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Regular-article-logo Wednesday, 07 May 2025

Anand recovers just in time

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(PTI) Published 09.11.14, 12:00 AM
Magnus Carlsen and Viswanathan Anand shake hands before the game, in Sochi, on Saturday

Sochi: Indian ace Viswanathan Anand played out a fighting draw with defending champion Magnus Carlsen of Norway, in the first game of the World Chess Championship, here on Saturday.

Having drawn white pieces, Anand went for the jugular on expected lines, but Carlsen, after some initial problems in the Grunfeld defense, came out with flying colours and gave him a tough time.

With one of the preparations backfiring against an agile Carlsen, it will be up to team Anand to look for remedial measures, especially with white pieces.

The Indian had gone up by almost 30 minutes on the clock in the opening phase. But the advantage was gradually neutralised by Carlsen. Anand was, in fact, having less time than Carlsen when the game reached the first time control.

It was a good opening for Anand as white in the topical exchange variation. The five times world champion apparently took a cue from a couple of recent games, played by Ragger Markus and Alexander Moiseenko and even though their final result were uninspiring, the position did offer the kind of volatility Anand was hoping to get.

Carlsen, to his credit, was in his elements and showed no fatigue when he was posed with a difficult position to solve. While things seem to be favouring Anand, thanks to his speed in executing his moves till move 13, the next one from Carlsen apparently took the Indian by a huge surprise as he spent no less than 23 minutes on it.

Soon afterwards Anand embarked on a principled decision, one that dented his pawn structure forever, but something that still gave him hope to fight for the initiative.

However, as the game progressed it became clear that Carlsen had judged this one position better and slowly but surely, white’s advantage – and hope – disappeared from the board.

With the exchange of last minor piece on move 23, the players reached a perfectly equal, yet dynamic queen and rooks endgame. It was here that Anand lost his nerve towards the end of the first time control and what appeared to be a draw was suddenly menacing for the Indian.

Carlsen did many things right from this juncture. The Norwegian gave nothing away to Anand and forced some passive display which led to a precarious, if not lost, position for the challenger.

It all boiled down to a single move when on move 44, when given a chance, Anand had to find the perfect reposte without which his position would have only deteriorated further. As it turned out, Anand found the move in just over two minutes and thereafter things were in control.

The game was drawn in in 48 moves when Carlsen could not avoid perpetual checks.

Earlier, Anand named Grzegorz Gazewski of Poland as the lone new inclusion in his team, putting an end to speculations that there were big changes being done.

“(Krishnan) Sasikiran, (Radoslav) Wojtaszek and Gajewski,” Anand said in the pre-match press conference here.

Both Sasikiran and Wojtaszek were there the last time around too, in Chennai, along with Hungarian Peter Leko and Sandipan Chanda when Anand had lost the crown last year.

The Indian ace reposed faith in his team and has only omitted Leko from the list of people who accompanied him here. Chanda has been travelling with Anand, and it’s clear that he has another role defined somewhere in the support system.

Gajewski hails from Poland, like Wojtaszek, and is known as a fierce competitor and someone who carves out a niche for himself especially in less known positions.

The auditorium has a sitting capacity of 140, and an increase in noise levels cannot be ruled out. But members of the organising committee indicated that they wanted to create an environment like the 60’s.

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