Koneru Humpy

Koneru Humpy (born 31 March 1987) is an Indian chess player best known for winning the FIDE Women's rapid chess championship in 2019.[1] In 2002, she became the youngest woman ever to achieve the title of Grandmaster (GM) at the age of 15 years, 1 month, 27 days,[2] beating Judit Polgár's previous record by three months[3] (this record was subsequently broken by Hou Yifan in 2008). In October 2007, Humpy became the second female player, after Polgár, to exceed the 2600 Elo rating mark, being rated 2606.[4][5]

Koneru Humpy
Koneru in 2012
CountryIndia
Born (1987-03-31) 31 March 1987 (age 37)
Vijayawada, Andhra Pradesh, India
TitleGrandmaster (2002)
World ChampionWomen's World Rapid Chess Championships (2019)
FIDE rating2546 (April 2024)
Peak rating2623 (July 2009)

Career

Humpy won three gold medals at the World Youth Chess Championship: in 1997 (under-10 girls' division), 1998 (under-12 girls) and 2000 (under-14 girls). In 1999, at the Asian Youth Chess Championship, held in Ahmedabad, she won the under-12 section, competing with the boys.[6] In 2001 Humpy won the World Junior Girls Championship. In the following year's edition, she tied for first place with Zhao Xue, but placed second on tiebreak.[7] She became the eighth ever female Grandmaster in 2002. Humpy competed with the boys in the 2004 World Junior Championship, which was won by Pentala Harikrishna and tied for fifth place, finishing tenth on countback with a score of 8.5/13 points.[8]

Humpy won the British Women's Championship in 2000 and in 2002. In 2003, she won the 10th Asian Women's Individual Championship and the Indian Women's Championship.[9][10] In 2005, she won the North Urals Cup, a round-robin tournament held in Krasnoturyinsk, Russia featuring ten of the strongest female players in the world at the time.[11]

She participated in the Women's World Chess Championship for the first time in 2004 and since then, she has competed in every edition of the event held with the knockout format. Humpy reached the semifinals in 2004, 2008 and 2010.

In 2009, she tied for 1st–4th with Alexander Areshchenko, Magesh Panchanathan and Evgenij Miroshnichenko in the Mumbai Mayor Cup.[12]

In 2009, Humpy accused the All India Chess Federation of preventing her from participating in the 37th Chess Olympiad in Turin.[13][14] Her father Koneru Ashok, who was coaching her, was not allowed to travel with her for tournaments.

Humpy took part in the FIDE Women's Grand Prix 2009–2011 and finished in overall second position, in turn qualifying as challenger for Women's World Chess Championship 2011.[15][16] Hou Yifan won the match, winning three games and drawing five. Humpy finished runner-up in the FIDE Women's Grand Prix series also in the 2011–12, 2013–14, 2015–16 and 2019–21 editions.

She won the individual bronze at the Women's World Team Chess Championship 2015 held in Chengdu, China. Team India finished fourth in the competition – a point behind China, which won the bronze medal.[17]

In 2019, she became women's World Rapid champion after coming back from a two-year maternity sabbatical.[18]

In 2020, Humpy won the BBC Indian Sportswoman of the year award, following a public vote.[19]

Humpy competed at the 2022 Chess Olympiad as part of the women's India team, which achieved a bronze medal.[20]

Personal life

She was originally named "Hampi" by her parents (Koneru Ashok and Koneru Latha[21]) who derived the name from the word "champion". Her father later changed the spelling to Humpy, to more closely resemble a Russian-sounding name.[22][23]

In August 2014 she married Dasari Anvesh.[24] Since 2016 she is working with Oil and Natural Gas Corporation Limited (ONGC).[25]

The President, Dr. A.P.J. Abdul Kalam presenting Padma Shri to Kumari Koneru Humpy (Chess), at an Investiture Ceremony at Rashtrapati Bhavan in New Delhi on 23 March 2007

She gave birth to a baby daughter named Ahana in 2017.[26]

FIDE Women's Grand Prix Titles

S.NoYearDateVenuePoints (Win/draw/loss)Result
120097–19 March 2009Istanbul, Turkey8.5/11 (+7=3-1) Gold
2201030 July – 11 August 2010Ulaanbaatar, Mongolia6.5/11 Bronze
3201123 February – 5 March 2011Doha, Qatar8/11 (+6=4-1) Gold
4201210 June – 21 June 2012Kazan, Russia7.5/11 (+4 =7 –0) Gold
5201216 September – 28 September 2012Ankara, Turkey8.5/11 (+7 =3 –1) Gold
62013June 15 – 29 June 2013Dilijan, Armenia8/11 (+5=6–0) Gold
7201317 September – 1 October 2013Tashkent, Uzbekistan8/11 (+6=4–1) Gold
820152 October – 16 October 2015Monte Carlo, Monaco7/11 Bronze
920161 July – 15 July 2016Chengdu, China7/11 (+5=4-2) Silver
10201910 September – 23 September 2019Skolkovo, Russia8/11 (+5=6-0) Gold
1120192 December – 15 December 2019Monaco7/11 (+4=6-1) Gold - Shared 1st Place
1220231 February – 14 February 2023Munich , Germany7/11 (+3=8-0) Silver

Achievements

Awards

In Wijk aan Zee, 2006

See also

References

External links

Awards and achievements
Preceded by Women's Asian Chess Champion
2003
Succeeded by