Olympiad gold-medallist Vantika aims for Grandmaster title
Hailing from Noida in Uttar Pradesh, she had little chess infrastructure to motivate her to pursue the sport.
PTI
-
Vantika knows that and is trying her best to give her mother a present for her sacrifices by becoming a GM.PHOTO:PTI
London, 12 Oct
Chess
Olympiad gold-medallist Vantika Agrawal is someone who has learnt the sport the
hard way.
Hailing
from Noida in Uttar Pradesh, she had little chess infrastructure to motivate
her to pursue the sport.
However,
her determined mother, who wanted her children to excel in whatever they
pursued, supported Vantika in overcoming numerous challenges and making a mark
in a sport dominated by players from South India.
Vantika
finally helped India achieve its biggest glory in team chess by winning the
first-ever Olympiad gold in Budapest recently.
Vantika,
21, is now aiming to become a Grandmaster, which could happen as early as next
year.
But she
knows the challenges that lie ahead -- the least being the countless
tournaments she will have to play across the world and the monetary burden it
will put on her parents.
"It
has not at all been easy reaching this level, because the culture here (in
north India) is all about excelling in academics, and if you want to play chess
or any other sport, you need to devote extra time to that,” said Vantika, who
is a brand ambassador of the ongoing Tech Mahindra Global Chess League here.
“I remember
that even in school while they were supporting me, nobody really knew about
chess. So, when I used to go and tell them about my achievements, they were
completely uninterested... I mean, even in Shri Ram College of Commerce, where
I completed my B.Com (Hons), they still don't know that I have won the Olympiad
gold,” says Vantika, whose mother quit her job with a leading multinational to
be with her daughter as she pursued success in the sport.
For
Vantika, the Hangzhou Asian Games women’s team silver medallist last year,
chess started out of curiosity to explore more sport after she had dabbled a
bit in arts, music, dance, karate and a lot of other things during ‘zero’
period in school.
"I
joined karate classes and did a bit of Bharatnatyam, learnt music and vocals. I
was seven-and-a-half years old when I developed a liking for chess. I think the
first tournament I played I won some prize money. I think prizes, to some
extent, became a motivation to continue playing chess.
But with
coaches hard to come by, she spent 5-6 hours online every day to learn the
finer nuances of the game. Luckily, she got a coach in Manish Uniyal, who was
willing to invest his time.
“I think, I
won the Asian Championship U9 title in Delhi in 2011. I kept playing ‘Open’
tournaments all over India, travelling with my mother to every single state...
Odisha, Maharashtra, Mumbai, everywhere.”
Even as she
continued to pursue the sport, there was no way Vantika was willing to
compromise on her academics.
“I used to
play a tournament, come back and the next day, I used to have some exam or
something. I remember giving 2-3 unit tests on a single day,” she recalled.
Balancing
chess with academics continued for a good 10 years and she excelled in both,
winning several national titles and also scoring big in school and college.
“I remember
my first medal, a silver in the U11 Nationals. I achieved my first
international success by winning the U14 world championship bronze in 2016.”
While the
Covid-19 pandemic brought with it several challenges, Vantika got plenty of
time at her Noida residence to sharpen her skills. Soon, she went on to win the
mixed team gold in the 2020 Online Chess Olympiad.
A
consistent show at the Olympiad in Budapest recently added another feather to
Vantika’s cap when she along with Divya Deshmukh played a pivotal role in
guiding India to the gold medal at a time when stalwarts like R Vaishali were
struggling.
The
Olympiad success achieved, Vantika is now completely focused on becoming a
Grandmaster.
“So, from
2022 till now, I have competed in 28 Open events to earn rating points to
become a GM. I’ve been living out of the suitcase. Every month, I am travelling
to some place or the other,” says Vantika.
“You start
getting fatigued... "Playing one tournament after another, while also
arranging the finances, is a challenge in itself," says Vantika’s mother
Sangeeta.
But she is
willing to invest in her child’s future knowing that Vantika has the potential
to make it big.
“An online
coaching class with a foreign grandmaster costs Rs 10,000 an hour. So, if she
does 10 hours of coaching every month, it comes to Rs one lakh. But we are not
thinking about money right now. We are just trying to focus on her, make her a
better player.
More than
the expenses, it’s the travel and the challenges to keep her child motivated in
a lonely world of chess, which continuously weigh on Vantika’s mother’s mind.
Vantika
knows that and is trying her best to give her mother a present for her
sacrifices by becoming a GM.
“I think if
I keep trying my best, I can even make it (become a GM) by next year. Divya
Deshmukh is pretty close to becoming a grandmaster. But, yeah, I will also keep
trying and see how things go,” Vantika signed off. -PTI
Leave a Reply
Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *