Former world champion Viswanathan Anand was held to an easy draw by Fabiano Caruana of Italy in the first round of Norway Chess tournament here.
It turned out to be a good day for Caruana as his preparation in the Berlin defense came good. Anand decided not to press the Italian and soon the players entered a dead-drawn endgame with Bishops of opposite colours.
For Anand it brings out a decent start to the USD 305000 prize money tournament in what could be called the strongest tournament of the year. The Indian ace has four more white games to play in the tournament.
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The Norwegian made his 60th move and then thought he had an extra 15 minutes which actually did not exist. It was checkmate in 30 moves for Carlsen when he was declared lost on time.
Anish Giri of Holland was the other big winner on the opening day at the expense of Alexander Grischuk of Russia. Playing white, Giri launched a fine king side attack and sacrificed a couple of pawns on the other flank to distract Grischuk. The Russian lost his queen for two pieces and the resulting position was child's play for Giri.
Maxime Vachier-Lagrave of France continued with his good form from the blitz tournament to beat Levon Aronian of Armenia. It was a tenacious defense by Aronian in a slightly worse position but the Frenchman was remorseless as he carried out his plans to perfection.
In the other games of the day Hikaru Nakamura of United States defeated wild-card Jon Ludvig Hammer of Norway. It was a typical Nakamura game wherein he got the play on both flanks to put pressure. Hammer had to face a stiff task as white had a protected passed pawn on the sixth rank in the middle game and when the dust subsided, Nakamura had landed the knockout blow.