Wei, Sindarov settle for a draw in opening game of the final

Wei, Sindarov settle for a draw in opening game of the final


Wei Yi and Javokhir Sindarov played out a draw in the first game.

Wei Yi and Javokhir Sindarov played out a draw in the first game.
| Photo Credit: FIDE

It was perhaps only fitting that Abhinav Bindra made the ceremonial opening move at the Chess World Cup on Monday. Like chess, shooting too is a lonely sport.

It was the first game of the final of what is one of the biggest events in the mind game’s calendar, and India’s first-ever individual gold medallist at the Olympics made the first move for Javokhir Sindarov, taking the ‘e’ pawn two squares forward at Resort Rio.

A little earlier, while talking to reporters, the articulate Bindra had said that he was more of a follower of chess players and than the game itself. For the game’s followers, who are growing in numbers rapidly in India, there may not have been too much excitement in the final’s first encounter. But it had its moments before Wei Yi and Sindarov decided to split the point after 50 moves; the opposite-coloured bishop ending

This was the first time ever that Wei and Sindarov were coming face to face in the classical format. The Chinese, not for the first time here, opted for Petrov’s Defence, and managed to create a promising position, but he didn’t really press, as he opted to capture the knight instead of a pawn, taking which would have given him more to play for.

The stakes are high in the other match, too. And Andrey Esipenko, after making that terrible blunder against Wei that cost him a place in the Candidates, should be feeling better. The Russian beat Nodirbek Yakubboev to take a 1-0 lead in the third-place playoff.

This time, playing from the white side of a Sicilian Defence (Four Knights), he was the beneficiary of some weak moves under time pressure from his opponent, in a rook-and-minor-piece ending. The Uzbek resigned on the 38th move, when he was about to lose his knight.

The results: Final: Javokhir Sindarov (Uzb) drew with Wei Yi (Chn); Third-place playoff: Andrey Esipenko (Rus) bt Nodirbek Yakubboev (Uzb).



Source link

By Admin

Leave a Reply