Adhiban beats Adams to tie for third in Isle of Man
Isle of Man (UK), Oct 29 (PTI) Grandmaster B Adhiban finished tied third at the Chess.com Isle of Man International tournament after beating highly-regarded Michael Adams of England in the ninth and final round here on Monday.
The victory that took him to 6.5 points not only made Adhiban the best performing Indian but also netted him in the pool of joint third spot after the other top results came in.
Former second of Viswanathan Anand, Poland's Radoslav Wojtaszek emerged the winner of the event after he defeated Arkadij Naiditsch of Azerbaijan in the final Armageddon game.
After a draw under normal time control Wojtaszek and Naiditsch tied for the top spot on seven points and even though the top two prizes between the two were evenly split, the winner's trophy went to Wojtaszek who put up a spirited show in the tiebreaker.
It was double joy for Wojtaszek as his wife Alina Kashlinskaya of Russia also won the top women's prize.
Adhiban was the star of the day from Indian perspective, fighting back inch by inch from an optically inferior position against Adams. Adhiban is known to bite the bullet when needed and a similar effort came from him in the endgame when he launched a well calculated assault on white's queen's side in endgame.
Adams lost a piece and the resulting technique was no problem for Adhiban.
Vladimir Kramnik and Alexander Grischuk of Russia, Hikaru Nakamura and Jeffery Xiong of United States, Gawain Jones of England, Wang Hao of China and Adhiban tied for the third spot on 6.5 points each in the 133000 Pounds Sterling prize money tournaments.
Anand ended the final round with another draw against Wang Hao which means that the Indian ace could inch up to six points. Giving him company on six points were Indians S P Sethuraman who had another fine day holding Anish Giri of Holland to a draw and Vidit Gujrathi who split the point with Hrant Melkumyan of Armenia.
R Vaishali, sister of young Grandmaster R Praggnanandhaa, lost her final round to Pia Cramling of Sweden but still made her maiden International Master norm. Vaishali had played some terrific games and came close to making a Grandmaster norm also but a lapse in form in the last two rounds meant that this time she would take an IM norm home.
Important and Indian results final round (Indians unless stated): Arkaditsch Naiditsch (Aze, 7) drew with Radoslav Wojtaszek (Pol, 7); Jeffery Xiong (Usa, 6.5) drew with Gawain Jones (Eng, 6.5); Alexander Grischuk (Rus, 6.5) beat Maxime Vachier-Lagrave (Fra, 6); Wang Hao (Chn, 6.5) drew with V Anand (6); S P Sethuraman (6) drew with Anish Giri (Ned, 6); Alexei Shirov (Lat, 5.5) lost to Vladimir Kramnik (Rus, 6.5); Hikaru Nakamura (Usa, 6.5) beat Pavel Eljanov (Ukr, 5.5); Michael Adams (Eng, 5.5) lost to B Adhiban (6.5); Vidit Santosh Gujrathi (6) drew with Hrant Melkumyan (Arm, 6); Nihal Sarin (5.5) drew with Wesley So (Usa, 5.5); R Praggnanandhaa (5) lost to Le Quang Liem (Vie, 6); D Gukesh (5) lost to Zoltan Almasi (Hun, 6); Vladislav Kovalev (Blr, 6) beat Abhijeet Gupta (5); Surya Shekhar Ganguly (6) beat Dennis Wagner (Ger, 5); V Vishnu Prasanna (5.5) beat Nigel Short (Eng, 4.5); M Shyam Sundar (4.5) lost to Alexander Donchenko (Rus, 5.5); Swapnil S. Dhopade (4.5) lost to Svane Rasmus (Ger, 5.5); Alexandra Kosteniuk (Rus, 5.5) beat Sundararajan Kidambi (4.5); Ilya Khmelniker (Isr, 5.5) lost to Abhimanyu Puranik (5.5); Sevag Krikor Mekhitarian (Bra, 5.5) beat S Ravi Teja (4.5): Christiansen Johan-Sebastian (Nor, 4.5) lost to C R G Krishna (5.5); Prithu Gupta (5.5) beat Helgi Olafsson (Isl, 4.5); Vaibhav Suri (5) beat B Merry Alan (4); Debashis Das (5) beat Inna Gaponenko (Ukr, 4); Arjun Kalyan (5) beat Dragnev Valentin (4); Anurag Mhamal (5) beat Sopiko Guramishvili (Geo, 4); Pia Cramling (Swe, 5) beat R Vaishali (4); Raunak Sadhwani (5) beat Eesha Karavade (4)