Women's day event highlights young chess talents in Prague

On the rest day of the Prague International Chess Festival 2026, organizers hosted a special programme to support women's chess and celebrate the Futures tournament for young female players. Swedish grandmaster Pia Cramling delivered a lecture and simultaneous exhibition, while Czech actress Aňa Geislerová received an introduction to the game from Indian player Divya Deshmukh. The event aimed to inspire and motivate the next generation of female chess players.

The Prague International Chess Festival 2026 featured a dedicated Women's Day on Monday, March 2, at the Grand Hotel Prague Towers and other venues in Prague. This second-year initiative focused on the Futures category, an exclusively female tournament for young talents, with Pia Cramling serving as ambassador.

Cramling began with an expert lecture for Futures participants at the Don Giovanni Hotel. She then conducted a simultaneous exhibition near Vyšehrad against Prague Futures players. Germany's Lilian Schirmbeck was the only one to defeat her, stating, "I was really happy to play against her because I am a big fan of Pia Cramling."

Czech actress Aňa Geislerová, a five-time winner of the Czech Film and Television Academy Awards, attended and learned chess basics from Indian champion Divya Deshmukh, a participant in the Challengers section. Geislerová remarked, "Divya was magical because she thought she could genuinely teach me something. She's incredibly communicative and kind." She added, "I'm here to support this. When you give something a face, you give it weight - and this is exactly the kind of thing that deserves it." Geislerová also addressed broader issues, noting, "Women are reaching places they have never been before in history. On the other hand, that history is also coming back to us in certain ways. The fight for women's rights and equality concerns women in all fields." She highlighted that sport remains an area needing improvement.

Anastasia Sorokina, Chair of the FIDE Commission for Women's Chess, emphasized the importance of such events: "I am very grateful to the organisers of big tournaments like Prague International Chess Festival... for giving the extra opportunity for the girls, for the future stars. But of course it's never enough... Now we have only 10 percent of women among chess players. So it's difficult for girls to prove how strong they are."

Additional activities included an autograph session with Cramling, simultaneous exhibitions by Czech national team players Anna Lhotská and Tereza Rodshtein, and an inspirational seminar by Jeroen van den Berg, director of Tata Steel Chess and founder of the Women in Chess Foundation. The evening concluded with a screening of the award-winning documentary Sofonisba's Chess Game. The event welcomed all interested girls, regardless of skill level, with free public admission to foster growth in women's chess.

مقالات ذات صلة

Realistic photo of World Champion Gukesh D and top grandmasters at the Prague Chess Festival 2026 opening in Prague's Don Giovanni Hotel.
صورة مولدة بواسطة الذكاء الاصطناعي

Prague Chess Festival 2026 opens with strong masters field

من إعداد الذكاء الاصطناعي صورة مولدة بواسطة الذكاء الاصطناعي

The 2026 International Prague Chess Festival has begun in Prague, Czech Republic, featuring top grandmasters in its Masters event. Reigning World Champion GM Gukesh D headlines alongside players like GM Vincent Keymer and GM Nodirbek Abdusattorov. The tournament runs from February 24 to March 6 at the Don Giovanni Hotel.

The Prague International Chess Festival 2026 is underway, featuring elite players in the Masters, Challengers, and Futures sections. World Champion Gukesh D leads the Masters group against strong opponents. Fans can follow the action live on multiple online platforms.

من إعداد الذكاء الاصطناعي

World champion D Gukesh drew with Hans Moke Niemann in the opening round of the Prague International Chess Festival 2026 Masters section. Defending champion Aravindh Chithambaram bounced back with a victory over Niemann in round two. In the Challengers section, Divya Deshmukh held higher-rated opponents to draws in both rounds.

Indian Grandmaster Divya Deshmukh, 19, has been invited to the Norway Chess Women tournament in Oslo, marking her as the youngest participant since its 2024 launch. Following a stellar 2025 season where she won the FIDE Women’s World Cup and earned the GM title, she joins Bibisara Assaubayeva and Anna Muzychuk in the six-player field. The event, set for May 25 to June 5, underscores growing gender equality in elite chess.

من إعداد الذكاء الاصطناعي

Reigning champion Anna Muzychuk will return to the Norway Chess Women tournament in 2026 to defend her title. The Ukrainian grandmaster, a three-time world champion in rapid and blitz chess, aims for a second consecutive victory. The event, held in Oslo, promotes gender equality in professional chess.

Three decisive results highlighted round seven of the Challengers tournament at the Prague International Chess Festival. Vaclav Finek maintained his full-point lead after drawing a marathon endgame against Benjamin Gledura. Daniil Yuffa and Jachym Nemec advanced to joint second place with victories, while Surya Shekhar Ganguly secured his first win of the event.

من إعداد الذكاء الاصطناعي

Chess.com has unveiled an exciting online chess showdown where Grandmaster Judit Polgar will face off against the global community. The match coincides with the Netflix debut of her documentary, Queen of Chess, on February 6. Polgar, a chess legend, will play with the white pieces in a daily game decided by community votes.

 

 

 

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