![]() From the publishers of THE HINDU
Vol. 24 :: No. 52 :: Jan. 19, 2002 - 25, 2002
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CHESS/AICF GOLDEN JUBILEE INTERNATIONAL TOURNAMENT
A victory not so sweet for SasikiranP. K. AJITH KUMARTAHIR VAKHIDOV of Uzbekistan could not believe his luck. On Christmas Day, there was not just one Santa Claus for him, but three. First it was his opponent for the day, Andrey Shariyazdanov. The Russian, seeded fourth, somehow managed to blunder from a drawn position and lost.
RAMESH KURUP That took the Uzbekistan veteran's tally to eight points at the end of the 11th and final round of the AICF Golden Jubilee international GM Open tournament at Taj Residency, Kozhikode. On the board next to him, Iran's Ghaem Ehsan Maghami inexplicably lost to Maxim Sorokin of Argentina from a position he should have won. The Iranian teenager was thus left at his overnight score of 7.5 points. The other factor favouring the sixth-seeded Vakhidov came in the form of baby-faced Krishnan Sasikiran. The 20-year-old from Chennai was cruising to a comfortable victory against the prodigious Pendyala Harikrishna with two extra pawns, when he made a decisive blunder: he rode his knight to the wrong square ("I think there was a blindspot or something," he said later) and the game was drawn. That not only helped Harikrishna keep his unbeaten record (Vakhidov, 38, was the only other player not to lose a single game) intact in the tournament, but it spoilt Sasikiran's own chances of becoming the outright champion as well. Sasikiran could take the first place only on account of a better progressive score (with eight points he had tied with Vakhidov), and thus had to share the prize-money, too. Instead of the top prize of Rs. 1 lakh, Sasikiran got only Rs. 85,000, as Vakhidov's second place was worth Rs. 15,000 more than the original Rs. 70,000. (All these calculations were required because the players had decided to split the prize-money in case of ties). Regardless of the amount he won, Sasikiran was a deserving champion. He played the best game of the tournament with Maghami, who was so distraught after blundering his way to a crucial loss to Sorokin on the final day. "Only a child could have played like the way I did today," Maghami said, as he showed on the board how smoothly he could have accomplished his win. Things, as Sasikiran later admitted, hadn't gone smoothly for him in the year, when he reached Kozhikode on the eve of the tournament. Though he had won the Hastings Premier title in Britain - a significant triumph - at the beginning of 2001, he could not be as consistent on the board as one normally expects of him. He had also won the Asian Zonal championship in Colombo, though not in a convincing manner. So, probably, the AICF Golden Jubilee title was something he needed dearly to regain his confidence. It was apt too that he was able to rediscover some of his best form at the right time; otherwise the title could well have gone to Iran or Uzbekistan (not a bright idea, when the tournament was being conducted to mark the jubilee of the official organisation of the country). Sasikiran had looked India's best bet, when Abhijit Kunte lost his form after the sixth round and Harikrishna was unable to find his, thanks also to a persistent cold, which troubled him right through the event. Sasikiran, seeded second and one of the pre-tournament favourites, was the first player to take sole lead, with a perfect score after three rounds, following his crucial win against Maghami in the third round. He made it four out of four, when he beat top-seed Evgeny Vladimirov of Kazakhstan after rejecting an offer of draw. In the sixth round, after drawing with Shariyazdanov earlier in the day, he came across his nemesis. Abhijit Kunte proved too good for Sasikiran, yet again. With a fine knight sacrifice, the Pune-based youngster with a charming smile, who had narrowly beaten Sasikiran in their race to become India's fourth GM, scored a fluent win. Kunte was in the sole lead with 4.5 points, and it seemed that he was getting back to his best. Kozhikode had seen the very best of him, in 1998, when, in another Golden Jubilee