Viswanathan Anand beats Boris Gelfand to win World Chess title
India's world chess champion Viswanathan Anand retained his title on Wednesday by beating Israeli challenger Boris Gelfand in a thrilling speed chess decider of their match in Moscow.
- NDTVSports
- Updated: May 30, 2012 08:38 pm IST
Indian Grandmaster Viswanathan Anand showed immense resilience to beat challenger Boris Gelfand of Israel in a tense rapid chess tie-breaker to win the World Championship crown for the fifth time overall and fourth in a row here on Wednesday. (Also Read: Brief account of world titles won by Anand)
Anand won the second game and drew the other three to win the title at the State Tretyakov Gallery here. Luck played a major part in the final game, favouring the Indian chess wizard when it mattered the most.
After a 6-6 deadlock in the 12 Classical games, the rapid finale ended 2.5-1.5 in Anand's favour making him the world chess champion.
The victory also meant that the 'King of Chess' will keep the crown till 2014, when the next World Championship will be held.
Anand has in the past beaten the likes of Vladimir Kramnik and Veselin Topalov but the Indian ace admitted to NDTV that this was his toughest win.
"I think definitely this is the toughest ever because we went all the way to tie-break and that hasn't happened to me before. This one... I think was very very close. I always had the feeling that Boris Gelfand would be a very tough opponent because I knew that he was enormously motivated.
"He played stuff he never played before in his life and that is very hard to prepare for because it is very hard to anticipate that kind of a detail, said Anand.
He added that in the end it was a question of holding the nerves which he did successfully.
"I believe it was entirely a question of nerves and my nerves held up till the very end and that was the main thing," said the world champion.
Watch: It has been my toughest ever title: Anand to NDTV
In Chennai, Anand's father Viswanathan Iyer was esctatic and agreed with his son's assessment that it was the toughest challenge Vishy has faced.
"Gelfand has always been a tough opponent. Even in the earlier games if you see he has been always a tough opponent."
Mr. Iyer added that "it was the proudest moment of our lives".
It was high tension drama that almost made the Moscow weather look like an Indian summer inside the Tretyakov Gallery. Heated discussions on the chess board, tipsy-turvy games and above all the intensity of the battle made everyone forget that the champion and the challenger had been playing 12-classical games over the past three weeks.
The hallmark of Anand's success was his speed. Often, Gelfand was seen down to his last few seconds when Anand still had a few minutes left on his clock.
Gelfand played white in game one and got nothing out of the opening. In fact, an inaccuracy by the Israel gave Anand a huge advantage as the game progressed out of a Semi-Slav defense but it was Anand's chance to go wrong if the battle had to unfold the way it did.
Anand made a return error, and Gelfand, instead of looking for his chances in a tactical position, found himself short of time. Soon it was time to restore parity where the Israeli found solace in. The game was drawn quickly thereafter.
The 42-year-old Indian ace played white in the second game and won an absorbing battle that saw fortunes fluctuating many a times. Anand was clearly better out of the Rosslimo Sicilian when some optically safer solutions landed him in some problems.
Gelfand took his chances when he could have objectively drawn and Anand was soon back in the game. The ensuing endgame was also completely drawn, but the Speed king pressed on as Gelfand ran short of time and eventually blundered.
In what was practically his last chance for survival, Gelfand fumbled again in the third game. Attaining a winning position fairly quickly this time, the Israeli again saw his clock ticking away. Striking where it hurts, Anand confidently went in to a two-pawn less endgame, this time showing that the position was completely drawn.
Anand yet again employed the Rosslimo as white with its solid reputation in the fourth game, exchanged the queens early and the position was already equal. Gelfand had the Bishop pair to boost off but there were no targets for him to attack as white had no weaknesses.
Black of Gelfand stood slightly better for a long time but that's where it ended. The position was never improved beyond that as Anand neutralized the initiative. The draw was what the champion needed and he achieved it after 56 moves.
"It was incredibly tensed. Well, when I woke up this morning, I knew it would end one way or the other but didn't know how it will go. It was so even that didn't know how the tie-breaker will turn," Anand said after the game.
"I am too tensed to be happy but really relieved", he said.
This was Anand's fifth World Championships title and fourth crown in a row. The Indian chess wizard bagged his first world title in 2000 before winning three in a row in 2007, 2008 and 2010. He has been the world champion since 2007.
Anand will pocket approximately USD 1.4 million - 55 percent of the total prize fund of USD 2.55 million - while Gelfand will get the remaining amount.
The Indian ace won the 2007 crown in a tournament format among eight players. In 2008 and 2010, he beat Vladimir Kramnik of Russia and Veselin Topalov of Bulgaria respectively after the format changed to championship match between the defending champion and a challenger.
Anand, meanwhile, also told NDTV that he will be back in India in three days. The whole country is now eagerly waiting to felicitate the chess king.
(With inputs from PTI)