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  • Men go down to Russia, women move up to second

    The Indian Express
    Tuesday, October 26, 2004

    Men go down to Russia, women move up to second

    PRESS TRUST OF INDIA

    Posted online: Tuesday, October 26, 2004 at 0000 hours IST

    MALLORCA, OCTOBER 25: Fighting hard, the Indian men suffered a 1.5-2.5
    defeat against top seed and defending champion Russia in the 9th round of
    the 36th Chess Olympiad at the gran casino here. There was cause for cheer
    in ghe women's section, however, with India, led by Grandmaster Koneru
    Humpy, beating Ukraine to be placed second.

    World rapid champion Viswanathan Anand crashed through the defences of
    Grandmaster Alexander Morozevich and gave India an early lead while Krishnan
    Sasikiran also came good on the second board, getting an easy draw playing
    black against Russian champion Peter Svidler. But while Surya Sekhar Ganguly
    was outdone from a complicated position by Vadim Zvjaginsev, P Harikrishna
    missed out against Alexander Dreev.

    Russia, with 24.5 points, moved closer to leaders Ukraine after the win but
    remain 2.5 points adrift.

    With just five more rounds remaining, the US was the biggest gainer of the
    day, moving to sole third spot with 24 points after drubbing Spain 'A'
    3.5-0.5. Armenia and third seed Israel are joint fourth with 23 points while
    the Indians share the sixth spot on 22.5 along with Switzerland, Bulgaria,
    France, Slovenia, Azerbaijan and Cuba. Poland and Moldova are next in line
    on 22 points each.

    Anand was brilliance personified as he outplayed Morozevich in an extremely
    complicated game arising out of a Sicilian Defence and leading to a hedgehog
    setup. Going for an opening surprise, Sasikiran employed the Tchigorin
    variation in the Ruy Lopez rather than his normal Brayer and it appeared as
    if Svidler was not well-prepared. Getting the normal complications in the
    middle game, Sasikiran was the first to simplify matters as he went for
    routine exchanges on the queen side to maintain the balance. In the women'
    section, GM Koneru Humpy guided India to a 2-1 victory to elevate the team
    to joint second spot. Playing on the top board, Humpy was undeterred by some
    near ominous defence by Natalia Zhukova and recorded an impressive victory
    for India, Vijayalakshmi managed a draw with Inna Gaponenko, while
    Dronavalli Harika did well to hold Kateryna Lahno on the third board to
    complete the Indian victory.

    The battle for gold, though, appears almost over for the other teams as
    China scored a comprehensive 3-0 victory, cruising past Lithuania in another
    one sided contest. China's tally now stands at 23.5 points, a massive
    six-point lead over nearest rivals Russia, USA, Hungary and India.
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