided with complimentary 15-day passes on all public transportation that Budapest has to offer. The extensive network of Metro/bus/tram lines is sufficient for all the needs of an Olympiad, and the lack of communication between the organizers and participants was frankly disappointing.

Spectator access was also underwhelming at the venue, and there was a total lack of hype surrounding an event of such magnitude. Sending people up to watch chess from the grandstands of a sports arena was fruitless. Not only were they not allowed to carry any electronic devices up there, but the distance from the players was so extreme, that even binoculars would prove to be insufficient. FIDE’s declared mission is to grow the game in its second century of existence. In order to do that, these little details have to be thought over and well-planned in advance. From picking a suitable playing venue to ensuring an enriching experience for fans who come from all corners of the world to meet their idols, this remains a big task on the shoulders of FIDE Management, together with the local organizers. Personally, I hope to be present in both Tashkent 2026 and Abu Dhabi 2028 in order to track the progress over time.

Chess Olympiad 2026 in Uzbekistan

Overall grade of the entire FIDE Chess Olympiad: B+

Competition: A

Fair-play and anti-cheating: B

Accommodation and food: B

Transportation and logistics: F

Media access: C

Expo and Fan Zone: B

Spectator flow: D

Food and drinks at the venue: C

]]>
Board medals from Women Chess Olympiad 2024 https://www.chessdom.com/board-medals-from-women-chess-olympiad-2024/ Sun, 22 Sep 2024 17:21:28 +0000 https://www.chessdom.com/?p=94010 Zhu Jiner from the young team of China is the board 1 gold medalist of the Women Chess Olympiad 2024. The other gold medalists by board are Carissa Yip, Diviya Deshmukh, Agrawal Vantika, and Dana Kochavi.

Final standings open: India gold, USA Silver, Uzbekistan bronze (complete standings)

Final standings women: India gold, Kazakhstan Silver, USA bronze at the Women Chess Olympiad 2024 (complete standings)

Gaprindashvili cup: India wins ahead of USA and Armenia (final standings)

