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Yurtaev posts victory
V. V. Subrahmanyam
GUNTUR, APRIL 10. He refused an offer of draw with the hope of
snatching a crucial win to be in the race to grab the coveted GM-
norm.
But, D. V. Prasad suffered his second defeat in-a-row when he
lost to GM Leonid Yurtaev in a first round game of the Chalapathi
Grandmasters international chess tournament being held at
Chalapathi Residential School here today.
This game was originally scheduled for the opening day but with
the late arrival of Yurtaev it was put off to today, which was a
rest day for the other players.
Much to Prasad's surprise, Yurtaev offered a truce even before
the contest began. But, contrary to the image he gained in this
edition, Prasad was in an aggressive and determined mood. ``There
is no point in accepting a draw. I wanted to fight to the
finish,'' he said later.
Prasad opted for e4 opening to which Yurtaev replied with Modern
Defence. The Indian even introduced a novelty on 12th move - Be5
when he could have played Rc1\Nbb5, Bd2. But after the 17th move,
Black started to equalise the position fairly comfortably. Though
Prasad showed plenty of resilience to match his rival and looked
at one stage to gain an upperhand when he played the 29th move -
Qd2, he fumbled when he should not - playing the Rc2 on 42nd move
soon after the first time control. For soon, he lost a pawn (N x
b5) and virtually the game.
Later analysing the loss, Prasad admitted that he should have
played Re2 or Ke3 instead of Kg2 on 38th move which also weakened
his position.
Much to his chagrin, Yurtaev's pawn on the `h' file persistently
posed a threat in the end-game and Prasad had to resign after 80
moves.
No doubt, dreams of Prasad, who is has an ELO rating of 2421
compared to his rival's 2536 and who definitely felt that this
tournament was the best chance to get those invaluable nine
points to achieve the GM title, were shattered by virtue of two
consecutive games in which he looked in a fairly comfortable
position.
The moves: (D. V. Prasad lost to Leonid Yurtaev): e4-g6; d4-Bg7;
c3-d5; ed5-Qd5; Be3-Nf6; Bf3-Qd8; Ne2 0-0; 0-0 Nbd7; Bf4-c5; Na3-
cd4; Cd4-Nb6; Be5-Nfd5; Rc1-Be6; Nb5-Qd7; Nc7-Rad8; Ne6-Qe6; Bg7-
Kg7; Qb3-Rd7; Rfe1-Qd6; Nc3-Nc3; bc3-Rc7; a4-Nc4; Be2-Na5; Qb4-
b6; Ba6-Rd8; Qb2-Qf6; g3-Rd6; Rcd1- Re6; Qd2-Re1; Re1-Qc6; Bb5-
Nb3; Qb5-Nb3; Qg5-Qf6; Qe3-Na5; Qd3- Nb7; Re5-Nd6; c4-Nf5; c5-h5;
Kg2-bc5; Rc5-Rb7; d5-Nd6; h4-Qe5; Rc2-Nb5; ab5-Rb5; Qh5-Qe4; Kg1-
Qc2; Qc6-Qb1; Kg2-Qb4; Qa6-Qd4; Kg1-Qc5; Qa1-Kg8; Qab-Kf8; Qa1-
Ke8; Qa4-Kf8; Qa1-f6; Qa6-Qb6; Qc8-Kf7; Qc4-Kg7; Qc6-Kf7; Qc4-
Qd6; Qa4-a6; Qa5-f5; Kg2-f4; Kf3- fg3; fg3-Qf6; Kg2-Qb2; Kh3-Qe2;
Qb6-Qe1; Kg2-a5; Qc6-Qe4; Kf2-a4; Qc5-Qd3; d6-Qd2; Kf3-Qd1; Kf2-
ed6; Qc7-Ke6; Qc8-Kd5; Qg8-Kc5; Qg6-Qd4; Kg2-a3; Qc2-Kb4.
Tomorrow's pairings: Leonid Yurtaev vs V. Saravanan; Alexander
Fominyh vs G. B. Prakash; Ildar Ibragimov vs Zia-ur-Rehman; D. V.
Prasad vs K. Sasikiran; D. Barua vs Andrey Shariyazdanov; Abhijit
Kunte vs Sandipan Chanda; Koneru Humpy vs Pravin Thipsay.
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