
Viswanathan Anand remained in control of much of his sixth round game against tournament leader Sergey Karjakin,even having chances for a win in the end game but had to settle for a draw. The draw was enough for Karjakin to hold on to the top spot with 4.5 points from six games,but his lead was cut down to just half a point. Anand remained tied-fourth,with three rounds to go in the Norway Chess 2013 Super Tournament.
Magnus Carlsen ground out a result from another draw-ish position against Teimour Radjabov,moving up to second place with 4 points.
Around the 40th move however,there were a few inaccuracies from both players,who were perhaps looking to go for the win,for various reasons 8211; Karjakin to recover from his loss in the previous round and Anand to get his campaign going.
Anand had chances to claim the doubled pawn on c. Even if he did,it is not clear whether it would have been enough for a win,considering black8217;s advanced a pawn would have given Karjakin enough play. It remained unexplored though and the position petered out to a draw,signed after 57 moves.
Radjabov blunders
Carlsen and Radjabov seemed to be heading to a draw in their English game heading for a draw until the Azeri blundered deep in the end game under time pressure to hand the Norwegian the advantage. It was a game that was very similar to their late contest at the Candidates Tournament,with Carlsen squeezing the position until his opponent blundered in the endgame. Carlsen started the tournament with four straight draws,but with two wins in as many games as the tournament enters the final stretch.
Round six,results:
Levon Aronian 2.5 bt Ludvig Hammer 1.5,Hikaru Nakamura 3 drew with Peter Svidler 2.5,Veselin Topalov 2 drew with Wabg Hao 1.5,Viswanathan Anand 2.5 drew with Sergey Karjakin 4,Magnus Carlsen 3 vs Teimour Radjabov 2.5
Round seven,pairings:
Wang Hao vs Levon Aronian,Ludvig Hammer vs Magnus Carlsen,Peter Svidler vs Veselin Topalov,Teimour Radjabov vs Viswanathan Anand,Sergey Karjakin vs Hikaru Nakamura