Former National champions B Adhiban and Krishnan Sasikiran raised their
performance when it mattered and clinched their respective tie-break
games to enter the second round of the chess World Cup here.
Pitted
against a much higher-rated rival, Adhiban displayed top form to beat
Evgeny Alekseev of Russia 5-3, winning in the blitz tiebreaker while
Sasikiran prevailed over Constantin Lupulescu of Romania 2.5-1.5
cruising past in the second rapid game to reach the round of 64.
It
turned out to be a bad day in office for other Indian contender
Parimarjan Negi as he let go of his lead once again before going down to
Yuri Kryvoruchko of Ukraine in the mini-match.
Parimarjan lost
2-4 but before that he won the first rapid tiebreaker as black. he blew
it away with white pieces in the return game.
Adhiban's victory
turned out to be the second biggest upset in the World cup so far after
Wei Yi of China had beaten Ian Nepomniachtchi of Russia.
Ranked
way below, Adhiban showed a lot of determination and played with his
heart out to beat Alekseev, a member of the top 50 club it he world
rankings.
It started with the rapid tiebreaker wherein Adhiban
drew the first blood but lost the return game. The stage was thus set
for two 10-minutes each games that ended in draws
Alekseev missed
out on a clear advantage in the subsequent five-minutes each blitz game
and ran out of time and in the second blitz game Adhiban gave no
chances and picked up as many as three pawns before the Russian called
it a day.
Sasikiran gave a perfect display of technical chess to outplay Lupulescu.
Playing
the white side of a Queen pawn game in the second rapid tiebreaker
after drawing the first, Sasikiran weakened the king side with some
precise moves in the middle game and launched an attack on the king side
to knock down a pawn for no compensation. The rest was child's play for
the seasoned Indian.
Negi was unlucky yet again. In the normal
games too he had won the first game with black pieces but could not make
a draw as white and in the second too it was a similar story.
Winning
with black with a fine combination, Negi got a balanced position again
as white but missed out in the endgame to let Kryvoruchko level the
scores again.
In the next set of tiebreakers, Kryvoruchko won
both games. Sasikiran has a tough challenge to tackle in Sergey Karjakin
of Russia in the next round of this USD 1.6 million event.
Adhiban will take on Alexander Fier of Brazil in what is expected to be an even contest.
Source: http://tinyurl.com/mwzow8w
Post a Comment