City
Epaper

India wins two silver medals in team competition at Asian Schools Chess C'ships in Mongolia

By IANS | Updated: November 1, 2025 16:49 IST

Ulaanbaatar (Mongolia), Nov 1 A team comprising young Indian chess prodigies proved its mettle on the international stage ...

Open in App

Ulaanbaatar (Mongolia), Nov 1 A team comprising young Indian chess prodigies proved its mettle on the international stage once again, clinching the silver medal for the country in the Under-7 Rapid Team Category at the prestigious Asian Schools Chess Championship 2025 in Ulaanbaatar, Mongolia.

The Indian Under-7 team, led by Laksh Satyen Jain of Mumbai, and including ACM Kavish Bhattad and Sivansh Naga Aditya Kasukurthy of Pune, delivered a commendable performance and finished with a combined tally of 12 points, ending just behind the Mongolian team, which secured the gold with 16.5 points. The event, which started on October 24 and ended on Friday.

Despite the fierce competition and challenging conditions, the young Indian trio displayed remarkable composure, tactical brilliance, and fighting spirit throughout the event, continuing India’s proud legacy of producing world-class chess champions at a young age. India has had tremendous success in age-group competitions at the Asian and global levels for the last four decades.

“This achievement is a testament to the discipline, consistency, and maturity our young players have shown at such an early age. Competing on an international stage and bringing home a silver medal is a proud moment for India and reflects the strength of our youth chess training programs,” said Durga Nagesh Guttula, Principal & Chief Coach – Chess Division, Russian Centre of Science and Culture, Mumbai.

In the Under-9 Team Category, India secured another silver medal through the team led by AFM Shreyan Thipparthi, Nova Ayer Jugal, and Hriday Garg, reaffirming India’s growing dominance in youth chess across Asia.

This year’s championship witnessed the participation of over 800 players from 16 countries, making it one of the largest and most competitive editions of the Asian Schools Chess Championship. The event was organised under the aegis of the Asian Chess Federation and the Mongolian Chess Federation, in association with the World Chess Federation (FIDE) rules.

The competition was held as a 9-round Swiss system tournament with a time control of 90 min + 30 sec/move.

Disclaimer: This post has been auto-published from an agency feed without any modifications to the text and has not been reviewed by an editor

Open in App

Related Stories

CricketIPL 2026: Kevin Pietersen Snubs Defending Champions RCB as He Picks Top Four Teams, Says...

HealthSummer Diet Tips: Avoid These ‘Heating’ Foods to Stay Cool and Healthy

BusinessJapan sets up special cell to boost FDI flows into India

NationalJapan sets up special cell to boost FDI flows into India

BusinessAlstone Strengthens Its National Presence with Punjab Kings as Official Cladding Partner for India's Premier T20 Cricket League 2026

Other Sports Realted Stories

Other SportsPM Modi hails Sanju as 'success role model'; calls for ‘Samson-style’ comeback in Kerala polls

Other Sports'This is not the end of the world for us': Rahane motivates KKR players after loss against SRH

Other SportsKITG 2026: Karnataka emerge overall champions; hosts Chhattisgarh finish ninth

Other SportsUN expert welcomes IOC's policy to bar transgender athletes from female events

Other Sports'National boards shouldn't decide...': Jaffer questions Green's 'non-bowling' role in IPL