GM tournament, he took 4.5 points off five GMs on his way to an unexpected, glorious triumph. He was only an IM then. He hasn't had good results of late, and his fine beginning in the tournament promised a lot. But, in the very next round, he suffered a setback against Marat Dzhumaev of Uzbekistan, the 10th seed, and never recovered. Kunte was placed 11th in the end, two slots below his seeding. "The year has been really bad for me," he said on the final day, after agreeing to a quick draw with R. B. Ramesh (he had to leave early to attend a marriage). "My game hasn't been that awful, though the results certainly have been." Unlike Kunte, Sasikiran, so solid and consistent, recovered from the loss in quick time. He was back in joint lead after the seventh round itself, with a win against the best performer among the six women at Kozhikode, S. Vijayalakshmi, who spoilt chances of a draw with incorrect defence. Sasikiran never went out of the lead after that. He was joined at the top by Maghami at the end of the eighth round. The duo were the joint leaders till the final round got under way. Of course, Vakhidov did finish ahead of Maghami, who had to be content with the third place, but it was the teenager who looked the biggest threat to Sasikiran's title aspirations. He almost pulled it off too, until he made that costly mistake against Sorokin. Had he won the game, he would have been the outright champion with 8.5 points. And he would have won Rs. 1 lakh, instead of the Rs. 22,000-odd he got in the end. Maghami looked very dejected long after the last round was over. His only solace was that Sasikiran won the title. "Here only the two of us deserved to come first," he told The Sportstar. "It's OK for me since Sasi has won the title." Just 19 and virtually going on without a coach so far, the Iranian promises a lot. He became his country's first GM when he scored his third norm from the Asian championship in Kolkata in August 2001. He is still the only GM in Iran, where he has had to struggle to come through. He used his spare time during the tournament to prepare for his Law Degree examinations, which were scheduled soon after the conclusion of the tournament. Vakhidov, also the coach of the Uzbekistan national team, played solid chess without taking any risks, to pick up his second GM norm. "It was nice to get my norm," he said and added, "and I am happy with the way I played here." He must have been happy with the way some of his opponents played too. Alexander Lyssenko, a 50-year-old Russian, who is more of a coach than a player, managed to lose to him in 18 moves, blundering a piece. Then of course, there was Shariyazdanov, who, interestingly, is Lyssenko's favourite student. The younger Russian probably wanted to emulate his trainer but ended as one of the major disappointments of the event. The champion at the Guntur GM tourney in 2000, finished 12th, much below the expectations. An even bigger disappointment was Koneru Humpy, who reached Kozhikode needing just one more GM norm to make history. The World junior girls' champion and India's youngest Woman Grandmaster would have also become India's youngest Grandmaster on the men's side, breaking the record Harikrishna had set in August 2001. After having such a wonderful year - when she won the World juniors, three men's GM tournaments, the WGM title and two GM norms - she was in for a few setbacks at the Beypore Hall in Taj Residency. To be fair, she had no time to prepare, coming straight from a Category X tournament in Budapest. Her rhythm was upset by K. Visweswaran in the second round itself. Though she did well in a few games, like the one against the National 'B' champion Sriram Jha, she was unable to produce the kind of form she had been used to for the best part of the year. "I haven't played well here at all," she admitted, "and I was making too many mistakes." The other Indian WGM, S. Vijayalakshmi made very few mistakes. The fighter impressed in a men's tournament yet again. Well over a year after she completed her WGM title from the Wipro tournament in Hyderabad, the Chennai girl proved quite a handful for her formidable rivals. She did better than