By Paritosh Pramanik :
IM ANUP DESHMUKH RECALLS EARLY DAYS OF VIDIT AND DIVYA WHILE COACHING THEM IN CITY
THE careers of two members
of the Indian chess contingent, that won the historic
men and women Chess
Olympiad gold medals at
Budapest on Sunday, were
curated in Nagpur.
One is directly related to
Nagpur while the other has
strengthened his base in the
Orange City under the
‘benevolent’ International
Master Anup Deshmukh.
IM Deshmukh has shaped
many chess careers and
Grand Master Vidit Gujrathi
and city’s Divya Deshmukh
are the ‘two gems of his factory’.
Local lass Divya and
Nashik-born Vidit both have
learnt the tricks of trade
from IM Deshmukh at his
home more than a decade
back.
Vidit has spent several
days in Anup Deshmukh’s
house when he was young
and was aiming to achieve
big in the field of chess. It
was a time when only multiple-time World Champion
Viswanathan Anand was
carrying Indian flag around
the world.
Nagpur’s IM Anup
Deshmukh decided to produce many more players
like Vishy Anand and took
VRS from his LIC job to
train budding chess players.
Today, his efforts are bearing fruits.
Vidit Gujrathi once had
thanked Deshmukh for
shaping his career.
“Anup sir has played a big
role in my life. I remember
when I was 10 years old, I
had gone to Nagpur and
trained with him. Those
were some extremely valuable chess lessons. His passion for the game was
immense. He would (be)
completely immersed in the
game while teaching me.
This naturally made a big
impact on me as a chess
player. He helped me win
the Under-11 national title. I
remember that it was not
just me, but also many players from my generation who
benefited from his training
and went on to become
strong players -- GM Abhijit
Gupta and GM Swapnil
Dhopade to name a couple
of them.
“Anup sir would not
charge fees and also take
care of the expenses of the
students who would come
to his place. He is such a
benevolent man. No words
can do justice to what he
has contributed towards the
chess fraternity. I am
immensely grateful,” Vidit
had once wrote on social
media.
The same words of gratitude were spoken by Divya.
“IM Anup Deshmukh sir
helped me to give a good
foundation and overall
understanding of chess in
my early chess career. He
guided me in the year 2012
along with Rahul Joshi sir.
He used to motivate me a
lot and would always tell me
to aim higher. I am really
indebted and grateful to
him for his and Deshmukh
Madam’s support and
encouragement,” Divya had
penned the special praise a
few years back.
The joy was palpable
when ‘The Hitavada’ contacted IM Deshmukh for his
views on two of his products
winning maiden gold
medals at Chess Olympiad.
“It’sabig achievement, I
am really proud of both of
them. They deserved it.
They can achieve much
more,” said IM Deshmukh
from Ahmedabad where he
is appointed as the head
coach by Gujarat
Government on a one-year
contract.
A down-to-earth coach
Deshmukh was reluctant to
take any credit of both the
players winning the medal
and said, “They were with
me very briefly and I am
sure they have learnt a lot
from many other coaches.
“I did nothing. It’s their
hard work. There are many
coaches who have coached
them,” replied Deshmukh.
“It was way back in 2004
when I persuaded Vidit to
play one more round and
then quit in a national tournament. I still remember
when Vidit was in Nagpur
for the Under-11 nationals
and had lost a couple of
rounds and wanted to quit.
“His mother asked me to
encourage him. I told him,
‘look Vidit there are no tickets for Nashik so play one
round and till then we can
arrange the tickets.’
He won
the next match and then,
again I requested him to
play another round that
now he had won one match.
He continued his winning
streak and I kept on encouraging him to play another
round. As luck would have
it, Vidit claimed the U-11
national chess title,”
recalled Deshmukh about
his ward who hated to lose.
“Vidit never wanted to
lose. He used to get very
upset after defeat. I used to
try to calm his mind and
make him understand that
sports is about winning and
losing. Slowly he started
accepting the defeats but
was determined not to commit the same mistakes,” IM
Deshmukh narrated.
Vidit’s stay at IM
Deshmukh’s home was not
very long. “He used to come
at my place for a week or so
and then return. Then after
a few months he used to
come again with his mother.
It was a stop-start-stop
training. But we used to stay
connected over the phone.
He was really a hard worker
and never used short-cut,
same was with Divya,” said
Deshmukh as the talk
moved towards Nagpur’s
only Woman Grandmaster
and International Master.
“Divya has been very talented since she was 4-5
years old. I still remember
she used to train for 4-5
hours daily. She was very
stubborn and never wanted
to lose. The best part of
Divya was that she had a
great grasping power. She
was a very fast learner (and
still is). Any new move
taught, she used to remember it immediately. She is a
talented player and will win
many more accolades in
coming years,” wished
Deshmukh.