Trending:

Chess Olympiad: China keep Ding Liren away from D Gukesh, but India clinch win; women's team beat Georgia to go 7/7

FP Sports September 19, 2024, 13:37:13 IST

China decided against making World Chess Champion Ding Liren play against challenger D Gukesh as India defeated China in the seventh round of 45th Chess Olympiad.

Advertisement
D Gukesh defeated Wei Yi as India beat China at Chess Olympiad. PTI/FIDE
D Gukesh defeated Wei Yi as India beat China at Chess Olympiad. PTI/FIDE

With India taking on China in the open section of the 45th Chess Olympiad, all eyes were on the possible clash between World Championship challenger D Gukesh and reigning World Chess Champion Ding Liren, but the Chinese think tank decided otherwise. Nonetheless, it mattered little from the Indian perspective as the men’s team defeated China 2.5-1.5 in the seventh round, while Grandmaster R Vaishali and Vantika Agrawal put up impressive performances as Indian women thumped Georgia. Both Indian men’s and women’s teams are unbeaten in the Chess Olympiad 2024.

STORY CONTINUES BELOW THIS AD

Playing the white side of a Closed Sicilian Gukesh reached a drawn endgame after nearly five hours of play but he remained focussed to find one mistake that was made by Chinese top board Wei Yi.

R Praggnanandhaa played out a quick draw as black against Yangyi Yu of China while P Harikrishna pressed for some time before the position petered out to be equal in the ensuing rook and pawns endgame against Wang Yue of China on the fourth board.

Earlier Arjun Erigaise went for the kill against an alert Bu Xiangzhi and the latter found a nice piece sacrifice to force a draw through repetition.

STORY CONTINUES BELOW THIS AD

With just four rounds to come, the Indian men have done everything correct thus far and are sitting pretty with a 100 percent score like their female counterparts.

Iran is the only team in close pursuit of the leaders on 13 points while a pack of four teams – Serbia, Hungary, Armenia and defending champions Uzbekistan share the third spot on 12 points each.

In the next round now, the Indian men will take on Iran while the women are pitted against Poland.

In the women’s section, Vaishali and Vantika notched wins against Lela Javakhishvili and Bella Khotenashvili as Indian women thumped second seeds Georgia 3-1.

On a day that saw D Harika settling for a draw with Nana Dzagnidze and Divya Deshmukh being held by Nino Batsiashvili from a better position, it was Vantika who handled her time pressure extremely well to play almost 20 moves with just about a minute on her clock to win her game and seal India’s seventh straight victory.

STORY CONTINUES BELOW THIS AD

The Indian women took their tally to an impressive 14 points out of a possible 14 and stretched their lead to two points over nearest rivals Poland, Kazakhstan and France who all have 12 points apiece.

In a surprising turn of events a blunder by Olivia Kiolbasa of Poland against Nataliya Buksa of Ukraine cost the Polish team dearly in the sixth hour of play as what looked like a certain victory became a 2-2 draw.

Results round 7 open: India (14) beat China (11) 2.5-1.5 (D Gukesh beat Wei Yi; Yu Yangyi drew with R Praggnanandhaa; Arjun Erigaise drew with Bu Xiangzhi; Wang Yue drew with P Harikrishna); Iran (13) beat Vietnam (11) 2.5-1.5; Lithuania (10) lost to Hungary (12) 1.5-2.5; Uzbekistan (12) beat Ukraine (10) 3-1; Serbia (12) beat Netherlands (10) 3-1; Armenia (12) beat England (10) 2.5-1.5; France (11) drew with Georgia (11) 2-2.

Women: India (14) beat Georgia (11) 3-1 (D Harika drew with Nana Dzagnidze; Lela Javakhishvili lost to R Vaishali; Divya Deshmukh drew with Nino Batsiashvili; Bella Khotenashvili lost to Vantika Agrawal); Ukraine (11) drew with Poland (12) 2-2; Azerbaijan (10) lost to Kazakhstan (12) 1-3; Armenia (11) drew with United States of America (11) 2-2; Mongolia (11) drew with Germany (11) 2-2; Spain (10) lost to France (12) 1.5-2.5.

STORY CONTINUES BELOW THIS AD

With PTI inputs

Home Video Shorts Live TV