Top performer: Gukesh D with 3056 TPR

Board 1

Gold: Zhu Jincer
Silver: Sarasadat Khademalsharieh
Bronze: Nana Dzagnidze

Board 2

Gold: Carissa Yip
Silver: Elizabeth Paehtz
Bronze: Yuxin Song

Board 3

Gold: Deshmukh Divya
Silver: Sabrina Vega Gutierrez
Bronze: Elina Danielian

Board 4

Gold: Agrawal Vantika
Silver: Alice Lee
Bronze: Anna Sargsyan

Board 5

Gold: Dana Kochavi
Silver: Nodira Nadirjanova
Bronze: Lu Miaoyi

Board medals from Women Chess Olympiad 2024

Board 1
Rk.NameRtgTeamRp
1GMZhu Jiner2487China2597
2IMKhademalsharieh Sarasadat2468Spain2560
3GMDzagnidze Nana2508Georgia2541
4IMAssaubayeva Bibisara2482Kazakhstan2517
5IMMkrtchian Lilit2366Armenia2507
6IMKashlinskaya Alina2490Poland2503
7IMAtalik Ekaterina2381Turkiye2429
8WGMMunkhzul Turmunkh2256Mongolia2427
GMStefanova Antoaneta2416Bulgaria2427
10GMDronavalli Harika2502India2424
11GMKosteniuk Alexandra2483Switzerland2419
12WIMGaal Zsoka2385Hungary2418
13WGMOuellet Maili-Jade2318Canada2415
14IMInjac Teodora2425Serbia2412
15GMCramling Pia2425Sweden2410
Board 2
Rk.NameRtgTeamRp
1IMYip Carissa2386United States of America2634
2GMPaehtz Elisabeth2455Germany2477
3IMSong Yuxin2373China2467
4GMSocko Monika2422Poland2456
5IMRepkova Eva2319Slovakia2428
6IMHouska Jovanka2333England2407
7IMFataliyeva Ulviyya2378Azerbaijan2404
8IMMilliet Sophie2348France2392
9WGMSandu Mihaela2248Romania2388
10GMVaishali Rameshbabu2498India2385
11GMHoang Thanh Trang2351Hungary2379
12GMUshenina Anna2417Ukraine2370
13GMPeng Zhaoqin2349Netherlands2335
14IMMunguntuul Batkhuyag2346Mongolia2334
15IMSalimova Nurgyul2412Bulgaria2321
Board 3
Rk.NameRtgTeamRp
1IMDivya Deshmukh2483India2608
2IMVega Gutierrez Sabrina2374Spain2505
3GMDanielian Elina2393Armenia2495
4GMBatsiashvili Nino2461Georgia2478
5IMBuksa Nataliya2387Ukraine2471
6WIMBalabayeva Xeniya2335Kazakhstan2431
7IMGuo Qi2367China2422
8WGMBeydullayeva Govhar2395Azerbaijan2417
9WGMRadeva Viktoria2296Bulgaria2378
10FMVan Foreest Machteld2224Netherlands2326
11IMNomin-Erdene Davaademberel2319Mongolia2317
12WIMOmonova Umida2032Uzbekistan2305
13WFMKarimi Setayesh2105Iran2290
14WGMHeinemann Josefine2316Germany2284
15Bederdin Lilja2065Finland2273
Board 4
Rk.NameRtgTeamRp
1IMVantika Agrawal2370India2558
2IMLee Alice2384United States of America2471
3IMSargsyan Anna M.2364Armenia2446
4WIMNurman Alua2324Kazakhstan2425
5WGMNi Shiqun2348China2412
6IMGaponenko Inna2324Ukraine2404
7IMKiolbasa Oliwia2348Poland2345
8GMKhotenashvili Bella2432Georgia2316
9WIMBach Ngoc Thuy Duong2214Vietnam2289
10WIMAydin Gulenay2202Turkiye2287
11WGMKlek Hanna Marie2296Germany2253
12Canino Ruelle2004Philippines2245
13IMMatnadze Bujiashvili Ann2338Spain2244
14WFMGunawardhana Devindya Oshini1956Sri Lanka2230
15WIMLehaci Miruna-Daria2180Romania2224
Board 5
Rk.NameRtgTeamRp
1WFMKochavi Dana2009Israel2676
2WIMNadirjanova Nodira2059Uzbekistan2460
3IMLu Miaoyi2438China2410
4WCMMungunzul Bat-Erdene2224Mongolia2408
5WIMSliwicka Alicja2373Poland2317
6IMLazarne Vajda Szidonia2283Hungary2300
7WFMManko Mariia2159Switzerland2286
8WIMBenmesbah Natacha2258France2227
9WIMHamid Rani1900Bangladesh2200
10WFMGolubeva Oksana2119Canada2181
11WIMSarquis Maria Belen2172Argentina2174
12WGMEric Jovana2162Serbia2131
13WIMHapala Elisabeth2113Austria2111
14WCMBraganza Nadia1890New Zealand2111
15WFMSibajeva Marija2007Lithuania2060
]]>
USA and China stunned in the Women Chess Olympiad 2024 https://www.chessdom.com/usa-and-china-stunned-in-the-women-chess-olympiad-2024/ Sun, 15 Sep 2024 18:17:14 +0000 https://www.chessdom.com/?p=93686 In a dramatic round 5 of the Women Chess Olympiad 2024, two of the top favorites for the gold medals of the competition China and USA – lost their matches.

China lost 2,5-1,5 against the team of Armenia, with IM Lilit Mkrtchian winning with black on board 1. USA managed to draw on three boards, but again the key game was on board 1, where WGM Turmunkh Munkhzul defeated IM Gulrukhbegim Tokhirjonova.

Replay all top games from the Women Chess Olympiad here

That makes India absolute favorites for the title. Despite GM Harika Dronavalli losing to IM Assaubayeva, GM Vaishali and IM Vantika finished the job to keep India undefeated.

This is a flash report from the Olympiad, stay tuned for updates

]]>
Anna Ushenina defeats Nana Dzagnidze in the playoffs to win Tata Steel Chess India Women’s Rapid 2022 https://www.chessdom.com/anna-ushenina-defeats-nana-dzagnidze-in-the-playoffs-to-win-tata-steel-chess-india-womens-rapid-2022/ Thu, 01 Dec 2022 17:21:18 +0000 https://www.chessdom.com/?p=85371 The fourth edition of the Tata Steel Chess India Rapid & Blitz, India’s biggest chess tournament, takes place from November 29 till December 4, 2022, featuring the Women’s event for the first time this year.

Ukrainian grandmaster Anna Ushenina won the Rapid portion of the tournament as she clinched a convincing 2-0 victory against GM Nana Dzagnidze in the playoff match for the first place.

Anna Ushenina wins Tata Steel Chess India Women’s Rapid 2022; Photo by Lennart Ootes

Ushenina scored fantastic 2.5/3 points on the last day to score 6.5/9 points and waited for Nana Dzagnidze’s last-game result. Dzagnidze played against Mariya Muzychuk and needed a victory to claim gold, but it seemed that she had no chances and the game finished in draw. As Dzagnidze and Ushenina had a 2-way tie for the top scoring 6.5 points, each, the playoff match determined the Winner.

