Levon Aronian and Viswanathan Anand, who both tied for the third spot, are behind Anish Giri. (Source: File) Five-time World Champion Viswanathan Anand split the point with Levon Aronian of Armenia and finished joint third after the conclusion of the 10th Tal memorial chess tournament here today.
It turned out to be a mixed event for Anand although he did add a few rating points. The draw with Aronian was Anand’s sixth in the tournament besides two beautiful victories and a sole loss.
The game with Aronian was a tense affair wherein both players could claim to be slightly superior at some point in the game. However the Italian opening by Anand did not yield enough to press for a win although the players fought on till the 40th move.
Ian Nepomniachtchi of Russia won the USD 200000 prize money tournament by holding on a much worse position against lowest-placed Boris Gelfand of Israel in the final round.
-
Find Out Why Nawazuddin Siddiqui Pulled Out Of Ramleela Event In UP -
Supreme Court Bars BCCI From Releasing Funds To State Associations: What It Means? -
PM Modi To Push For Masood Azhar’s Ban With Chinese President Jinping During BRICS Summit -
Mirzya Audience Reaction: Harshvardhan Kapoor & Saiyami Kher’s Debut Gets A Mixed Response -
Wing Part Found In Mauritius Confirmed To Be Part of MH370, Says Malaysia -
BJP Slams Rahul Gandhi For His ”Dalali” Remarks At PM Modi -
Apple iPhone 7 Plus Camera Review And Image Test -
Interview With Mirzya Stars Harshvardhan Kapoor, Saiyami Kher And Director Rakeysh Omprakash Mehra -
Those Seeking Proof Of Surgical Strikes Not Loyal, Says Defence Minister Manohar Parrikar -
Millions Flee Inland As Southeast US Braces For Hurricane Mathew -
Madras High Court Dismisses Petition Seeking Photographs Of Jayalalithaa In Hospital -
Your Favourite Soft Drink Brand Could Be Toxic, Here’s What A Study Found -
Supreme Court Reserves Order Till Friday On BCCI’s Non Compliance Of Lodha Report -
India Responds To Pakistan’s Allegations At UN, Says Jammu & Kashmir Integral To India -
3 Militants Dead After Attack On Army Camp In Handwara, J&K
In the end, the fortunes smiled back on the Russian who had been leading the tournament solely for the past four rounds as Gelfand erred to let his opponent claw back in the game.
Nepomniachtchi ended the tournament on six points, a half point ahead of Anish Giri who missed out on serious winning chances against Li Chao.
The pundits believed that Anish Giri will win the title solely as he had a winning position while Nepomniachtchi was clearly worse. However, there was a big slip between the cup and the lip as Giri blundered and Li Chao drew.
Giri finished second on 5.5 points, a half point ahead of Aronian and Anand who both tied for the third spot with identical five points. Aronian drew eight and won only one for his five points.
Vladimir Kramnik of Russia ended joint fifth along with compatriot Peter Svidler, Li Chao and Shakhriyar Mamedyarov of Azerbaijan on 4.5 points apiece. Evgeny Tomashevsky of Russia finished ninth on 3.5 points in the ten-player round-robin tournament while Gelfand tallied two points with his four draws and five losses to finish last.
The caravan doesn’t stop here as up next for Anand is the Champions showdown at St Louis in United States starting mid-November. The Indian will then take part in the London Chess Classic that is a part of the Grand Chess tour.
Results final round: Boris Gelfand (Isr, 2) drew with Ian Nepomniachtchi (Rus, 6); V Anand (Ind, 5) drew with Levon Aronian (Arm, 5); Shakhriyar Mamedyarov (Aze, 4.5) beat Vladimir Kramnik (Rus, 4.5); Evgeny Tomashevsky (Rus, 3.5) drew with Peter Svidler (Rus, 4.5); Li Chao (Chn, 4.5) drew with Anish Giri (Ned, 5.5).
No comments:
Post a Comment