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Xie Jun's gut feeling turns true
By P.K. Ajith Kumar
NEW DELHI, DEC. 16. When she saw Viswanathan Anand in a bad
position in his quarterfinal match against Alexander Khalifman in
the World chess championship, Xie Jun was worried. For, she had a
strange idea about her own chances in the women's World
championship.
``I had this feeling that if Anand, who was the clear favourite
in the men's section, qualified for the final, I would also win
here, since I had the best chances in the women's section,'' said
the 30-year-old Chinese soon after winning her fourth World
title. ``But when I saw him in that losing position against
Khalifman in the tie-breaker, I told myself, ``Come on, how coud
Anand do this?''
The Indian genius survived that scare of course. And as for the
women's competition, Xie Jun continued to play on a different
level than the rest. The fact is that she totally dominated the
women's championship, whereas no man could stake a similar claim
in the men's event. Not even Anand.
All along the six-round tournament, Xie Jun looked the most
likely winner. She did not lose a single game, and could have won
many of her drawn games if she wanted to (she chose to play it
safe, when she needed only a draw).
Though she faced some unexpected resistance in the final from
compatriot Qin Kanying, at no stage during the four games did it
look that she would be stretched. She won the crucial first game,
when she had white pieces, coming up with a novelty that caught
her younger rival unawares.
``But I was surprised the way she fought after that game,'' she
said. ``Normally the Chinese players are afraid to play me.'' It
was not just her own countrywoman she scared in this
championship, though.
Xie Jun said she was happy to win what was the inaugural knock-
out World championship, but she would rather prefer the old
format. ``Here you make a mistake and you lose your life. Anyway
I am proud that I am the first World champion in the knock-out
format and the last champion in the classical system.''
Xie Jun had created a sensation in 1991, when she won the World
title for the first time, shocking Maia Chiburdanidze of Georgia,
a five-time World champion. Significantly she also led the way
for a Chinese revolution in women's chess. China is far ahead of
the rest of the world in the women's game, and has truly taken
over from Georgia.
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