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Gukesh beats Gujrathi to regain joint lead

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TORONTO: India’s D Gukesh bounced back with a finely crafted game to outwit compatriot Vidit Gujrathi and regain his joint lead with Ian Nepomniach­tchi of Russia after the eighth round of the Candidates chess tournament here.

On a day when R Praggnanan­dhaa played out a draw with Firouza Alireza of France, Hikaru Nakamura sealed his supremacy in the all-American duel against Fabiano Caruana to come back in to reckoning for top honours.

Overnight sole leader Nepomniach­tchi faltered in the early stages to allow tail ender Nijat Abasov to get away with an easy draw in the other game of the eight-player double round-robin event.

With six rounds still to come, Gukesh and Nepomniach­tchi have 5 points apiece and they are followed by Nakamura and Praggnanan­dhaa on 4.5 points each.

Caruana is now sole fifth on four points. Gujrathi on 3.5 comes in next ahead of Alireza on three points, while Abasov is still at the rear of the tables on 2.5 points.

Gukesh had his task cut out and went for a rare variation wherein he surprised Gujrathi as early as on move four. Gujrathi sank into a long thought and ended up losing around twenty minutes on the clock. In the next few moves Gukesh equalized without much ado even as Gujrathi tried to make some headways on both flanks.

In the middle game, Gukesh seized control of the only open file and used his queen and rook for an absolute domination to penetrate. Vidit tried hard to resist but the pressure was quite unforgivin­g especially when he had less time. The die was cast when Gukesh entered the eighth rank and it was a picturesqu­e finish as white’s king was taken for a walk before the checkmate became inevitable. The game lasted 38 moves.

“These kind of clean games are rare at this level, in the opening he did some inaacuraci­es and his position was unpleasant, I was in control, it was a nice game,” Gukesh said when asked if he was surprised how he won as black without much counterpla­y.

Praggnanan­dhaa could not achieve much with his white pieces. Alireza employed the Sicilian Taimanov and the Indian went for another variation that has not been tested very regularly at the top level.

However, for once, Alireza found the going easy and equalized without many problems, thanks to some timely breakthrou­ghs on the queen side.

The players reached an equal endgame soon after the Queens got traded on the 30th move the result was never in doubt. The draw was agreed to ten moves later.

Hikaru Nakamura stole the thunder and has clearly been a nemesis for world number two Caruana in the key encounters especially when the former had white pieces.

It had started in Norway chess tournament when Nakamura defeated Caruana in the last round to win and the trend had continued in the FIDE’s Grand Swiss where he again won in the final round as white.

In the eighth round game, Nakamura, one point away from leaderboar­d, took his chances in the closed Ruy Lopez and was duly rewarded as Caruana went for some unwarrante­d complicati­ons after getting a level position in the middle game.

 ?? ?? D Gukesh during press conference after beating Vidit Gujrathi
D Gukesh during press conference after beating Vidit Gujrathi
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