Having won two of the first three games, this was Anand's third straight draw in the event and the Indian ace will look to heat things up in the next round when he plays with the slightly favourable colour in the game.
Shakhriyar Mamedyarov of Azerbaijan emerged as the sole leader when lady luck smiled on him from a nearly lost position against Grandmaster B Adhiban.
Adhiban had thus far been out-of-sort and nowhere near the performance he showed in the previous edition when he finished third. However, the Indian missed a golden opportunity when he failed to convert what should have been his first victory.
Vladimir Kramnik of Russia and top ranked Magnus Carlsen of Norway are joint fifth at the near half-way stage on 3.5 points with seven rounds still to come.
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Anand had to do little with black pieces as Anish Giri did not enter complexities. For the records, it was a Catalan by the Dutchman wherein Anand sacrificed a piece for piece- play and exchanged queens to retain subtle compensation. The peace was signed in mere 20 moves.
Meanwhile, in the challengers' section, Anton Korobov of Ukraine stretched his lead to a full point after scoring over Aryan Tari of Norway. The Ukrainian moved to an impressive 5.5 points out of a possible six and is now a full point ahead of Indian hope Vidit Gujrathi.
Gujrathi played out a draw with Benjamin Bok of Holland while D Harika also split the points with Dmitry Gordievsky of Russia.
Challengers: Benjamin Bok (Ned, 2.5) drew with Vidit Gujrathi (Ind, 4.5); Dmitry Gordievsky (Rus, 3) drew with D. Harika (Ind, 2.5); Anton Korobov (Ukr. 5.5) bt Aryan Tari (Nor, 2.5); Lucas van Foreest (Ned. 3.5) drew with Erwin LAmi (Ned, 3); Matthias Bluebaum (Ger, 2.5) drew with Bassem Amin (Egy, 2.5); Jeffery Xiong (USA, 2.5) drew with Michal Krasenkow (Pol, 2.5); Olga Girya (Rus, 2.5) drew with Jordeen van Foreest (Ned, 2.5).
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