Replay all Day 3 games here

Playoffs between Anna Ushenina and Nana Dzagnidze; Photo by Lennar Ootes

Scoring 5.5/9 points, Harika Dronavalli clinched bronze in the tournament, while Mariya Muzychuk, Humpy Koneru, and Vaishali R tied for fourth place trialing by half a point. See the final rankings below

The Tata Steel Chess India 2022 continues tomorrow with the Blitz tournament. Games will be on air from 12:00 (local time). Schedule of all rounds

Tata Steel Chess India Women’s Rapid 2022 – Rankings after 9 played rounds:

.

]]>
Nana Dzagnidze maintains the lead at Tata Steel Chess India Women’s Rapid 2022 https://www.chessdom.com/nana-dzagnidze-maintains-the-lead-at-tata-steel-chess-india-womens-rapid-2022/ Wed, 30 Nov 2022 19:05:00 +0000 https://www.chessdom.com/?p=85346 The fourth edition of the Tata Steel Chess India Rapid & Blitz, India’s biggest chess tournament, takes place from November 29 till December 4, 2022, featuring the Women’s event for the first time this year.

After yesterday’s perfect 3/3, Georgian grandmaster Nana Dzagnidze today scored three draws against GM Anna Ushenina, GM Harika Dronavalli and GM Koneru Humpy. With a score of 4.5 points, Dzagnidze heads to the last day of the rapid event as the sole leader.

Nana Dzagnidze maintains the lead in Tata Steel Chess Women’s Rapid 2022; Photo by Lennar Ootes

GM Koneru Humpy, GM Anna Ushenina, GM Mariya Muzychuk and IM Vaishali R are trailing by half a point and tie for the second place. Three more rounds left to be played and the last day of the rapid tournament opens with the 7th round at 12:00 (local time). Replay all Day 2 games here / Schedule of all rounds

Standings after Day 2:

]]>
Tata Steel Chess India Women’s Rapid & Blitz 2022 – LIVE https://www.chessdom.com/tata-steel-chess-india-womens-rapid-blitz-2022-live/ Wed, 30 Nov 2022 07:34:00 +0000 https://www.chessdom.com/?p=84971 The fourth edition of the Tata Steel Chess India Rapid & Blitz, India’s biggest chess tournament, takes place from November 29 till December 4, 2022. The Tata Steel Chess India 2022 this year has the women’s tournament with the same format – rapid and blitz. Anna Muzychuk and Mariya Muzychuk are the top seeds of the Women’s tournament. Nana Dzagnidze, Anna Ushenina, Oliwia Kiolbasa, Koneru Humpy, Harika Dronavalli, R Vaishali, and Savitha Shri complete the field. Bhakti Kulkarni will take part in blitz tournament only, and Vantika Agarwal will play only the rapid tournament.

Tata Steel Chess India Rapid & Blitz 2022 – All information

The Rapid event is first on the schedule, taking place from 29 November – 1 December in 9 rounds, round-robin system, with time control of 15 minutes for the entire game with an increment of 10 seconds from Move 1. Blitz event will be a double 10-player Round Robin played on December 3 and 4, with 9 rounds per day. The time control is 3 minutes with an increment of 2 seconds from Move 1.

Chessdom will follow the event with daily news and videos and will broadcast the live games of the Tata Steel India Women’s Rapid & Blitz 2022.

]]>
Nana Dzagnidze in the sole lead at Tata Steel Chess India Women’s Rapid 2022 https://www.chessdom.com/nana-dzagnidze-in-the-sole-lead-at-tata-steel-chess-india-womens-rapid-2022/ Tue, 29 Nov 2022 18:53:00 +0000 https://www.chessdom.com/?p=85216 The fourth edition of the Tata Steel Chess India Rapid & Blitz, India’s biggest chess tournament, takes place from November 29 till December 4, 2022, featuring the Women’s event for the first time this year.

After the first day and three played rapid rounds, GM Nana Dzagnidze emerged as the sole leader of the event with the perfect score of 3 points. Dzagnidze defeated WIM Shri Savitha in the first round, scored against IM Vaishali R in the second round, and took victory against the Polish star WIM Oliwia Kiolbasa in the last game of the day one.

