|
![]() | Help |
You are here: Rediff Home » India » Sports » Chess »
PTI >
Report |
|
Indian Grandmaster Krishnan Sasikiran suffered his second defeat at the Aerosvit International Chess tournament when he lost to Russian Grandmaster Sergei Rublevsky in the fifth round in Yalta, Ukraine. Meanwhile, Ukrainian Sergey Karjakin shot into the lead with a fine victory over Alexei Shirov of Spain. Karjakin, who was previously sharing the lead with Shirov and compatriot Vassily Ivanchuk, was the beneficiary as Ivanchuk was held to a draw by Russian Dmitry Jakovenko. Ivanchuk is followed by a group of eight players sharing the third to 10th positions. The tournament is being closely fought and there is very little to separate the players. The games -- Peter Svidler (Russia [Images]) vs Loek Van Wely (the Netherlands), Liviu-Dieter Nisipeanu (Romania) vs Lenier Dominguez (Cuba) and Alexander Onischuk (US) vs Pavel Eljanov (Ukraine) -- were long tussles, but without a decisive result. Rublevsky played the popular Slav defence against Sasikiran and the Indian Grandmaster responded ambitiously by opting for sharp complications. Sasikiran readily accepted pawn weakness on the kingside in an attempt to wrest the initiative. Rublevsky defended tenaciously and restricted his opponent. The Indian's weak pawn structure proved to be the decisive factor in the position and Rublevsky won the game in 51 moves. Karjakin showed great tactical resourcefulness in his victory over Shirov. The Ukrainian played the Spanish opening and failed to make much of the advantage of having white pieces. Shirov equalised in the opening with the Neo Archangelsk variation and gained the initiative in the middle game. He sacrificed an exchange to gain an attack which looked very promising. However, Karjakin combined defence with counter-attack and Shirov had no answer to his clever tactical play. The game ended after 45 moves as Karjakin won a knight to force his opponent's resignation. Ivanchuk played the Pelikan variation of the Sicilian defense against Jakovenko and had little difficulty in equalising in the opening. He sacrificed a pawn on the 21st move to damage his opponent's pawn structure. A bishop endgame was reached on the 32nd move and Ivanchuk had no difficulty in drawing the game despite his pawn deficit. The game between Svidler and Van Wely ended in a draw after a theoretical duel in the English attack against the Sicilian Najdorf. Both players were well prepared in the opening and agreed to split the point after the exchange of queens. Nisipeanu allowed Dominguez to escape with a draw. The Romanian played enterprisingly from the opening and succeeded in creating winning chances. However, he could not land the decisive blow and had to settle for a draw after 40 moves. Results Round 5: Sergei Karjakin (Ukr, 3.5) beat Alexei Shirov (Esp, 2.5); Dmitry Jakovenko (Rus, 2.5) drerw Vassily Ivanchuk (Ukr, 3.0); Peter Svidler (Rus, 2.5) drew Loek Van Wely (Ned, 2.5); Alexander Onischuk (USA, 2.5) drew Pavel Eljanov (Ukr, 2.5); Krishnan Sasikiran (Ind,2.0) lost to Sergei Rublevsky (Rus, 2.5); Liviu-Dieter Nisipeanu (Rom, 1.5) drew Lenier Dominguez (Cub, 2.5) The moves: (Krishnan Sasikiran Sergei Rublevsky)
|
![]() ![]() |
|
|
© 2007 Rediff.com India Limited. All Rights Reserved. Disclaimer | Feedback |