The Rai Sahab Council for Sports and Education held chess championships in 2024 and 2025, attracting a diverse mix of young and experienced players. Participation increased significantly by 2025, with deeper institutional and family involvement. These events are establishing a strong grassroots foundation for chess in India.
Over the past two years, the Rai Sahab Council for Sports and Education’s chess championships in 2024 and 2025 have demonstrated a positive shift in India’s local chess scene. Both editions were thoughtfully organised, providing a structured platform for emerging and rated players. The diversity of participants stood out, including school students, independent competitors, and experienced rated players from multiple districts. They competed under recognised formats with fair pairing systems and a disciplined tournament environment.
In 2024, the mix of young aspirants and seasoned participants created a healthy competitive ecosystem. For many younger players, this was their first exposure to a formal tournament setting. Trophies and certificates served more than symbolic purposes, strengthening profiles and opening doors to district, state, and national-level opportunities.
By 2025, growth was evident. Participation increased, institutional engagement deepened, and families showed stronger involvement. Tournament operations expanded in scale, reflecting rising credibility and awareness. Scheduling was smooth, match flow organised, and the overall experience structured and professional, building trust over time.
These events also provided meaningful visibility within the regional sporting ecosystem, with consistent footfall, engaged audiences, and well-managed branding opportunities for supporting partners.
Beyond logistics, the championships emphasise the importance of grassroots tournaments as a young player’s first serious step into competitive chess. They offer exposure, discipline, and confidence, reassuring players and families of a credible system.
With two successful editions and rising participation trends, the Rai Sahab Council’s championships are becoming a reliable fixture on the regional chess calendar. India’s rise as a global chess powerhouse relies on such quiet, consistent grassroots efforts.
Capt Dhaval Sachdeva (Retd), the Director of the Council, expressed confidence in this shift, expecting a huge turnout for the third edition in May 2026. “If we want sustained excellence, we must continue strengthening those foundations. Because every grandmaster once began at a well-organised local board,” he added.