Nana Dzagnidze takes early lead; Photo by Lennart Ootes

GM Koneru Humpy, GM Mariya Muzychuk, GM Anna Ushenina and GM Harika Dronavali are trailing by the full point and tie for second place. The next three rapid rounds will be played tomorrow, starting at 12:00 (local time). Replay all Day 1 games here / Schedule of all rounds

Standings after Day 1 – Tata Steel Chess India Women’s Rapid 2022:

]]>
Tata Steel Chess India Rapid & Blitz 2022 starts in Kolkata https://www.chessdom.com/tata-steel-chess-india-rapid-blitz-2022-participants-lists/ Mon, 28 Nov 2022 04:15:00 +0000 https://www.chessdom.com/?p=84956 The fourth edition of the Tata Steel Chess India Rapid & Blitz, India’s biggest chess tournament, will be held from November 29 till December 4, 2022. The Tata Steel Chess India 2022 will this year have the women’s tournament with the same format – rapid and blitz.

The Rapid event will be first on the schedule, taking place from 29 November – 1 December in 9 rounds, round-robin system, with time control of 15 minutes for the entire game with an increment of 10 seconds from Move 1.

Prize Money Rapid (Both Women and Open)`
1st        $ 10.000
2nd       $   5.000
3rd        $   4.000
4th        $   3.000
5th        $   2.000

Blitz event will be a double 10-player Round Robin played on December 3 and 4, with 9 rounds per day. The time control is 3 minutes with an increment of 2 seconds from Move 1.

Prize Money Blitz (Both Women and Open)`
1st        $ 7.500
2nd       $ 4.000
3rd        $ 3.000
4th        $ 2.000
5th        $ 1.000

The very strong line-up features world-class grandmasters and Indian chess stars. Wesley So headlines the Open tournament, together with Hikaru Nakamura, Shakhriyar Mamedyarov, Nodirbek Abdusattorov, and Parham Maghsoodloo. Vidit Santosh Gujrathi, Arjun Erigaisi, D Gukesh, and Nihal Sarin complete the field together with Praggnanandhaa who will play only the blitz event and Sethuraman SP who will play only in the rapid tournament. You can follow the live broadcast here.

List of players – Tata Steel India Rapid & Blitz 2022 – Open tournament:

  • Wesley So – USA
  • Hikaru Nakamura – USA 
  • Shakhriyar Mamedyarov – Azerbaijan
  • Nodirbek Abdusattorov – Uzbekistan
  • Parham Maghsoodloo – Iran
  • Vidit Gujarathi – India
  • Arjun Erigaisi – India
  • D Gukesh – India
  • R Praggnanandhaa (only blitz) – India
  • Nihal Sarin – India
  • Sethuraman SP (only rapid) – India

Read more: Wesley So arrives in Kolkata for Tata Steel Chess India Rapid&Blitz 2022

Tata Steel Chess India 2021 – Photo by Lennart Ootes

Anna Muzychuk and Mariya Muzychuk are the top seeds of the Women’s tournament. Nana Dzagnidze, Anna Ushenina, Oliwia Kiolbasa, Koneru Humpy, Harika Dronavalli, R Vaishali, and Savitha Shri complete the field. Bhakti Kulkarni will take part in blitz tournament only, and Vantika Agarwal will play only the rapid tournament. You can follow the live broadcast of the games here.

List of players – Tata Steel India Rapid & Blitz 2022 – Women’s tournament:

  • Anna Muzychuk – Ukraine
  • Mariya Muzychuk – Ukraine
  • Nana Dzagnidze – Georgia
  • Anna Ushenina – Ukraine
  • Oliwia Kiolbasa – Poland
  • Koneru Humpy – India
  • Harika Dronavalli – India
  • R Vaishali – India
  • Bhakti Kulkarni (only blitz) – India
  • Savitha Shri – India
  • Vantika Agarwal (only rapid) – India
Tata Steel Chess India 2021; Photo by Lennart Ootes

Schedule:

November 28, 2022
Opening Ceremony: 17:00
 
WomenOpen
Rapid day 1: November 29, 2022
Rapid round 1: 12:00Rapid round 1: 16:00
Rapid round 2: 13:00Rapid round 2: 17:00
Rapid round 3: 14:00Rapid round 3: 18:00
 
Rapid day 2: November 30, 2022
Rapid round 4: 12:00Rapid round 4: 16:00
Rapid round 5: 13:00Rapid round 5: 17:00
Rapid round 6: 14:00Rapid round 6: 18:00
 
Rapid day 3: December 1, 2022
Rapid round 7: 12:00Rapid round 7: 16:00
Rapid round 8: 13:00Rapid round 8: 17:00
Rapid round 9: 14:00Rapid round 9: 18:00
  
