Following a victory against world champion Magnus Carlsen in the previous round and a much deserving rest day thereafter, Anand had his task cut out against Nakamura. The American had a small advantage but it remained just that as Anand played the defensive part to perfection.
Veselin Topalov of Bulgaria again got lucky as local hero Jon Ludvig Hammer blundered in a dead-drawn endgame to hand another point to the Bulgarian in a platter. It may be recalled that in the first round, Carlsen had lost to Bulgarian in a completely winning position as he was not aware of the rules related to time control here.
Maxime Vachier-Lagrave played out a draw with Giri to reach 2.5 points for a sole fifth spot while Armenian Levon Aronian scalped for soon-to-be-American Fabiano Caruana of Italy to be on two points and in a tie for sixth place.
The biggest news of the day however was Carlsen striking form as the Norwegian finally got going in his typical style and crushed Russian Grandmaster Alexander Grischuk. Carlsen's first victory helped him reach 1.5 points from his five games.
Anand's knight manoeuvres were so perfect even Nakamura could not help praising his opponent calling one manoeuvre a "knight fianchetto", "You can see how my knights are defending each other nicely and are also restricting White's rook," said Anand on the moment when Nakamura was trying to press for more.