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Sports: Anand Draws With Carlsen; Aronian Emerges As Early Leader

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  • Sports: Anand Draws With Carlsen; Aronian Emerges As Early Leader

    ANAND DRAWS WITH CARLSEN; ARONIAN EMERGES AS EARLY LEADER

    Hindustan Times
    Sept 27 2011
    India

    World Champion Viswanathan Anand could do little with his white pieces
    as he settled for a draw with world number one Magnus Carlsen in the
    first round of the fourth Bilbao Final Masters, in Sao Paulo.

    World number three Levon Aronian of Armenia drew the first blood in the
    tournament at the expense of Spaniard Francisco Vallejo Pons to emerge
    as the early leader in the six-player double round robin tournament,
    played with the soccer-like scoring system.

    Also playing draw were Hikaru Nakamura of United States and Ukraine's
    Vassily Ivanchuk, who both fought hard but could not dispense with
    parity.

    With nine rounds still to come, Aronian leads the pack with three
    points in his kitty while Anand, Carlsen, Nakamura and Ivanchuk trail
    him on one point each. Vallejo Pons is at the bottom of the tables
    yet to open his account.

    The unique event which is split into two parts - Sao Paulo and the
    final half at Bilbao in Spain - also has Sofia rules in place to
    discourage draws but that hardly makes a difference with the advent
    of Berlin defense as a regular in elite chess.

    Anand has been employing the opening as black almost on a regular basis
    and this time Carlsen used it against the Indian ace successfully to
    get an easy draw.

    It all started in 2000 when Vladimir Kramnik used the Berlin
    successfully against Garry Kasparov in the Braingames world
    championship match and over the years the analysis has proved that
    despite slight deficiency in pawn structure, black has been known to
    keep the balance ticking.

    Anand could do little as pieces kept disappearing off the board and
    soon enough the players were left with just the Bishops of opposite
    colours with only a drawn result possible.

    The peace was signed in 28 moves. Unfortunately for the spectators,
    the foremost game of day one turned out to be the least exciting.

    Aronian, however kept everyone interested with his blend of
    uncompromising chess. Playing the white side of a Slav, the Armenian
    was pleasantly surprised to see a relatively less known variation
    and sacrificed a pawn early to gain space.

    Vallejo Pons had to concede the extra material quickly as white
    started to build a king side attack and it looked as if Aronian was
    training his sights for an early finish after he came up with a piece
    sacrifice to dismantle black's king side.

    Vallejo did not give up easily and reached piece plus endgame but
    white's handful of extra pawns were simply irresistible. Aronian won
    in 53 moves.

    Nakamura tried to prove some advantage in the Bogo Indian game against
    Ivanchuk. The American exerted pressure in the center but Ivanchuk
    was up to the task and once the position opened, the pieces changed
    hands in tandem. A double rook endgame with four pawns apiece was
    reached and the draw was agreed to in 28 moves.

    Results round 1: V Anand (Ind, 1) drew with Magnus Carlsen (Nor,
    1); Hikaru Nakamura (Usa, 1) drew with Vassily Ivanchuk (Ukr, 1);
    Levon Aronian (Arm, 3) beat Francisco Vallejo Pons (Esp, 0).

    The moves: V Anand v/s Magnus Carlsen 1. e4 e5 2. Nf3 Nc6 3. Bb5 Nf6
    4. O-O Nxe4 5. d4 Nd6 6. Bxc6 dxc6 7.

    dxe5 Nf5 8. Qxd8+ Kxd8 9. Nc3 h6 10. h3 Ne7 11. Be3 Ke8 12. Rad1 Bd7
    13. a3 Rd8 14. Rfe1 a6 15. Ne4 Bf5 16. Nc5 Rxd1 17. Rxd1 Bc8 18. Nd3
    Ng6 19. Nf4 Nxf4 20. Bxf4 Be7 21. Nd4 Bc5 22. Be3 Bxd4 23. Rxd4 Ke7
    24. f3 Rd8 25. Rxd8 Kxd8 26. g4 h5 27. Kf2 g6 28. Bg5+ Ke8 draw agreed

    http://www.hindustantimes.com/Anand-draws-with-Carlsen-Aronian-emerges-as-early-leader/Article1-750639.aspx

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