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Grand Swiss R09: An array of strong performances with Vishy leading the way

by Satanick Mukhuty - 20/10/2019

The FIDE Chess.com Grand Swiss Isle of Man is inching closer towards the finishing line but the excitement at the top is only swelling up as after the ninth round yesterday, the event has found a fourth leader in Hikaru Nakamura. The American star defeated Vladislav Kovalev with black pieces to climb up the leaderboard and join Fabiano Caruana, David Anton Guijarro, and Levon Aronian in the lead. Vishy Anand held Kirill Alekseenko to a solid draw to remain in the chasing group, while Vidit Gujrathi and Raunak Sadhwani made emphatic comebacks. Several Indians have so far performed admirably well in this extremely strong tournament. In this report we bring you the glimpses of some of their achievements from the ninth round. 

 

The FIDE Chess.com Grand Swiss 2019 is already at its climax, with only two rounds remaining the event hardly has any one clear leader. There are four players tied for the top place and as many as eleven players follow them closely just half a point behind. The tension is getting more and more intense but how are the Indians faring in it? Well, most of them are performing higher than their stated level and some of them are definitely stealing the limelight. Needless to mention, it is Vishy Anand himself who is leading the way. The Madras Tiger started off the tournament with an upsetting loss against Evgeniy Najer but since then has risen from strength to strength to join the chasing group of eleven players that after all includes none other than the World Champion Magnus Carlsen.

 

The leaders of the event at the moment are Fabiano Caruana, David Anton Guijarro, Levon Aronian, and Hikaru Nakamura who share 6.5/9 points each. Among them Hikaru has joined the top only after round nine, thanks to a powerful victory with black pieces against Vladislav Kovalev of Russia. Fabiano drew his ninth round game against Magnus Carlsen. Elsewhere, Aronian and Gujjaro too split the point between themselves.

Hikaru had a slow start in the event drawing four games in the first five rounds but with his win against Kovalev he has now emerged as one of the leaders. Check out his full game from round nine below | Photo: John Saunders

Raunak Sadhwani - the star of Indian contingent!

Coming back to the subject of Indian performances in the event, one name that immediately stands out is Raunak Sadhwani. The thirteen-year-old from Nagpur has shown some phenomenal chess to hold his own against all his 2650+ rated opponents. What is even more inspiring is that the boy needed only to show up in rounds 8-9 to secure his GM title but he rather chose to fight and delivered a crushing performance in the ninth round against Alexander Motylev. This is something that speaks volumes of the youngster's character. The following is what IOM chess tweeted about the Indian prodigy!

Raunak faces the strong (almost 2700 rated) Egyptian Grandmaster Amin Bassem in the penultimate round. How do you think he will do against him? | Photo: John Saunders 

Without further ado let us delve into how Raunak outplayed Alexander Motylev in round nine yesterday. The Russian had the black pieces and adopted a very committal approach in the English opening by pushing g7-g5 on move 10. However, as we will see, owing to the closed nature of the position, there was no straightforward way for White to exploit the resulting weaknesses. But Raunak patiently waited for his chance and was able to open up the position eventually, after which the game was soon wound up in just 37 moves with fierce piece play.  

 

Raunak Sadhwani - Alexander Motylev, Round 9

10...g5?! in the above position looked dubious as obviously it weakens the kingside and particularly the f6 square. But in a closed structure like the above how does White go about exploiting this?

As a rule in such situations it is important to be patient! Raunak came up with the very ingenious idea of going 11.Ne1 here. The idea is to go clear the f3 square for the queen potentially also paving way for an f2-f4 break! And the e1 knight can surely be rerouted to c2 where it will have an active role to play.  

White went about developing his queen to f3 and knight to c2. Now, the next step was open the position up with d3-d4!

Black is already in a lot trouble in the above position. A simple move like 18...exd4 loses immediately to 19.Bxh3 g4 20.Nd5! The position was opened up soon enough from here and White's pieces unleashed themselves on Black's uncastled king. The full game is presented below.

