Home Chess Tata Steel Chess: Sindarov beats Erigaisi, joins Abdusattorov in the lead

Tata Steel Chess: Sindarov beats Erigaisi, joins Abdusattorov in the lead

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Sindarov and Abdusattorov co-leaders, Niemann joins chasing pack

With only two rounds remaining, the struggle for overall victory in the Tata Steel Masters remains completely open. After round eleven, the two Uzbek representatives, Nodirbek Abdusattorov and Javokhir Sindarov, are tied for first place on 7 points. Half a point behind stands a group of three: Matthias Bluebaum, Jorden van Foreest and now also Hans Niemann. Vincent Keymer, a further half point back, still has an outside chance of winning the tournament.

Sindarov joined his compatriot in the lead by defeating Arjun Erigaisi with the black pieces. The game arose from a tension-filled Semi-Slav and required sustained accuracy. Sindarov handled the complications confidently and remains the only player in either section who has not lost a game after eleven rounds.

Two further wins with black directly affected the race behind the leaders. Niemann beat Thai Dai Van Nguyen in a wild struggle. Nguyen at one point held a favourable position but failed to make the most of his chances, after which the initiative swung decisively in Niemann’s favour. Keymer, on his part, scored a full point by defeating defending champion Praggnanandhaa Rameshbabu. Pragg opted for an early sacrificial attack, but the idea did not stand up to precise defence, and Keymer gradually took over.

Hans Niemann

Very much in the fight for tournament victory after winning on Friday – Hans Niemann | Photo: Tata Steel Chess / Lennart Ootes

The decisive game that had the least direct impact on the very top of the standings was arguably the most theoretically interesting. Anish Giri defeated Yagiz Kaan Erdogmus in 32 moves in a heavily analysed line of the Queen’s Gambit Declined. Giri thus bounced back from his loss to Bluebaum in the previous round and returned to a fifty-percent score. Erdogmus, who had been in shared second place only a few rounds earlier, now also stands on an even score after two consecutive losses. Even so, the 14-year-old continues to show he can compete on equal terms with elite opposition.

Three games ended in draws. The most noteworthy was the all-Indian clash between Gukesh Dommaraju and Aravindh Chithambaram, in which the world champion missed several chances to press for a win.

In Saturday’s penultimate round, both Abdusattorov and Sindarov will have the white pieces, against Bluebaum and Praggnanandhaa respectively.

Gukesh Dommaraju

Reigning world champion Gukesh Dommaraju came from playing six decisive games in a row (three wins and three losses) | Photo: Tata Steel Chess / Lennart Ootes

Round 11 results

Erigaisi 0-1 Sindarov

Javokhir Sindarov, Arjun Erigaisi

Javokhir Sindarov looking at the position after 33…Qa5 from afar – Arjun Erigaisi would falter here with 34.Rd1?, when 34.Re4 was the way to go | Photo: Tata Steel Chess / Lennart Ootes

Giri 1-0 Erdogmus

Anish Giri

The ever-charismatic Anish Giri | Photo: Tata Steel Chess / Lennart Ootes

Praggnanandhaa 0-1 Keymer

Vincent Keymer

Notably, Vincent Keymer has collected five wins, four losses and two losses so far in the event | Photo: Tata Steel Chess / Lennart Ootes

Standings after round 11

All games

Woodward climbs to sole first place, as Ivanchuk takes down Suleymanli

In the Challengers section, a striking pattern continued for a second consecutive round: Vasyl Ivanchuk defeated the player who had begun the day as sole leader, while that player’s closest rival won to take over first place. After beating Andy Woodward in round ten, Ivanchuk now overcame Aydin Suleymanli. This result allowed Woodward, who defeated Marc’Andria Maurizzi, to move into sole first place.

Ivanchuk has now won five of his last six games and shares second place with Suleymanli, half a point behind Woodward. Maurizzi stands alone in fourth place, another half point back, meaning four players remain realistically in contention for tournament victory as the weekend approaches.

Vasyl Ivanchuk

Vasyl Ivanchuk thinking hard during the game…

Vasyl Ivanchuk

…and sharing his thoughts after scoring his fifth win in six games | Photos: Tata Steel Chess / Lennart Ootes

Ivanchuk, playing the Sicilian Defence against Suleymanli, made the most of his opportunities once the Azerbaijani overextended and erred tactically in a sharp middlegame. In Woodward’s game, Maurizzi went all-in for an attack that did not hold up tactically. After incorrectly sacrificing a rook on h2, the French grandmaster soon had to resign.

Two further decisive games were seen on Friday. Faustino Oro defeated Daniil Yuffa and moved to a plus-one score, while Carissa Yip beat Eline Roebers, also reaching plus one. Yip now requires 1½ points from her final two games to secure her third GM norm.

Carissa Yip

Carissa Yip might return from Wijk aan Zee with her third and final GM norm | Photo: Tata Steel Chess / Lennart Ootes

Round 11 results

Woodward 1-0 Maurizzi

Andy Woodward

Challengers’ sole leader Andy Woodward | Photo: Tata Steel Chess / Lennart Ootes

Standings after round 11

All games


Tournament schedule

Games start daily at 14:00 CET (7:00 ET, 20:30 IST), except for round 13, which starts two hours earlier than usual.

Date Day Round
January 17 Saturday Round 1
January 18 Sunday Round 2
January 19 Monday Round 3
January 20 Tuesday Round 4
January 21 Wednesday Round 5
January 22 Thursday Rest day
January 23 Friday Round 6
January 24 Saturday Round 7
January 25 Sunday Round 8
January 26 Monday Rest day
January 27 Tuesday Round 9
January 28 Wednesday Round 10
January 29 Thursday Rest day
January 30 Friday Round 11
January 31 Saturday Round 12
February 1 Sunday Round 13

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