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Home  » Sports » Anand credits wife after Leon Masters title win

Anand credits wife after Leon Masters title win

By REDIFF SPORTS
Last updated on: July 02, 2024 00:03 IST
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V Anand

IMAGE: Viswanathan Anand won the Leon Masters for the 10th time, on Sunday. Photograph: Kind courtesy chess.com-india/X

Five-time world champion Viswanathan Anand proved his mettle once again and defeated Spaniard Jaime Santos Latasa 3-1 in the final to win the Leon Masters for a 10th time, in Leon, Spain, on Sunday.

The 54-year-old Anand, who lived in Spain for many years before shifting base back to Chennai, proved yet again that this was one of his favourite hunting grounds.

It was in 1996, that Anand won his first title at the competition.

 

Following the win, Anand thanked his wife, Aruna for pushing him to play the tournament despite the risk of missing her 50th birthday.

'As my wife celebrated her 50th birthday, I was apprehensive about being away playing chess. However, she told me to go and play, saying, 'Who knows, you might win.' Very happy to win while it was still her birthday!! Sometimes, the best moves are the ones made with love and support. Checkmate to a wonderful day!' he wrote on X.

The format featured four players with his compatriot Arjun Erigaise, the world number four, as the fourth seed and Bulgarian Veselin Topalov being the other two players in the tournament.

Each round featured four games of 20 minutes each with a 10-second increment after every move.

Arjun had lost to Santos Latasa in the second semifinals by a score of 1.5-2.5 which was considered a sensational victory for the latter given the vast difference in the ratings.

Earlier in the first semi-final, the legendary duel between Topalov and Anand had ended in favour of the Indian who won the third game before drawing the remaining three.

Though the scoreline suggests otherwise, Anand conceded that it was not so easy.

Santos Latasa pushed hard in the first game and in the second too, he had an extra pawn in a complicated game that ended in a draw.

Anand won the third game with black pieces out of an Italian opening. It was a balanced middle game wherein Anand was pleasantly surprised as the Spaniard went for a wrong trade that cost him two pieces for a rook and a couple of pawns.

The technical genius in Anand was soon at work as he kept on creating problems that became increasingly difficult to solve for his opponent. The game lasted 45 moves.

Santos Latasa faced an unpleasant task of winning on demand as black in the final game.

This is something that even the best in the world would not feel comfortable with and Anand got a fine position after trading the Queens early out of a Rossolimo opening.

Latasa kept looking for complications but Anand was determined and it was all over in 37 moves.

Results:

Semi-finals: V Anand beat Veselin Topalov 2.5-1.5; Arjun Erigaise lost to Jaime Santos Latasa 1.5-2.5.

Final: V Anand beat Jaime Santos Latasa 3-1. 

Chess Grand Master Viswanathan Anand (right) and his wife Aruna

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