her seeding to finish 13th, and scored her second win against her one-time coach Sorokin, besides drawing with Shariyazdanov, Vakhidov and Dzhumaev. "Yes, it was one of my better shows of the year," she said at the end of the closing ceremony, before dashing off to catch the evening's Chennai Mail. Her younger sister S. Meenakshi had a reasonably satisfying outing though she finished outside the prize list. In her last game Vijayalakshmi lost to her one-time coach Vladimirov, who was placed fifth on progressive scores. The former second of Garry Kasparov, who is the main coach of the Wipro-sponsored Harikrishna, was far from pleased with his effort. "I don't like this time control at all. My performance just proved my point," said the GM, never at a loss for words. "I think we are all lucky to be alive at the end of the tournament." His ward, Harikrishna, may have had some luck here or there, but he is increasingly becoming the most difficult player to beat in India. He has lost just two games with white pieces in the entire year. At Kozhikode, no player, with any colour, could take a full point from him. He was able to find a way out from a few inferior positions, reminding one of Dibyendu Barua, the Houdini of Indian chess. "But Barua could win from such positions. I am not very happy with my games here. I was not feeling well either, because of the cold," said the Guntur prodigy, who finished a creditable fourth, three places above his seeding. Visweswaran, an engineer-journalist from Chennai, had no obvious problems with his health. He came the closest an Indian did to make a norm. He finished half-a-point short of a maiden IM norm, after he messed up his game with Lyssenko. "I was winning against him with a mating threat," said the 27-year-old, one of the surprise packages of the tournament. "And he offered a draw in that position but I refused, for I believe you should go for a win when you have a chance to do so," he said. Prathamesh Mokal, a 19-year-old from Pune, turned out to be an even bigger surprise. He was seeded 44th, but finished 17th with six points. More importantly, he had an impressive score against stronger rivals, shocking Humpy, P. Konguvel and V. Saravanan. Lyssenko, who finished seventh, was one of the happiest men on Christmas Day. "This is one of my best-ever performances in a tournament," he said, and joked: "I have done better than all my students, including Shariyazdanov and the Indian youngsters." Pravin Thipsay finished a place below Lyssenko, at eighth, and it was a strong comeback for him, after scoring just one point from his first four rounds. He recorded a memorable win against Kunte too, as he picked up 6.5 points from the last seven rounds. The final placings (progressive scores within brackets): 1. Krishnan Sasikiran 8 (53.0), 2. Tahir Vakhidov (Uzb) 8 (49.5), 3. Ehsan Ghaem Maghami (Irn) 7.5 (49.0), 4. Pendyala Harikrishna 7.5 (46.0), 5. Evgeny Vladimirov (Kaz) 7.5 (45.0), 6. Maxim Sorokin (Arg) 7.5 (42.0), 7. Alexander Lyssenko (Rus) 7.5 (40.5), 8. Pravin Thipsay 7.5 (36.0), 9. Marat Dzhumaev (Uzb) 7 (45.5), 10. Dinesh Kumar Sharma 7 (39.0), 11. Abhijit Kunte 6.5 (46.5), 12. Andrey Shariyazdanov 6.5 (45.5), 13. S. Vijayalakshmi 6.5 (44.0), 14. R. B. Ramesh 6.5 (38.5), 15. Sriram Jha 6.5 (37.0), 16. Sandipan Chanda 6.5 (35.5), 17. Prathamesh Mokal 6 (41.0), 18. G. B. Prakash 6 (38.5), 19. Koneru Humpy 6 (36.5), 20. C. S. Gokhale 6 (36.5), 21. M. R. Venkatesh 6 (36.5), 22. D. V. Prasad 6 (34.5), 23. Roktim Bandyopadhyaya 6 (34.0), 24. Lanka Ravi 6 (34) and 25. S. Satyapragyan 6 (31.0). The moves: IM R. B. Ramesh v GM K. Sasikiran. Sicilian Defence. 1. e4 c5 2. Nf3 d6 3. d4 cxd4 4. Nxd4 Nf6, 5. Nc3 a6 6. Be2 e5 7. Nb3 Be7 8. Be3 Be6 9. Nd5 Nbd7 10. Qd3 Bxd5 11. exd5 Rc2 12. c4 -00- 13. -00- Re8 14. Kh1 Bf8 15. Rac1 b6 16. Nd2 a5, 17. b3 g6 18. Nb1 Bg7 19. Nc3 Qe7 20. a3 h5 21. Na4 Nc5 22. Nxc5 bxc5 23. Rfd1 Nd7, 24. Qd2 e4 25. Rb1 Be5 26. b4 axb4 27. axb4 cxb4 28. Rxb4 29. Rb5 Ra8 30. g3 Ra3 31. Qc2 Qf5 32. Rb3 Rxb3 33. Qxb3 Rb8 34. Qa4 Rb2 35. Bf1 h4 36. gxh4 Rxf2 37.Bxf2 Qxf2 38. Bg2 Qf4 39. Kg1 Qxh2+ 40. Kf1 Nc5 41. Qc2 Nd3 0-1.
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