Humpys chance to set record straight
Manisha Mohite

India have been having its best moments in chess for the last one month with Abhijeet Gupta and Harika Dronavalli winning the World junior and World junior Girls title respectively and the under-16 team winning the World Youth Olympiad.

With the Women’s World Chess Championship set to commence on Friday at Nalchik in Russia, all eyes will be on Koneru Humpy and if the Hyderabadi can pull it off this time, then India would be in possession of all the important World titles as Viswananthan Anand is the reigning World Champion.

Apart from Humpy, the other Indians in action are Harika Dronavalli, Tania Sachdev and Nisha Mohota.

Humpy starts as the highest rated player in fray though she is seeded second after reigning champion Yuhua Xu. Humpy, who is only the second woman in the history of the game to cross the 2600 ELO mark after Judit Polgar is the hot favourite in terms of rating.

The Indian has had terrific results in Open section but strangely has not done so well in the Women’s section. In the last edition, she had started as the top seed but was eliminated in the second round.

The path to the title however is not easy as the event is a knock-out one with five rounds to be played to enter the final.

Tough contenderFormer World Champion Antoaneta Stefanova of Bulgaria is another tough contender for the title. She won the North Ural Cup with effortless ease and has also been posting good results in Open sections.

China’s 14-year-old sensation Yifan Hou is another dangerous player who has sprinted her way to the become the fourth highest rated woman player in the World. At the last edition she had reached the third round and this time around she is much stronger.

In fact the Chinese have been dominating this event right from the time Xie Jun won it in 1991, Susan Polgar and Stefanova having a brief reign in between.

Russia who once ruled women’s chess hardly find themselves without a strong contender.

Warm up

The Indians, apart from Mohota are pitted against lower ranked opponents in the first round. The 17-year-old Harika, fresh from her triumph in the World juniors would have warmed up sufficiently and if she can maintain her form, that would be an added bonus for India.

Tania is the reigning national champion and the 22-year-old has also won the Asian women’s title while 29-year-old Nisha Mohota has maximum international exposure. Tania has been in good nick for the past two years and it would be interesting to watch how she and Nisha fare here.

Unpredictable results and shocking ousters have always been a hallmark of the knock-out event which requires immense mental toughness along with playing skills.

Margin of error is very limited in this format were a single defeat will dent your prospects badly as comeback possibilities are remote.

This tournament has seen many good players making early exits time and again. Will Humpy be lucky this time?

Source: http://www.deccanherald.com

Posted by Picasa
Chess Daily News from Susan Polgar
Tags: ,