Harikrishna, the lone Indian in the top fifty of world ranking besides Viswanathan Anand, along with Krishnan Sasikiran has a task cut out.
S P Sethuraman, Vidit Santosh Gujarathi and Deep Sengupta are the other members of the team.
Qualified by virtue of a historic bronze medal winning performance in the last chess Olympiad, the Indians will surely miss Parimarjan Negi and B Adhiban who were both a part of the Olympiad triumph.
Harikrishna is in fine fettle and should be able to guide the team. A medal-winning performance will be however possible if the Indians do well on lower boards with Sethuraman and Gujarathi as Sasikiran is likely to hold his ground well too.
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On paper, the Russian team starts as the overwhelming favourite but there is much more to it than meets the eye. Alexander Grischuk, Sergey karjakin, Evgeny Tomashevsky, Dmitry Jakovenko and Nikita Vituigov are all formidable names in the world of chess but still the team is without king pin Vladimir Kramnik (busy in Shamkir) and Peter Svidler.
However, all eyes will be on Olympiad champions China that never ceases to spring a surprise. Ding Liren, Yu Yangyi and Wei Yi is a dangerous trio of players against any opposition while Xiangzhi Bu can be lethal on any day too.
The surprise inclusion is International Master Wang Chen, who recently also was part of the team in a match against India that the Chinese won in Hyderabad.
The tournament will have nine rounds in all among ten teams with each team playing once against the other. There will be four games in each round and the team scoring 2.5 points or above will be awarded with two match points.
In case of a tied result the point will be split and the team with maximum match points will be declared the winner.