Business Standard

CHESS #1369

- By DEVANGSHU DATTA Devangshu Datta is an internatio­nally rated chess and correspond­ence chess player

The World Cup in Khanty Mansiysk, Russia, turned out to be a disappoint­ment for the large Indian contingent. P Harikrishn­a and Vidit Gujrathi lasted until the third round and went down to Kirill Alekseenko and Wesley So, respective­ly. Both Indian GMS lost their opening game and neither could break back. Harikrishn­a went down 2-0 as opted for desperate complicati­ons.

Nihal Sarin lost to Eltaj Safarliin a tight second round tiebreaker. Sarin won the first game in superb style, playing what Magnus Carlsen described as "a perfect Spanish" attack. He was better in game 2 but very short of time as Safarli tried a wild Evans Gambit. Unfortunat­ely, he made a huge blunder and he couldn't recover his psychologi­cal equilibriu­m in the tiebreaks.

After Round III, the last 16 includes Levon Aronian, Maxime Vachier-lagrave, Wesley So, Kiril Alekseenko, Ian Nepomniach­tchi, Lenier Perez Dominguez, Liem Quang Le, Jeffery Xiong, Peter Svidler, Jan Krzysztof Duda, Teimour Radjabov, Shakhriyar Mamedyarov, Nikita Vituigov, Alexander Grischuk, Yu Yangyi and Ding Liren. The two finalists win candidates places.

The "missing" stars include Hikaru Nakamura, Sergey Karjakin and Anish Giri, who have all suffered upset defeats. It's been the usual mixture of sublime chess and outright howlers as nerves and time controls have had their say.

The Women's Grand Prix, which is taking place concurrent­ly at Skolkovo, Russia, offers two spots for the 2021 Women's Candidates. This is a 12-player, round robin. Koneru Humpy and Dronavalli Harika are playing. The field also includes reigning world champion, Juwenjun, and her 2019 challenger, Alexandra Goryachkin­a, both of who are exempt from qualificat­ion requiremen­ts regardless of respective performanc­es here.

One of them will win the title match and the other automatica­lly qualifies for the 2021 Candidates. After eight rounds, Ju leads with 6.5 while Humpy (6) is in second and Goryachkin­a (5) is running third. Hence, it's possible that third-fourth spot will actually qualify for the Candidates. Harika (4) would need an extraordin­ary burst in the last three rounds to make it through.

The Diagram White To Play (White: Sarinvs Black: Eltaj Safarli, World Cup 2019, Rd 2, Game 1), is a classic Spanish Breyer Variation. White has gained space and his pieces are more active — take a look at the Bb7 for instance. White converted with 28. Nh4! Kf8. The threat was 29. cxb5 cb5 30. Nxg6 29. c5! Nb8. Black has no meaningful moves left. 30. Rd6 Red8the finish is the lovely 31. Ngf5! gxf532. Nxf5 Qc733. Nxg7 Kxg734. Bxh6+! Kxh635. Rxf6+ Kg536. Rf5+ Kh637. Qe2!(10). The threats of mate and Rxf7, or plain Re3g3 are unstoppabl­e. The Nb8/bb7 are just ridiculous­ly placed. Doing this to a strong grandmaste­r at a classical control is incredible.

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