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Chess Olympiad: Indian eves tamed by China; Men hold England

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  • Chess Olympiad: Indian eves tamed by China; Men hold England

    Chess Olympiad: Indian eves tamed by China; Men hold England

    http://post.jagran.com/chess-olympiad-china-tame-indian-eves-1346568177
    Posted on: 02 Sep 2012, 12:12 PM


    Istanbul (Turkey): The Indian women`s team met their nemesis in the
    Chinese as they lost by a huge 0.5-3.5 margin but the men held higher
    seeds England to a draw in the fifth round of the 40th Chess Olympiad
    here.

    It turned out to be a tough day for Indian girls against top seed
    China as only D Harika could salvage a creditable draw with women`s
    world champion Yifan Hou on the top board.

    Eesha Karavade had her chances but went down to Zhao Xue on the second
    board and Tania Sachdev was outplayed by Ju Wenjun on the third board.
    On the last board, Mary Ann Gomes put up some resistance but in the
    end Qian Huang of China ensured the big victory.

    The Indian men, in contrast, held their own and in fact had another
    chance to upstage a higher seed following a mix-up against USA in the
    previous round.

    There was not much excitement in this encounter as K Sasikiran and P
    Harikrishna drew comfortably on the top two boards while Abhijeet
    Gupta also had no troubles whatsoever in keeping his fortress together
    with black pieces against Nicolas Pert on the last board.

    Parimarjan Negi got some real winning chances in the middle game
    against his former coach Nigel Short but that too fizzled out to a
    draw as the game reached a level rook and pawns endgame leaving the
    match to qualify as an all-drawn encounter.

    At the top of the tables in the open section, Highest rated player in
    the Olympiad and world number two Levon Aronian gave Armenia a
    head-start defeating an off-form Vassily Ivanchuk in the match against
    Ukraine.

    While the other three games ended in a draw, Aronian`s win was enough
    to ensure a minimal 2.5-1.5 victory for former champions Armenia.

    Top seeded Russian men now match Armenia on a maximum 10 match points
    after beating Hungary 2.5-1.5. Alexander Grischuk scored the crucial
    victory for the Russians.

    With Armenia and Russia in front, Croatia and Azerbaijan are on the
    heels of the leader with nine match points while Indian men remain in
    the joint fifth spot on eight points.

    In the women`s section, defending champion Russia took the sole lead
    with a perfect 10 defeating France on the top board. The Indian
    women`s team is now in desperate need of some victories on seven
    points.

    Grandmaster D Harika was the only inspiration for the Indian girls in
    the match against China. Yifan surprisingly went for a safe Four
    Knights opening as white and regular exchanges led to a level rook and
    pawns endgame where the draw was agreed to after 37 moves.

    Eesha Karavade misplayed the middle game as white out of a Nimzo
    Indian defense and went down in 38 moves while Tania Sachdev lost five
    moves earlier after getting in to a much worse position in the opening
    against Ju Wenjun.

    Mary Ann Gomes, meanwhile, held her position together a long time but
    an error on the 35th move cost her dearly as Huang took control and
    won in 51 moves.

    Important results round 5 men: Armenia (10) beat Ukraine (8) 2.5-1.5;
    Hungary (8) lost to Russia (10) 1.5-2.5; Germany (8) drew with
    Montenegro (8) 2-2; Croatia (9) beat France (7) 2.5-1.5; USA (8) drew
    with Czech Republic (8) 2-2; Canada (7) lost to Azerbaijan (9)
    0.5-3.5; India (8) drew with England (8) 2-2 (K Sasikiran drew with
    Michael Adams; Gawain Jones drew with P Harikrishna; Parimarjan Negi
    drew with Nigel Short; Nicolas Pert drew with Abhijeet Gupta); Poland
    (8) beat Argentina (7) 2.5-1.5; China (8) beat Iran (6) 3.5-0.5; Spain
    (8) beat Paraguay (6) 3.5-0.5; Bulgaria (6) beat Peru (6) 2.5-1.5;
    Ireland (6) lost to Israel (8) 1.5-2.5; Iceland (6) lost to
    Philippines (8) 1-3;

    Women: Russia (10) beat France (8) 2.5-1.5; Serbia (9) beat Bulgaria
    (7) 2.5-1.5; Greece (7) lost to Poland (9) 1.5-2.5; Georgia (8) drew
    with Ukraine (8) 2-2; Latvia (7) lost to Slovakia (9) 1.5-2.5; China
    (9) beat India (7) 3.5-0.5 (Yifan Hou drew with D Harika; Eesha
    Karavade lost to Zhao Xue; Ju Wenjun beat Tania Sachdev; Mary Ann
    Gomes lost to Qian Huang); Moldova (6) lost to Hungary (8) 0.5-3.5;
    Vietnam (8) beat USA (5) 3-1; Ecuador (6) lost to Czech Republic (8)
    0.5-3.5; Bosnia & Herzegovina (6) lost to Spain (8) 0.5-3.5;
    Azerbaijan (8) beat Mongolia (6) 3.5-0.5; South Africa (6) lost to
    Philippines (8) 1-3; Montenegro (8) beat Switzerland (6) 3-1; Estonia
    (8) beat Costa Rica (6) 3.5-0.5.

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