Another player who has been extraordinarily solid in this tournament is S.L.Narayanan. The twenty-year-old youngster from Kerala deserves all the applauds for staying unbeaten in the event so far. In round nine he held Alexey Dreev to a draw with black pieces, this game is given below | Photo: Amruta Mokal

Harika sizzles, a class act by Vidit

Harika Dronavalli started off as the highest rated female player in the event and has truly lived up to her standard. She has defended well against all her higher-rated opponents and with the victory against Axel Bachmann in round nine she is all set to grab the best female player prize of the tournament. Her closest competitor in this regard is Alina Kashlinskaya of Russia. Here is what FIDE tweeted about here:

Harika in action against Piorun Kacper in round five | Photo: Maria Emelianova

Axel Bachmann - Harika Dronavalli, Round 9

Axel had found a comfortable position to play out of the opening but ended up over-extending his central pawn majority which allowed Black to break open with catastrophic consequences. Check out the full game below!

Vidit Gujrathi had sort of slowed down in the last few rounds, first losing to Parham Maghsoodloo in round four and then drawing four games in a row. However, in the ninth round of the event, the India no.3 bounced back with a brilliant game. Can you find the move that Vidit played with white pieces against Aryan Tari? Check the game below for answer | Photo: Maria Emelianova 

Results of all Indian players (Round 9)

Rd.Bo.No. NameRtgPts. ResultPts. NameRtg No.
9338
GMAlekseenko Kirill 2674 ½ - ½ GMAnand Viswanathan 2765
4
995
GMYu Yangyi 27635 ½ - ½5 GMAdhiban B. 2639
73
91617
GMVidit Santosh Gujrathi 2718 1 - 05 GMTari Aryan 2630
85
92647
GMFedoseev Vladimir 2664 ½ - ½ GMSethuraman S.P. 2624
94
92851
GMDreev Aleksey 2662 ½ - ½ GMNarayanan.S.L 2611
104
93263
GMMelkumyan Hrant 2650 ½ - ½ GMGukesh D 2520
119
9349
GMHarikrishna Pentala 27484 1 - 04 GMDurarbayli Vasif 2617
100
93837
GMSasikiran Krishnan 26754 1 - 04 GMVolokitin Andrei 2627
90
94299
GMVovk Andriy 26184 ½ - ½4 GMGanguly Surya Shekhar 2658
54
945129
IMSadhwani Raunak 24794 1 - 04 GMMotylev Alexander 2651
62
947105
GMNihal Sarin 26104 0 - 14 GMChigaev Maksim 2644
68
94870
GMBluebaum Matthias 26434 ½ - ½4 GMPuranik Abhimanyu 2571
114
95081
GMNajer Evgeniy 26354 1 - 04 WGMSoumya Swaminathan 2365
149
96087
GMBachmann Axel 2629 0 - 1 GMHarika Dronavalli 2495
122
967124
GMPrithu Gupta 24933 0 - 13 IMErenberg Ariel 2463
133

Pairings of all Indian players for the next round

Rd.Bo.No. NameRtgPts. ResultPts. NameRtg No.
1044
GMAnand Viswanathan 27656 6 GMWang Hao 2726
15
101276
GMNguyen Ngoc Truong Son 2638 GMVidit Santosh Gujrathi 2718
17
101773
GMAdhiban B. 2639 5 GMHarikrishna Pentala 2748
9
102482
GMMareco Sandro 26345 5 GMSasikiran Krishnan 2675
37
102994
GMSethuraman S.P. 26245 5 GMShirov Alexei 2664
49
1031119
GMGukesh D 25205 5 GMDreev Aleksey 2662
51
1034104
GMNarayanan.S.L 26115 5 GMMelkumyan Hrant 2650
63
103522
GMAmin Bassem 2699 5 IMSadhwani Raunak 2479
129
104254
GMGanguly Surya Shekhar 2658 GMErdos Viktor 2604
108
1047114
GMPuranik Abhimanyu 2571 GMPapaioannou Ioannis 2645
66
1048122
GMHarika Dronavalli 2495 GMRiazantsev Alexander 2645
67
105329
GMJones Gawain C B 26884 4 GMNihal Sarin 2610
105
1059100
GMDurarbayli Vasif 26174 4 WGMSoumya Swaminathan 2365
149
1069146
IMMunguntuul Batkhuyag 2421 3 GMPrithu Gupta 2493
124

