The 2026 European Women's Championship was won by a young player whom hardly anyone had expected to contend for the title: Anastasiia Hnatyshyn. The 15-year-old from Ukraine, who turns 16 on 12 June, was only 76th on the starting list among 165 participants, based on her rating. However, she began the tournament with six wins, defeating several women grandmasters (WGMs) along the way. Among her opponents, Latvia's Mai Narva had the highest rating, at 2426, more than 200 points above Hnatyshyn's own rating of 2207.

Photo: European Chess Union
In round seven, Anastasiia Hnatyshyn suffered a defeat against Meri Arabidze, but she recovered well and scored three points in the final four rounds, with two wins and two draws, which was enough for outright tournament victory. Hnatyshyn was the only player to finish on 9 points, with an exceptional performance rating of 2580.

Photo: European Chess Union
In the next rating list, Hnatyshyn will be listed with a gain of 215 points. In the women's live world rankings, Hnatyshyn climbed 216 places thanks to her performance, and now occupies the 17th place. In the girls' ranking (for women players under the age of 20), the 15-year-old displaced Russia's Anna Shukhman, who is two years older, from first place. In the Ukrainian women's ranking, Hnatyshyn now stands second, behind Anna Muzychuk.
It is an extraordinary success, especially given the difficult conditions in which the young Ukrainian and her family have to live in their home country.
Anastasiia Yurievna Hnatyshyn was born on 12 June 2010 in Lviv. The city lies some distance from the border with Russia, but even there a Russian missile can strike at any time and destroy the lives of people nearby, as has already happened on many occasions.
Although her apparent surge in performance may come as a surprise, it did not come from nowhere. The first tournament in which Hnatyshyn's name appears took place in Ukraine in 2017, when she was seven years old. Two years later, she won the silver medal at the European Under-10 Girls' Championship, behind Anna Shukhman. In 2022, she became world champion in rapid chess and blitz chess among girls under 12.

Photo: Sport.ua
In 2025, she won the European Under-16 Girls' Rapid and Blitz Championships. She has also won numerous medals in competitions in Ukraine. Hnatyshyn finished third in the 2024 Ukrainian Women's Championship. In 2025, she became Ukrainian national champion in rapid and blitz chess among girls under 20.
In a qualifying tournament for the selection of the women's team for the Chess Olympiad, Hnatyshyn finished second, thereby qualifying for the team, and will represent her country at the upcoming Chess Olympiad in Uzbekistan. At the tournament in Uzhhorod, she defeated, among others, former national team players Inna Gaponenko and Natalia Zhukova.
At the Mitropa Cup in St. Veit an der Glan in mid-May 2026, Hnatyshyn was already part of the Ukrainian team in the women's competition and contributed 5 points from 7 games to Ukraine's gold-medal finish. Overall, Hnatyshyn has taken part in no fewer than 185 over-the-board tournaments over the course of her nine-year tournament career. In addition, she has played numerous online blitz tournaments.

Photo: Sport.ua
Anastasiia Hnatyshyn comes from a chess-loving family and has five brothers and one sister. Almost all of them play chess. She learned to play at the age of five from her father. Since she was immediately enthusiastic about the game, she received lessons from coach Anton Romashov. Viktor Zhelyadinov and Martyn Kravtsiv then took over her training. She is currently coached by Volodymyr Grabinsky and Adrian Mikhalchishin.
A new course by Mikhalchisin:
The two earlier volumes:
Anastasiia Hnatyshyn has also taken part for five years in courses run by the Kasparov Chess Academy, either online or at seminars held in Zagreb and Vienna.
Chess, however, is not everything in the life of the young Ukrainian. Alongside chess, Hnatyshyn practises fly yoga, is generally keen on sport and closely follows the successes of Ukrainian athletes at the Olympic Games, both in summer and especially in winter. She also appears to have a liking for high-risk sports and would like to try parachuting one day. She is also interested in music and likes sewing.
In Anastasiia Hnatyshyn, Ukraine, a nation of 40 million people, has once again produced a player with the potential to reach the world elite from what appears to be its deep reservoir of chess talent. Other countries find this feat considerably more difficult.
Two games from the European Championship:
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