Announcement

Collapse
No announcement yet.

Utut's hopes crumble at Tripoli chess meet

Collapse
X
 
  • Filter
  • Time
  • Show
Clear All
new posts

  • Utut's hopes crumble at Tripoli chess meet

    The Jakarta Post
    June 24, 2004

    Utut's hopes crumble at Tripoli chess meet
    Musthofid, Jakarta

    Utut Adianto, who had entered the world chess championship in Tripoli
    with high hopes, crashed out in the second round on Tuesday.

    The Indonesian grand master's expectation of moving ahead in the
    championship crumbled after he suffered a crushing loss to GM Vladimir
    Akopian of Armenia.

    After holding Akopian in the first game on Monday, Utut failed to
    withstand the blistering attack by the 1999 championship runner-up in
    the second game on Tuesday.

    The Tripoli chess is only the latest championship in which Utut has
    been ejected in the second round. He has had four major appearances
    since 1997.

    He even exited during the opening stage in 1999 in Las Vegas, where
    Akopian arrived on the scene with a bang by getting through to the
    final before being stopped by eventual champion Alexander Khalifman of
    Russia.

    The latest defeat has left Utut upset about the weakness of the
    challenge he posed.

    "Playing chess at the world level is obviously not an easy task," Utut
    reported by e-mail. He said he had learned a lot from his game against
    Akopian.

    Utut, who played the black pieces, knew that he was doomed to fail
    immediately after he made a long castling on the 14th move. He
    surrendered in 43 moves.

    "A mistaken choice on the 14th move sunk me. What had looked a like a
    normal move turned out to be a disaster.

    "And Akopian, the 1999 finalist, punished me with remarkable accuracy
    and machine-like precision. I should have played 14...Na5, and then we
    might have built a balanced position.

    "Well, Akopian has taught me a valuable lesson -- that I have yet to
    master a thorough, world-class opening repertoire," Utut said.

    Utut, who is 38, had earlier been confident after having spent ten
    days training with Tibor Karolyi, a renowned chess trainer from
    Hungary, as part of his preparations for the world championships.

    But, instead of making it to the semifinals as he had hoped, he will
    now be traveling home after only the second round. He seemed resigned,
    however. "It seems that given my class, I have got as far as I can
    go. I probably only have a 3,000 cc engine, while a 4,000 cc engine is
    needed to play at the higher level."
Working...
X