Results of top ten boards (Round 9)

Bo.No. NameRtgPts. ResultPts. NameRtg No.
18
GMAronian Levon 27586 ½ - ½6 GMAnton Guijarro David 2674
39
21
GMCarlsen Magnus 2876 ½ - ½6 GMCaruana Fabiano 2812
2
338
GMAlekseenko Kirill 2674 ½ - ½ GMAnand Viswanathan 2765
4
448
GMMaghsoodloo Parham 2664 ½ - ½ GMKarjakin Sergey 2760
6
553
GMKovalev Vladislav 2661 0 - 1 GMNakamura Hikaru 2745
12
613
GMVitiugov Nikita 2732 ½ - ½ GMWang Hao 2726
15
718
GMMatlakov Maxim 27165 1 - 0 GMGelfand Boris 2686
30
834
GMMcShane Luke J 26825 ½ - ½5 GMSo Wesley 2767
3
95
GMYu Yangyi 27635 ½ - ½5 GMAdhiban B. 2639
73
107
GMGrischuk Alexander 27595 1 - 05 GMShirov Alexei 2664
49

Top ten pairings for the next round

Bo.No. NameRtgPts. ResultPts. NameRtg No.
12
GMCaruana Fabiano 2812 GMAnton Guijarro David 2674
39
212
GMNakamura Hikaru 2745 GMAronian Levon 2758
8
31
GMCarlsen Magnus 28766 6 GMMatlakov Maxim 2716
18
44
GMAnand Viswanathan 27656 6 GMWang Hao 2726
15
56
GMKarjakin Sergey 27606 6 GMAlekseenko Kirill 2674
38
624
GMHowell David W L 26946 6 GMGrischuk Alexander 2759
7
713
GMVitiugov Nikita 27326 6 GMRakhmanov Aleksandr 2621
95
819
GMLe Quang Liem 2708 6 GMMaghsoodloo Parham 2664
48
93
GMSo Wesley 2767 GMRobson Ray 2670
43
105
GMYu Yangyi 2763 GMKryvoruchko Yuriy 2669
44

Overall standings

Rk.SNo NamesexFEDRtgPts. TB1  TB2  TB3  TB4 
12
GMCaruana FabianoUSA28126,5272345,550,50,0
239
GMAnton Guijarro DavidESP26746,5269644,548,00,0
38
GMAronian LevonARM27586,5268245,550,00,0
412
GMNakamura HikaruUSA27456,5264638,041,50,0
515
GMWang HaoCHN27266,0273646,551,00,0
638
GMAlekseenko KirillRUS26746,0270842,546,00,0
748
GMMaghsoodloo ParhamIRI26646,0269643,547,00,0
81
GMCarlsen MagnusNOR28766,0268843,548,00,0
995
GMRakhmanov AleksandrRUS26216,0268339,042,00,0
107
GMGrischuk AlexanderRUS27596,0268045,049,50,0
1113
GMVitiugov NikitaRUS27326,0266641,545,50,0
126
GMKarjakin SergeyRUS27606,0265643,547,00,0
1318
GMMatlakov MaximRUS27166,0264540,044,50,0
144
GMAnand ViswanathanIND27656,0264341,044,50,0
1524
GMHowell David W LENG26946,0263538,543,00,0

 Complete results and standings


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