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It would have been a disappointment for many if we didn’t win a medal: Harika
The Hindu
She helped India take the historic bronze in late stage of pregnancy
Ever since she made her Olympiad debut, way back in 2004, Dronavalli Harika wanted to be part of an Indian women’s team that climbed the podium. When she had the best chance of realising that dream, she wasn’t going to miss it — even if that meant being taken to the labour room straight from the tournament hall.
It didn’t quite come to that, though there was a time she felt that could well be the case. It turned out to be a false pain.
That pain soon made way for joy: India won the bronze medal — for the first time in history — at the Women’s Chess Olympiad at Mamallapuram on Tuesday. True, the team was hoping to take the gold and was well poised for that, until it lost on the final day to the United States.
“Yes, it is disappointing that we could not win the gold after coming so well and performing consistently throughout the tournament, but winning the bronze is also a great achievement, I feel,” Harika told The Hindu.
“This is my ninth Olympiad in a row — I don’t think any other Indian woman has played as many — and an Olympiad team medal is something I desperately wanted all these years.”
She was determined to play the Olympiad despite the late stage of her pregnancy. “I could not have played if it was held outside India,” she said. (It had been allotted to Russia, but moved to Chennai after that country invaded Ukraine).
“My doctor, Srilatha Gorthi, gave me the confidence that I could play,” Harika said. “And I am so glad that I played.”