Blitz Day 1: December 3, 2022
Blitz round 1: 12:00Blitz round 1: 16:00
Blitz round 2: 12:20Blitz round 2: 16:20
Blitz round 3: 12:40Blitz round 3: 16:40
Blitz round 4: 13:00Blitz round 4: 17:00
Blitz round 5: 13.20Blitz round 5: 17:20
Blitz round 6: 13:40Blitz round 6: 17:40
Blitz round 7: 14:00Blitz round 7: 18:00
Blitz round 8: 14:20Blitz round 8: 18:20
Blitz round 9: 14:40Blitz round 9: 18:40
 
Blitz Day 2: December 4, 2022
Blitz round 10: 11:00Blitz round 10: 15:00
Blitz round 11: 11:20Blitz round 11: 15:20
Blitz round 12: 11:40Blitz round 12: 15:40
Blitz round 13: 12:00Blitz round 13: 16:00
Blitz round 14: 12.20Blitz round 14: 16:20
Blitz round 15: 12:40Blitz round 15: 16:40
Blitz round 16: 13:00Blitz round 16: 17:00
Blitz round 17: 13:20Blitz round 17: 17:20
Blitz round 18: 13:40Blitz round 18: 17:40
Tiebreak (If required) : 14:00Tiebreak (If required) : 18:00
Prize Giving Ceremony and Closing: 19:30
]]>
The Asian Women Continental Chess Championship 2022 https://www.chessdom.com/the-asian-women-continental-chess-championship-2022/ Tue, 25 Oct 2022 21:35:12 +0000 https://www.chessdom.com/?p=84274 The Asian Women Continental Chess Championship 2022 is starting this October 26 in New Delhi, India. Tania Sachdev is top seeded in the event, where 48 titled players, 14 WGMs, and 7 IMs are participating. Her main competitors are Davaademberel Nomin-Erdene, Agrawal Vantika, Padmini Rout, Bhakti Kulkarni, Eesha Karavade, Vo Thi Kim Phung, Deshmukh Divya, Soumya Swaminathan, etc. Scroll down for the full participants list

Asian Continental 2022 open participants / Asian Continental 2022 women participants / Live games will be daily on Chessdom.com

The Asian Women Continental Chess Championship 2022 participants

1IMTania SachdevIND2406
2IMNomin-Erdene DavaademberelMGL2404
3WGMVantika AgrawalIND2396
4IMPadmini RoutIND2390
5IMKulkarni BhaktiIND2376
6IMKaravade EeshaIND2336
7WGMVo Thi Kim PhungVIE2335
8WGMDivya DeshmukhIND2330
9IMSoumya SwaminathanIND2326
10WGMPriyanka NutakkiIND2326
11WGMGomes Mary AnnIND2324
12WGMNandhidhaa P VIND2309
13WIMKairbekova AminaKAZ2305
14WGMYakubbaeva NilufarUZB2303
15WIMSharma IshaIND2298
16WGMEnkhtuul Altan-UlziiMGL2295
17WIMArpita MukherjeeIND2293
18WGMNguyen Thi Mai HungVIE2258
19WIMMrudul DehankarIND2256
20WIMChitlange SakshiIND2252
21WGMDauletova GulmiraKAZ2249
22WGMSrija SeshadriIND2248
23WIMCholleti SahajasriIND2246
24WIMRakshitta RaviIND2238
25WIMBalabayeva XeniyaKAZ2220
26WIMSalonika SainaIND2209
27FMKurmangaliyeva LiyaKAZ2199
28WFMPandey SrishtiIND2173
29IMMohota NishaIND2166
30WIMAakanksha HagawaneIND2162
31WIMBommini Mounika AkshayaIND2152
32WFMHarshini AIND2149
33WFMMunkhzul DavaakhuuMGL2143
34WIMParnali S DhariaIND2136
35WGMVarshini VIND2126
36WIMTejaswini SagarIND2112
37WIMMakhija AashnaIND2090
38WGMSwati GhateIND2086
39WFMOvezdurdyyeva JemalTKM2061
40WIMPriyanka KIND2052
41WGMKiran Manisha MohantyIND2030
42Veliyeva HurmaTKM2003
43WFMLakshmi CIND1965
44Ishvi AggarwalIND1964
45WFMZairbek Kyzy BegimaiKGZ1930
46WIMNguyen Thanh Thuy TienVIE1923
47WCMJannatul FerdousBAN1861
48WFMShohradova LalaTKM1856
49WFMLohani SujanaNEP1716
50WIMRanasinghe S DSRI1690
]]>