Bulgaria 19.5 points – Ukraine (women) 23 points

1.1 GM Stefanova Antoaneta 2502 – WGM Zhukova Natalia 2425
1.2 WGM Voiska Margarita 2314 – IM Lahno Katerina 2468
1.3 WGM Velcheva Maria 2279 – IM Yanovska-Gaponenko Inna 2430

Georgia 20 points – Russia 22.5 points

2.1 IM Khurtsidze Nino 2426 – GM Kosteniuk Alexandra 2540
2.2 IM Javakhishvili Lela 2410 – IM Kosintseva Tatiana 2489
2.3 IM Lomineishvili Maia 2395 – IM Kosintseva Nadezhda 2469

India 19.5 points – Romania 19 points

4.1 GM Koneru Humpy 2548 – IM Peptan Corina Isabela 2408
4.2 WGM Harika Dronavalli 2358 – IM Foisor Cristina Adela 2392
4.3 WGM Swathi Ghate 2262 – WGM Calotescu Ana Cristina 2325

USA 19 points – Slovenia 19 points

5.1 WGM Zatonskih Anna 2433 – WGM Muzychuk Anna 2418
5.2 IM Krush Irina 2437 – WGM Srebrnic Ana 2302
5.3 WGM Goletiani Rusudan 2371 – WIM Krivec Jana 2323

The questions now are:

Can Ukraine hold off Russia in the last 3 rounds?
Can the Kosintseva sisters continue to carry Russia, especially Tatiana?
Can the US finally win a match by a 3-0 score to move into medal contention?

Overall Olympiad

Armenia – Czech Republic
China – France

USA – Russia

3.1 GM Kamsky Gata 2671 – GM Kramnik Vladimir 2729
3.2 GM Onischuk Alexander 2650 – GM Svidler Peter 2743
3.3 GM Nakamura Hikaru 2664 – GM Grischuk Alexander 2719
3.4 GM Kaidanov Gregory 2603 – GM Bareev Evgeny 2701

Gata finally has a chance to play against Kramnik, a player he crushed some years ago in the candidate’s macth. Can he continue to own Kramnik? I have confidence in Onishchuk to hold Svidler. Hikaru has not had a good Olympiad performance so far. How will he do against a super GM like Grischuk? Can Kaidanov hold off Bareev with the Black pieces? If the US loses this match, their medal hopes will suffer greatly. Can they pull off the biggest upset of the Olympiad?
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Chess Daily News from Susan Polgar
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