Sasikiran, Harikrishna back
in the reckoning
Krishnan Sasikiran and Pendyala Harikrishna shot back into the reckoning for top honours with resounding victories over Grandmasters Gennadi Gutman of
Ukraine and Murey Jacob of Israel in the eighth and penultimate round of the Czech Grandmaster Open chess tournament in Pardubice.
GM Zbynek Hracek of Czech Republic played a draw with
second seed GM Macieja Bartlomiej of Poland and was joined by
GM Peter Acs of Hungary and GM Dimitry Jakovenko of Russia at
the top of the table on 6.5 points each.
Sixteen players including Sasikiran and Harikrishna follow the three leaders
with six points each, and Sasikiran is well-placed to eclipse one leader (Jakovenko) who he plays in the final round.
GM Dibyendu Barua and double GM norm holder Surya Shekhar Ganguly
have 5.5 points apiece alongside 29 others.
It was a fine display of positional chess from National champion Sasikiran, who played white against Gutman. In a
King's Indian defence game, Sasikiran employed the Classical set up and went for a relatively new plan that caught Gutman
off guard. With slow but effective deployment of pieces Sasikiran tightened the noose and crashed through Gutman's
defences on the queen side first with his queen penetration and then by guiding his rook on the queen file.
Gutman was forced to part with a pawn but his counter play
bid never materialised. Sasikiran put the final nail in the
coffin with a tactical stroke that won him further material
and the game in just 37 moves.
Sixteen-year-old Harikrishna opened with the Petroff
defence with black pieces for the first time in his career and
there were no signs of unfamiliarity with the new position
(only Jacob had it) with his newfound love for one of the side
variations.
As the game progressed Harikrishna castled on the
queenside and maintained the dynamic balance despite the
exchange of a few minor pieces.
Looking to ease some tension, Jacob traded all the minor
pieces but was saddled with a weak queenside pawn structure
and an exposed king in the process. Harikrishna completed the
formalities of winning in style (winning a pawn and then
forcing the game in to a rooks and pawns endgame where his
pawn majority on the queenside proved decisive). Jacob called
it a day after 44 moves.
Ganguly went down to Peter Acs. Playing the Glek variation
for the third time with white pieces Ganguly suffered his
first loss in the tournament. Peter Acs displayed top form in
the endgame to turn out victorious after an interesting
middlegame duel between the two. The game lasted 44 moves.
Barua gave an endgame lesson to International Master
Vladimir Shushpanov of Russia. Playing white Barua fell into a
well-known opening trap that gave Shushpanov an easy equality.
However, after the trade of Queens on the 16th move, Shushpanov
went awry with his planning and allowed Barua to seize the
initiative with his queen side pawn majority. Playing
energetically once on top, Barua clinched the issue in 54
moves.