Anand slips to last spot in Final Masters chess
Posted on Oct 11, 2011 at 01:08pm IST
Bilbao: World Champion Viswanathan Anand was shocked by Levon Aronian of Armenia in the ninth and penultimate round of the fourth Final Masters as he slipped to the last spot with just one round to go in the category-22 super tournament here.
World number one Magnus Carlsen of Norway completed his second victory in as many games against tournament leader Vassily Ivanchuk of Ukraine to emerge as the joint leader on 14 points in the soccer-like scoring system being used here.
Ivanchuk, who enjoyed a three-point lead coming into this round, ran into a determined Carlsen who came with some imaginative manoeuvres to jump to joint lead after being wayward in the first half of the tournament played at Sao Paulo in Brazil.
The shocker of the day came from none other than lowest ranked Francisco Vallejo Pons of Spain who proved yet again that he is no-mug when it comes to handling “big boys” of the game.
Pons, who had earlier beaten Carlsen and Ivanchuk in the tournament, perplexed Hikaru Nakamura of United States, who was declared lost on time on move 40 in a position, which was quite defendable.
With just one round to go, Ivanchuk has the better chance of annexing this tournament as he plays Aronian with white in the final round game.
Carlsen will have to tackle Nakamura with black, while Anand has white in his last game against Nakamura.
For the records, Ivanchuk on 14 points shares the lead with Carlsen while Nakamura is still three points behind the leaders on 11 points along with Aornian.
Pons holds the sixth spot in the six-players double round-robin tournament on 10 points while Anand is now last on nine points in all.
For once, Anand completely lost focus in his game.
Playing the black side of a Queen gambit declined, Anand faced some opening problems and once he was unable to sort them out, he caved in quickly.
Aronain has been on the slump in the event thus far but when the opportunity arose, he was at his tactical best and wrapped the issue in just 25 moves.
Carlsen went for a tactical battle right from the word go against Ivanchuk who employed the Nimzo Indian defence as black. He seized the initiative in the early stages of the middle game and then an assault on the black king saw him winning the black queen for three pieces.
In the ensuing complications, the Norwegian won another piece and it was time for Ivanchuk to throw the towel in. The game lasted 34 moves.
Vallejo Pons was not threatening to win but his dogged defence and counter-attack put Nakamura in terrible time scramble. The American lost in a position where he was trying to find a win and Vallejo was all smiles after his third win.
Results:
Round 9: Levon Aronian (11) beat V Anand (9); Magnus Carlsen (14) beat Vassily Ivanchuk (14); Francisco Vallejo Pons (10) beat Hikaru Nakamura (11).
Source: http://ibnlive.in.com
The commentary on the match Valejo vs. Naka is quite wrong. Naka did not lose because of ‘terrible time scramble’, he had quite enough time to make just one move. He just thought that he already had made his 40th move and went for an orange juice. Thats quite a different story!
Well,if one has to write down the moves in the score-sheet,how did Naka assume that he had already completed 40 moves?
Confused!
Whoever wrote the story certainly has a talent of creating lies. Nakamura was certainly not in a time scramble.
This needs to be re-edited to the correct happening!
The whole thing needs to re-edited to actually what happened in the Valejo and Naka game!