The Indian Express (Delhi Edition)

Long jumper Sreeshanka­r hurts knee, out of Paris Olympics

- Fide/ Michal Walusza EXPRESS NEWS SERVICE

THINK OF Ian Nepomniach­tchi not as a grandmaste­r, but as an escape artist. Time and again at the Candidates tournament in Toronto, he’s found himself in losing positions, like he did against Praggnanan­dhaa in Round 5 and against Alireza Firouzja in Round 9. Time and again, he’s escaped unscathed. On Thursday, Nepomniach­tchi performed his most jawdroppin­gtrickinto­rontoyet,managingto­survive from two losing positions before defeating Vidit Gujrathi after a marathon battle that lasted over five hours.

The victory sent Nepomniach­tchi into sole lead in the open section of the Candidates chess tournament with seven points. Nepomniach­tchi has Gukesh, the 17-year-old, first-timer from India, and 36-year-old Hikaru Nakamura, a two-time Candidates contender, hot on his heels.

Both have half a point less than Nepomniach­tchi with just three more rounds left. Gukesh played out a draw against World No.2 Fabiano Caruana with white pieces while the third Indian in the open competitio­n, Praggnanan­dhaa, lost to World No.3 Nakamura, a result that sees him 1.5 points off the pace.

The scenario could have been a lot different had the chips fallen differentl­y in the Round 11 game against Vidit. Had the Indian managed to defeat Nepo, Gukesh and Nakamura would have been joint leaders. Had he managed to draw with the Russian, there would have been three joint leaders heading into Round 12.

When the end came, five hours and 67 moves later, both players were in shock. Vidit shook his head, held his face in both palms as he walked away. It was dawning on him that defeat left him two points behind the Russian, meaning his hopes of winning the Candidates are virtually over.

Nepo sat on his chair for a while, shuttered his eyes with his palm, scarcely believing that he had managed to claw a victory out of a game he seemed destined to lose. Twice.

How Vidit slipped up

By the 33rd move, Vidit, playing with white pieces, had built up a significan­t advantage on the board.

He could have added to that advantage by advancing his pawn in the ‘h file’ by one more square to h5, which would have put the black pawn on ‘g file’ under pressure: it could either capture the advancing pawn, or be captured by it. Either way, had Vidit made that move, there would be a pawn advancing towards Nepo’s king, not to mention the rook on the first rank who could have darted sideways before charging at Nepo’s king on h8.

Instead, Vidit chose the move 34. Kd3, which the computer didn’t appreciate too much. “I was doing fine after that (move). But I wanted to win the game,” Nepo said before launching into an analysis of what he had thought during the game and its critical moments, a monologue he ended with: “I got lucky.”

He would get lucky again. The second reprieve Vidit inadverten­tly offered Nepomniach­tchi was three moves later when instead of claiming the pawn on d5 with his knight, Vidit chose to withdraw his king to c2.

It was a decision that Vidit made in a hurry, because his time on the clock was thinning. Had Vidit chosen to claim the pawn with his knight, it would have started off a massacre on the board with two knights, two pawns, one bishop and two rooks losing their lives but Vidit emerging with a significan­t advantage.

Later, Nepo admitted he had not calculated what would happen if Vidit claimed the pawn with his knight. “Oh, white would win? Good to know,” he said with a straight face at the

post-match press conference before the shadow of a smile appeared on his face as he added earnestly. “I didn’t calculate that of course.”

There was one more moment where Vidit could have chosen to repeat his move and push the game to a draw. But he chose differentl­y. On the 41st move, Vidit pushed his knight to d2, which got him a bishop d6 response.

Vidit promptly shifted his knight to e4, attacking the black bishop. Nepo shifted it to the initial square again, which meant that the position had repeated twice on the board. All Vidit had to do was move his knight to d2 again. But he chose Ng3, which indicated he wasn’t looking for a draw.

“Luckily for me, he didn’t take the draw here and went Ng3,” Nepo said.

Nepomniach­tchi has an enviable record at the Candidates. He won the 2020 edition, which was split in half by the coronaviru­s pandemic — the first half being played in March 2020 and the second half starting 13 months later in April 2021 in Yekaterinb­urg. But Nepo stayed consistent through that phase.

He was joint leader when the event was stopped, and confirmed his victory with a round to spare when the players reconvened in 2021. In 2022, the event was clouded with a different kind of uncertaint­y: whether Magnus Carlsen will defend his title against the Candidates winner or not. Even at that edition, Nepo managed to win with a round to spare.

The man who has a 100 percent success rate at the Candidates tournament is now one square ahead of the rest of the eight-player field. Gukesh and Nakamura have just three more moves left to catch the man who’s an escape artist on the 64 squares.

SREESHANKA­RMURALI’S dream of competing at the 2024 Olympic Games is over as the long-jumpersaid­akneeinjur­ysufferedd­uring training requires surgery.

“All my life, I’ve had the courage to lookataset­backinthe eye,acceptsitu­ationsi can’t change, and workhardat­dictating the outcomes of those Ican.unfortunat­ely,in whatfeelsl­ikeanightm­are, but is a reality, my Paris Olympic Games dream is over,” Sreeshanka­r posted on Instragram.

Withlessth­an100dayst­ogoforpari­s2024, Sreeshanka­r is the sole long jumper to have made the automatic cut in men’s long jump. At Asian Athletics Championsh­ips, Supachalas­ai National Stadium, Bangkok in July last year, Sreeshanka­r clinched silver with abestjumpo­f8.37m,goingpastt­heautomati­c qualificat­ion mark of 8.27m.

“I suffered a knee injury during training on Tuesday, and all the tests and consultati­ons later, it’s been decided that I would need surgery,rulingmeou­toftheones­inglething­ihave chased relentless­ly all these years,” the 25year-old said.

Sreeshanka­r, sliver medallist at the 2022 Commonweal­th Games, had a memorable 2023 season during which he finished second at the Hangzhou Asian Games apart from the aforementi­oned silver in Bangkok. The Kerala athlete made the cut for 2020 Olympics too buthadatou­ghtimeinto­kyobeforeb­ouncing backinsubs­equentseas­ons.atthe2022w­orld Championsh­ips, he qualified for the final in Oregon.

“To wake up healthy every single day, and watch yourself get into the best shape of your life, is every athlete’s dream. I was living it, until this incident. Life writes strange scripts, and sometimest­hereiscour­ageinaccep­tingitand movingon.that’swhatiwill­do.myjourneyt­o a comeback began the minute I injured my knee This road is going to be long, difficult and will take a lot out of me. The good thing is, I have a lot to give. I will overcome this, because that’s what Mamba Mentality is all about,” Sreeshanka­r wrote.

So far, in track and field events, only Sreeshanka­r, Neeraj Chopra and Kishore Kumar Jena (men’s javelin) had attained automatic qualificat­ion from India.

“I will need your prayers, love and positive energy. I may jump alone, but it takes a collective push before every leap. This is my biggest one yet,” he signed off.

 ?? ?? Vidit Gujrathi (L) in disbelief after losing to Ian Nepomniach­tchi at the Candidates.
Vidit Gujrathi (L) in disbelief after losing to Ian Nepomniach­tchi at the Candidates.
 ?? File ?? Vinesh Phogat’s 50kg qualifiers will begin in Bishkek on Saturday.
File Vinesh Phogat’s 50kg qualifiers will begin in Bishkek on Saturday.
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