Premium
This is an archive article published on October 28, 1999

Third win for Humpy, Aarthie, Sangma

OROPESA DEL MOR SPAIN, OCT 27: Reigning girls under-12 world champion Koneru Humpy, Aarthie Ramaswamy and Rahul Sangma led their respec...

.

OROPESA DEL MOR SPAIN, OCT 27: Reigning girls under-12 world champion Koneru Humpy, Aarthie Ramaswamy and Rahul Sangma led their respective fields garnering three full points after as many rounds at the World Chess age-group Championship for boys and girls here.

The Indians fared better in round three with eight wins, one draw and three losses. Aarthie, Humpy and Sangma8217;s third straight wins were the icing on the cake.

In girl8217;s under-18 Aarthie faced the fifth seed Nadezhda Kasintseva of Russia and played the Sicilian to obtain equality. Kasintseva, however, played well to nullify the advantage and Aarthie complicated the position by sacrificing a piece to catch her rival in time pressure.

In the final minutes of sudden death Kasintseva failed to play the right moves and fell into Aarthie8217;s mating net.

Humpy once again played excellent game with white pieces against Zuzana Barosova of Slovakia. The champion developed her attack along the open F file by doubling her rooks and forced Zuzana to giveup an exchange. Thereafter Humpy displayed fine endgame technique.

In the boys under-10, Rahul Sangma lost a piece in the opening for two pawns but played energetically to improve the position of his pieces. Sangma won a pawn and an exchange to enter into a rook and pawn vs bishop and knight endgame and won after 86 moves. In the Under-16 girls, Y Pratibha faced the French Defence from Austrian Christine Ertl. Pratibha attacked relentlessly on the King side and sacrificed a piece to win the opponent8217;s queen.

P Harikrishna played the English opening and crushed Lithuanian Robertos Sakinis brilliantly in just 20 moves. He is half a point behind the leaders.

Story continues below this ad

MR Venkatesh played the Sicilian Pelican Sveshnikov variation and developed his pieces menacingly on Gilles Doubenfeld8217;s Luzembourg queen-side. After obtaining a strong advantage, he converted it into a win.

Valay Parikh won in just nine moves against Serge Hovnanion of Lithuania in under-18 section.

Hovnanion fell into a basic opening trap andblundered his queen and lost.

Tania Sachdev played the Sicilian defence against Tomakataryna of Poland and the game transposed into a Dragon type of setup. Tania lost a pawn in the middle game, however, she fought well in the double rook endgame and won back the pawn to draw the game.

Story continues below this ad

Another Indian in her category, Shraddha Samani, lost to Olga Iukina of Russia.

Eesha Karavade played the Dutch defence against Elitza Raeva of Bulgaria. Eesha played a good all-round game, bringing her queen on the King side for a decisive attack. Elitza resigned when she could not prevent Eesha8217;s pawn from queening.

 

Latest Comment
Post Comment
Read Comments
Advertisement
Advertisement
Advertisement
Advertisement