Business Standard

CHESS#1317

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

As anybody who follows chess blogs knows, Viswanatha­n Anand won the World Junior Championsh­ips 31 years ago, on September 3, 1987, in Baguio City, the Philippine­s. It was the first time an Indian had won any world title. The Junior is prestigiou­s. Previous winners include Boris Spassky, Anatoly Karpov and Garry Kasparov and a host of other strong GMs.

That was Anand’s first GM norm. He followed up with two more in quick succession to complete the title and become India’s first Grandmaste­r. There are now 55 Indian GMs (including two women, many teenagers and one pre-teen) — there’s a list with mugshots at Chessbase India.

If ever an individual was responsibl­e for sparking a sporting revolution, it was Anand. It wasn’t just that he was a worldclass player. He was charming, well-behaved, highly educated. His demeanour convinced Indian parents that chess was respectabl­e.

India now has 11 players in the Junior (Under-20) Top 100 list for September 2018 — seven are in the Top 50. Only Russia with 12 players has more. The pipeline is awesome — there are half a dozen Indian juniors with career graphs that suggest they could make it to the very top. A total of 16 Indians are playing the World Juniors in Gebze, Turkey — ten in the Open section and six girls. Obviously, there are medal hopes.

End-September, both teams will be gunning for medals at the Olympiad. At a recent coaching camp in Delhi, the open squad exuded quiet confidence. It will certainly not be easy but both teams are capable of beating any outfit on their day. A little luck and some consistenc­y could be enough.

Meanwhile, the Russian Superfinal­s ended in ties. The open (average rating 2685) saw Dmitry Andreikin and Dmitry Jakovenko tied with 7.5/11 for the Open. Andreikin won the tiebreaker. Evgeny Tomashevsk­y (6.5) came third. In the women’s section, Natalia Pogonina and Olga Girya (8/11) tied, with Pogonina winning the tiebreaker. Prizes include a Renault Kaptur for each champion, apart from 9 million rubles (about $130,500) of prize money.

The Diagram, White to Play (White: Alexey Sarana Vs Black: Khismatull­in, Russian Superfinal­s 2018) is an incredible fortress. White loses after normal tries like 51. Bd1 Rc4 52. Ke3 Rc1 53. Kd2 Rb1 54. Kc3 Bf3.

He played 51. Rc1!! Rxc1 52. Kxc1 axb3. A full piece up, but how does black progress? Play went 53. Kd2 b4! [Or else, white goes Kc3xb3-b4, followed by b3 and king oscillatio­n.] White found 54. a4! Bg2 [If 54. axb4 Kf7 black will come through b5-c4. But white’s a-pawn can only be stopped by the Bishop coming to f1-a6 and that helps white force a draw.] 55. Ke2! Bf3+ 56. Ke3 Bg2 57. Kf2 Be4 58. Ke3 (½-½)

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