After winning the national junior championship some time back, Narayanan had announced his arrival in the Indian chess scene and the youngster has lived up to expectations in the premier event for junior players here.
Having beaten the likes of Vladislav Kovalev of Belarus and Kamil Dragun of Poland earlier in the tournament, Narayanan currently shares the second spot in the championship on 5.5 points and will look forward to his Grandmaster norm first before going further.
Grover and Rajpara have 4.5 points each while Gujrathi is only on four points despite starting as the highest rated Indian and the defending bronze medallist.
Sahaj Grover was doing well until the last round when disaster struck and he handed the game in a platter to Karen Grigoryan of Armenia. There was certain exhaustion visible in Grover's game and the rest day should help him recover soon.
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With Cori in front, Narayanan is sharing the second spot with Wei Yi, Lu Shanglei of China and Karen Grigoryan. Grandmaster in waiting Arvindh Chathambaram is among those who have five points each.
In the girls' championship, being organised simultaneously, Padimini Rout meets her toughest opponent after the lone rest day in defending champion Aleksandra Goryachkina of Russia.