D Gukesh is back in the ongoing World Chess Championship 2024 by beating Ding Liren in Round 3 on Wednesday. The scores (1.5 each) are now levelled with 11 more games to go in the battle for the coveted world chess title. Gukesh’s victory on Wednesday was important for various reasons . A win or draw for Liren would have given him a significant points advantage in a World Chess Championship where the first player to reach 7.5 points will be declared winner. Also, this is Gukesh’s first win over Liren in a classical game , giving the 18-year-old Indian Grandmaster the much-needed morale advantage for the rest of the series.
The victory in game three came as Liren lost on time against Gukesh but it was the result of some excellent preparation by the Indian Grandmaster who exuded confidence even after losing the first match in the Championship.
Playing with the white pieces, Gukesh opened the match and followed the same pattern from a Vladimir Kramnik vs Arjun Erigaisi match at the World Rapid Team till the 13.hxg4.
Ding though struggled to remember that game and went 13.Nbd7 instead of Arjun’s 13.Bxb3. And this is where Ding started to lose the match as he took 33 minutes to recall the 2023 match.
“I was prepared until 13th move. I guess he was trying to remember something, maybe he mixed up something. I thought how he reacted was not the most precise way. Then I think I just got a very nice position after 15.g5. All these 17.f3, 19.e4 looks really shaky for Black,” Gukesh said after his victory.
Impact Shorts
More ShortsThe next few moves were the following:
Nd2 Rg8
g5 Nh5
Bh2 Rh8
f3 Ng7
Bg3 Rh5
It was that Rh5 on the 18th move by Ding that gave Gukesh a significant advantage as the evaluation engine also showed the Indian was on +1.31.
“I think my position was in trouble because a normal move 18…Ne6 doesn’t work due to 19.Rc1. Also, 18…Be7 I refuted due to 19.Rc1 Bf5 20.e4 Be6 21.exd5 Bxd5 22.Nxd5 cxd5 23.Rc7 after Ne6 24.Rxb7 a6,” Liren said about the trouble he faced after playing 18.Rh5.
Liren also said that missing 23.Ne2 was a mistake.
While Gukesh kept playing the right moves, Ding was always under pressure once he started to lose control. He was left with making eight moves in a minute and 49 seconds and eventually lost on time. It was the first time since the 1993 World Chess Championship between Garry Kasparov and Nigel Short that a player lost a match after running out of time.
All the moves:
d4 Nf6
Nf3 d5
c4 e6
cxd5 exd5
Nc3 c6
Qc2 g6
h3 Bf5
Qb3 Qb6
g4 Qxb3
axb3 Bc2
Bf4 h5
Rg1 hxg4
hxg4 Nbd7
Nd2 Rg8
g5 Nh5
Bh2 Rh8
f3 Ng7
Bg3 Rh5
e4 dxe4
fxe4 Ne6
Rc2 Nxd4
Bf2 Bg7
Ne2 Nxb3
Rxc2 Nxd2
Kxd2 Ne5
Nd4 Rd8
Ke2 Rh2
Bg2 a6
b3 Rd7
Rcc1 Ke7
Rcd1 Ke8
Bg3 Rh5
Nf3 Nxf
Kxf3 Bd4
Rh1 Rxg5
Bh3 f5
Bf4 Rh5
The fourth match of the World Chess Championship 2024 will be played on Friday (29 November) from 2.30 PM IST.