Anand loses to Carlsen in Tal Memorial

June 19, 2013 10:10 am | Updated 10:10 am IST - Moscow

Indian chess star Viswanathan Anand suffered a shock loss to next World Championship challenger Magnus Carlsen of Norway in the fifth round and slipped to the joint seventh spot in the Tal Memorial Tournament here.

Playing the last classical game against Carlsen ahead of the World Championship match scheduled in Chennai in November next, Anand could not find any suitable plan and was outplayed by the young Norwegian in what could be termed as a rude wake up call for the Indian world champion.

Boris Gelfand of Israel joined Hikaru Nakamura of United States in lead on 3.5 points after winning his second game in the tournament at the expense of Alexander Morozevich of Russia.

While Nakamura played his first draw in the tournament sharing point with Dmitry Andreikin of Russia the most striking thing known past the half way stage is the fact that the four Russian participants are yet to score a victory in the tournament.

With Gelfand and Nakamura in front, Carlsen and Mamedyarov are close behind on three points each. Andreikin and Fabiano Caruana of Italy share the fifth spot on 2.5 points while Anand and Karjakin are joint seventh now on two points each.

Lower down, the Russian duo of Morozevich and Vladimir Kramnik share the cellar with 1.5 points in their bag right now.

While the focus of the world stayed on the Carlsen-Anand game, Andreikin did well to keep Nakamura in check. The American had won three games in a row and was raring to go but was denied any leverage by the best performing Russian here.

In other games of the day, Mamedyarov remained focused and drew with Caruana while Kramnik played his third draw in five games here splitting the point with Karjakin.

The results (Round 5) :

Magnus Carlsen (Norway, 3) beat V. Anand (India, 2); Boris Gelfand (Israel, 2.5) beat Alexander Morozevich (Russia, 1.5); Hikaru Nakamura (USA, 3.5) drew with Dmitry Andreikin (Russia, 2.5); Shakhriyar Mamedyarov (Azerbaijan, 3) drew with Fabiano Caruana (Italy, 2.5); Vladimir Kramnik (Russia, 1.5) drew with Sergey Karjakin (Russia, 2).

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