City
Epaper

Magnus Carlsen nears 2900 as India teenager Arjun Erigaisi suffers setback on first day of final

By IANS | Updated: September 25, 2022 09:55 IST

New York, Sep 25 World chess champion Magnus Carlsen is on the brink of becoming the first player ...

Open in App

New York, Sep 25 World chess champion Magnus Carlsen is on the brink of becoming the first player to hit the historic 2900 Tour Rating mark after crushing Indian teenager Arjun Erigaisi on Day One of the Julius Baer Generation Cup final the seventh leg of the USD1.6 million Meltwater Champions Chess Tour.

Norway's Carlsen now has one hand on the trophy having ended the challenge of Erigaisi, one of India's brightest talents, 2.5-0.5 with one game to spare.

In his first Meltwater Champions Chess Tour final, Erigaisi needs to pick himself up before the second half of the final later on Sunday after a chastening day of chess for the youngster.

Carlsen told Meltwater Champions Chess Tour that he was "far from satisfied" with his play and said there were some "pretty bad moments, but overall I can't complain".

"It felt to me that he (Erigaisi) didn't fully believe in it, which I can understand. So maybe he didn't take his chances in the last game fully either because I think he had serious chances to press. But it didn't feel like he was grasping the moment," said Carlsen.

Carlsen started with a brutal win over his teenage opponent. The champ built a checkmating attack on the kingside before delivering the killer blow with the bishop sacrifice 35.Bxg6. It quickly got worse for Erigaisi. In game number 2, Carlsen knocked the Indian off his stride with a novelty in the opening 8...Bd7 before seeing deep enough to launch another unstoppable kingside attack.

With 28...N4d5! Carlsen found the only winning move and the game ended with Erigaisi resigning on move 30.

"What a masterpiece, what a tactical duel by both players," enthused Grandmaster David Howell in the commentary box.

"A stunning game," Grandmaster Peter Leko added.

In game 3, Erigaisi needed a win to stay in the match but Carlsen appeared to put down the shutters and close up shop before unleashing another attack in the endgame.

With 38.Nh5, Erigaisi's face fell. Carlsen then inexplicably blundered away what seemed another certain win, but the draw was enough for a 2.5-0.5 win.

Carlsen was ahead in the final and Erigaisi now needs to win later on Sunday just to take it to tiebreaks.

GM Howell said: "I must say, in this tournament so far he (Carlsen) is possibly the best I've seen since 2019, since he was just destroying everyone.

"He's been on a roll. He won something like nine games in the prelims and straight through here without any play-offs."

"Calm, controlled, measured. He looks on the top of his game."

Erigaisi, hailing from Warangal in India, was downcast at the end but said he wanted to remain positive. "It's just evident that he's the better player but hopefully things will go my way and I'll try to play my best chess," he said.

Disclaimer: This post has been auto-published from an agency feed without any modifications to the text and has not been reviewed by an editor

Tags: WarangalNorwayMagnus CarlsenArjun ErigaisiMagnus carlsen chess
Open in App

Related Stories

MumbaiMumbai: Over 10 International Schools Receive Threat Emails in 2 Months via Foreign VPNs; Probe Underway

NationalTelangana Accident: 7 Killed, 6 Injured As Lorry Carrying Iron Rods Collides With Autorickshaws in Warangal (VIDEO)

NationalTelangana Fire: Massive Blaze Erupts at Gunny Godown in Warangal (Watch Video)

InternationalIsrael-Hamas War: Ireland, Norway and Spain Recognise Palestine as State (Watch Video)

National‘Caught Up With My Young Friend’: PM Narendra Modi Shares Heartwarming Moment With Child in Telangana, See Pic

Other Sports Realted Stories

Other Sports1st Test: Siraj, Bumrah, and Rahul ensure India seize control over West Indies

Other SportsWomen’s World Cup: Bowlers shine as Bangladesh bundle out Pakistan for paltry 129

Other Sports1st Test: Rahul hits unbeaten 53 as India reach 121/1, trail West Indies by 41 runs

Other SportsIndian junior women’s hockey team ends Australia tour with 4-5 loss to Canberra Chill

Other SportsManish, Vaishnavi storm into semis of National Tennis Championship