![]() From the publishers of THE HINDU
Vol. 24 :: No. 26 :: Jun. 30 - Jul. 06, 2001
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CHESS/NATIONAL 'A' CHAMPIONSHIP - WOMEN
Viji, miles ahead of the restRAKESH RAOANOTHER National championship and another title for S. Vijayalakshmi. Indeed, it was as simple as that. When Vijayalakshmi reached New Delhi for the National 'A' chess championship, she was confident, though she was not in the best of forms. Precisely, that gave Vijayalakshmi a pretty good reason to test her strength against those who had made her look vulnerable just a month back. Once the tournament got underway, one did not have to wait till the very end to find the winner. The nation's first Woman Grandmaster made it easier for all concerned. She was the queen with two rounds to spare!
RAJEEV BHATT The title was Vijayalakshmi's fifth - first after becoming a Woman Grandmaster - and helped her match the tally of the Maharashtra-trio of Rohini Khadilkar, Bhagyashree Thipsay and Anupama Gokhale. This fourth consecutive National title saw Vijayalakshmi break the long-standing record of Rohini who had claimed three in a row beginning from 1976. Vijayalakshmi was particularly pleased with her performance this time since it came soon after her dismal showing in the Asian Zonal championship in Colombo. She had finished last among the five Indians, headed by champion Pallavi Shah. But in the National championship, Vijayalakshmi topped while Pallavi struggled all the way and finished last. Like Vijayalakshmi, younger sister Meenakshi once again proved better than the rest and retained her runner-up slot with an improved performance. Swati Ghate and R. Aarthie, seeded three and two, made the top-four bracket, followed by Bhagyashree Thipsay. The way Vijayalakshmi went about her task, it did not take long for the other contenders to realise that they were, at best, fighting for lesser honours. Barring a friendly draw with Meenakshi in the second round, Vijayalakshmi scored seven victories in eight rounds. Vijayalakshmi's winning sequence left Meenakshi, the nearest challenger, two points behind. Meenakshi trailed, following defeats to Swati and Bhagyashree. An uncharacteristic loss to Aarthie in the ninth round was a blow to Vijayalakshmi's pride but not to her chances. She returned with a vengeance and dismissed Saimeera Ravi and M. R. Sangeetha to take an unassailable 2.5-point lead with only two rounds to go. Lacking motivation after having sealed the title, Vijalakshmi blundered her way to defeat against Saheli Barua but signed off like a champion by brushing aside Bhagyashree. "I needed this title to prove a point. I had fared poorly in Colombo, so I was determined to do well here. I was happy with the quality of my matches, though the aggregate could have been better," said the 21-year-old Assistant Manager (Finance) with Indian Airlines. Meenakshi, seeded six, performed more consistently than some of the higher seeds. She did go wayward for a while but she got hold of the control levers in time. After successive losses to Bhagyashree and Nisha Mohota, Meenakshi survived a seemingly-lost position against debutant Harika Dronavalli in the 10th round. But thereafter, she scored three straight wins and remained in the second spot.
RAJEEV BHATT Swati, the reigning National 'B' champion, justified her seeding with a strong finish. After defeats to Nisha, Dolan Champa Bose and Vijayalakshmi, Swati gathered her wits and scored 4.5 points from the last five rounds for the third spot. After beginning her campaign with a comfortable victory over Bhagyashree, Swati was lucky to score over Meenakshi in the third round. But it was her gritty showing against Aarthie that helped her stay clear of the second seed. Aarthie, thrice National 'B' runner-up, too, had her moments. This 20-year-old WGM norm-holder punished an off-colour Vijayalakshmi to catch the attention of everyone. This one-off victory should do Aarthie's confidence a world of good since her quality of play remains under scrutiny despite her surprise triumph in the World (under-18) girls' championship in 1999. The championship was a good platform for Aarthie to prove a point or two. However, Aarthie failed to really get going with the black pieces. She lost to Bhagyashree, Meenakshi, Anupama, Swati and drew with Dolan and Sangeetha - all with black. On the other hand, she won all her seven matches with white for a respectable tally. For the seasoned duo of once arch-rivals, Bhagyashree and Anupama, there was hardly anything to feel great about. Though Bhagyashree had victories over Meenakshi, Aarthie and Anupama, she suffered disappointing defeats to Swati and Saheli. After she was held by a determined Harika and later by Nisha, three straight victories raised visions of a good finish. However, Bhagyashree failed to get the better of Pratibha in the 11th round. Following a win over Dolan, Bhagyashree ran into Vijayalakshmi in the final round and tumbled. In comparison, Anupama's four defeats and five draws kept her out of contention. Her sixth-round victory over Aarthie was a good one but in the remaining seven rounds, she managed just 2.5 points. Nisha Mohota, once the country's youngest Woman International Master, never really came close to justifying her fifth seeding. Three defeats in the first four rounds left her with too much of catching up to do. She redeemed herself with victories over Swati and Meenakshi but defeats to Harika, Saimeera and a draw with Pratibha proved costly. Among the rest, Harika was the best. All credit to this Guntur girl who showed glimpses of her talent in what was her toughest championship till date. She proved that her qualification from National 'B' was no flash in the pan. The fact that this unrated girl beat three WIMs - Saheli, Nisha and Pallavi - besides holding Meenakshi, Bhagyashree and Anupama, underlines her stupendous performance. It must also be remembered that she almost beat Vijayalakshmi and Meenakshi before her inexperience surfaced. Still, four wins, as many losses, five draws and an eighth-place finish was a truly incredible performance by Harika, who is yet to celebrate her 11th birthday. At the other end of the scale was Pallavi. She was expected to be among the front-runners but never really recovered from the first-round loss at the hands of Y. Pratibha as seven other players went on to defeat her. In fact, the last-round draw, an agreed one at that, helped Pallavi break the sequence of five straight defeats.
RAJEEV BHATT Pallavi was a victim of the high expectations following her triumph in Colombo. "I never expected to win the Asian Zonal since I had not prepared much owing to my exams. Though I am sad at doing badly in this championship, I am well aware of my lack of preparations," admitted Pallavi, who has had this uncanny knack of making the Indian squad in alternate years, in which the Olympiad is held. Lastly, there may be several areas where the Indian women players need to improve. But none can question their fighting qualities. With their egos in place, these ladies refuse to offer a draw early in the game. As one of them said, "the question is, who will offer a draw? Everyone waits for the other to make an offer, which hardly comes. Certainly, our egos come in the way." The fact that only 20 matches - out of 130 - ended in draws, substantiate the point. Of these, three came on the last day. Otherwise, not more than two matches ended in draws on any of the other days. Three cheers to the never-say-die spirit of these 'fighting' ladies. Final placings (with tie-break scores, wherever necessary): Women: 1. S. Vijayalakshmi 10.5; 2. S. Meenakshi 9; 3. Swati Ghate 8.5; 4. R. Aarthie 8; 5. Bhagyashree Thipsay 7.5; 6. Nisha Mohota 7 (3.5); 7. Saheli Barua 7 (3); 8. Harika Dronavalli 6.5 (4); 9. Anupama Gokhale 6.5 (3.5); 10. Y. Pratibha 5; 11. Saimeera Ravi 4.5; 12. M. R. Sangeetha 4; 13. Dolan Champa Bose 3.5 (2); 14. Pallavi G. Shah 3.5 (1).
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