Having won the first game of the match, Harika needed just a draw to make it to last-four stage but as luck would have it, the Indian fell under pressure right from the start in the second game and did not quite recover.
For Dzagnidze, it has turned out to be a good opportunity now as both players start the tiebreak games of shorter duration with scores tied.
These two had drawn the first game of the match.
Alexandra Kosteniuk of Russia was the other winner of the day as she overpowered Ni Shiqun of China in a finely crafted endgame. The Russian won by 1.5-0.5 margin to set up a semifinal clash with Anna Muzychuk of Ukraine, who only had to hold Antoaneta Stefanova of Bulgaria to move to the next round.
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Out of the four quarterfinals, only Harika's match is stretched to the tiebreak stage and the Indian will play a couple of 25 minutes games with a 30 seconds increment against Dzagnidze. If the scores are still tied two games with 10 minutes apiece will be played and if the tie persists two blitz games will follow a final Armageddon game to determine the winner in the USD 450000 championship.
A piece sacrifice would have saved the day but even the best players in the history of the game would have been proud to find that. As it happened, Harika missed it and was eventually forced to call it a day in the ensuing rooks and pawns endgame.
Results quarterfinal: Nana Dzagnidze (Geo) beat D Harika (Ind) 1-1, goes to tiebreak; Alexandra Kosteniuk (Rus) beat Ni Shiqun (Chn) 1.5-0.5; Ju Wenjun (Chn) lost to Tan Zhongzyi (Chn) 0.5-1.5); Antoaneta Stefanova (Bul) drew with Anna Muzychuk (Ukr) 0.5-1.5.
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