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Aronian Defeats Vachier-Lagrave, Trails Arjun By Half-Point
Aronian Defeats Vachier-Lagrave, Trails Arjun By Half-Point
Analysis session after Aronian defeated Vachier-Lagrave. Photo: V. Saravanan/Chess.com.

GM Arjun Erigaisi continues to lead the Chennai Grand Masters 2024 Masters with four points after a draw with GM Parham Maghsoodloo in the fifth round. Trailing him by half a point is GM Levon Aronian who defeated GM Maxime Vachier-Lagrave to reach 3.5 points. Aronian was the only winner of the day in the Masters.

In the Challengers section, GM Pranav Venkatesh was held to his maiden draw by GM Raunak Sadhwani but continues to lead the field by a full point on 4.5 points. GM Leon Mendonca and Sadhwani follow the leader with 3.5 and three points respectively.

GM Murali Karthikeyan scored his second win in as many games to be the only winner of the day when his opponent GM Abhimanyu Puranik blundered in an equal-looking endgame when each player had just around a minute on their clocks.

Round six will start on Sunday, November 10, at 4:30 a.m. ET/10:30 CET/3 p.m. IST.

Round 5 Standings: Challengers


It was a relatively sedate day in Chennai with just one decisive result in each section, though all the games were extended battles.

Masters

The win against Vachier-Lagrave looked like a relatively smooth affair, as Aronian himself agreed, especially when one saw a typical "Aronian-esque" moment when he could afford to play the bold 39.Kf1.

Aronian's ability to nonchalantly play such an anti-intuitive move made it clear that he was in the best of flow during the game. Chatting afterward, he described his mindset during the game: "Today I could play easily without thinking! Sometimes it's more of a psychological thing—you put pressure on your opponent to make difficult decisions. You have an easy play, you get ahead on time, (and) you feel this is the way to play." And against such smooth play, Vachier-Lagrave—in Aronian's words—"got too nervous, way too fast at some point."

Today I could play easily without thinking!

—Levon Aronian

This only decisive result is our Game Of The Day annotated by GM Rafael Leitao (soon to be added).

Arjun's game was obviously followed with a lot of interest, but it was Maghsoodloo who seemed to be dictating it in the late middlegame.

Arjun and Maghsoodloo analyze their game, watched by (left to right) GMs Srinath Narayanan, Deepan Chakkravarthy, and Vachier-Lagrave. Photo: V. Saravanan/Chess.com.

Challengers

The decisive game between Karthikeyan and Puranik is an annotator's nightmare, as it was thoroughly messy with many mutual mistakes. The following is a light analysis of many of the crucial moments of the game.

Puranik vs. Karthikeyan was a messy game decided when the former blundered in a mutual time scramble. Photo: ChessBase India.

How to review?

You can click through the games of this tournament on our Events Page.

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