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Gukesh, Giri Beaten; Narayanan In Sole Lead
Narayanan took the sole lead and knocked Gukesh out of the top 10. Photo: Keti Tsatsalashvili/Qatar Masters.

Gukesh, Giri Beaten; Narayanan In Sole Lead

Colin_McGourty
| 16 | Chess Event Coverage

GM Narayanan Sunilduth Lyna is the first sole leader of the 2023 Qatar Masters after beating world number-eight Gukesh Dommaraju to move to 4.5/5. No fewer than 12 players are half a point back, including GM Hikaru Nakamura, and IM Vaishali R, who beat a strong grandmaster to post a stunning 2773 rating performance so far. GM Magnus Carlsen won a third game with the white pieces, while GM Anish Giri paid a high price for a single mistake against IM Rudik Makarian

Round six, after a rest day, starts on October 17 at 8:15 a.m. ET/14:15 CEST/5:45 p.m. IST.

How to watch?
You can watch the 2023 Qatar Masters on the Qatar Chess Association YouTube: YouTube.com/QatarChessqa and on Hikaru Nakamura's Kick channel: kick.com/gmhikaru. Games from the event can be viewed on our events page.

The live broadcast was hosted by IM Irine Sukandar, IM Jovanka Houska, and GM Evgenij Miroshnichenko.

Qatar continues to be a tough place for favorites, with the world numbers seven and eight—Giri and Gukesh—the latest to stumble. For Giri it was all down to one move, 34...Qa7?, which suddenly allowed 35.d5! to break open the black position. In what followed,19-year-old IM Makarian was merciless.

Gukesh's downfall, meanwhile, was critical to the tournament standings. We were heading for a 14-way tie for first place until 107-point-lower-rated fellow Indian Narayanan won a fine game to take the sole lead. He had the white pieces and soon took control. 

Gukesh would later pounce on a chance to fight back and was tantalizingly close to a draw, but in a queen endgame, he couldn't find the narrow path to hold and lost in 58 moves.

A picturesque final position.

Not all the favorites struggled. Top seed Carlsen kept his hopes alive with a third win in a row with the white pieces, this time taking down 15-year-old Indian GM Bharath Subramaniyam. Carlsen thought his opponent's decision to put knights on the rim on h5 and a5 made it "very hard to imagine that Black is ok."

Carlsen did, however, confess to one shaky moment in what should have been a smooth win.

Carlsen commented:

I’d missed this idea he had of 29...Re1 from afar, and honestly I was not so sure if I was winning anymore because he could, I think, have forced an endgame where I’m two pawns up, but it’s not that easy for me to win. Fortunately for me, he had very little time, and he went for a direct try for a perpetual, which didn’t work.

After 30.Qd5?! Bharath could indeed have played 30...Qd3!, threatening checkmate and forcing an exchange of queens. What's more surprising is that Carlsen, with 50 minutes to spare, didn't calculate that 30.Rxg7+! is winning, with the queen and bishop just too powerful against the bare black king.

That game was also analyzed by Nakamura in his recap.

Nakamura also, of course, covered his own game against 17-year-old Uzbek GM Javokhir Sindarov, but that quiet draw is perhaps only of interest because it followed a 1959 game between the legendary GMs Mikhail Tal and Bent Larsen.

Back then Tal's b-pawn was able to break free, storm up the board, and win the game singlehandedly. However, Nakamura was aware of that precedent and shut things down for a 30-move draw that leaves him in the big group on four points, just half a point behind the leader.

The most notable player in that group, and hence half a point ahead of Carlsen, is 22-year-old Vaishali, who in the last couple of years has truly emerged from the shadow of her brother, GM Praggnanandhaa Rameshbabu. Her performance in Qatar has been a stunning 2773, and she's currently smashing the requirements for a grandmaster norm.

Her round-five opponent, GM Shamsiddin Vokhidov, had made draws in the previous two rounds against Giri and Nakamura, but he met his match in Vaishali. That encounter is our Game of the Day, analyzed by GM Dejan Bojkov.

Chess.com Game of the Day Dejan Bojkov


There's one more game we can't skip before ending this recap, since it featured the combination of the day. Another Uzbek GM, Nodirbek Yakubboev, found it in order to beat "the beast," GM Adhiban Baskaran, in his own style.

What a finish! Image: Qatar Masters YouTube.

The players now have a rest day on Monday before the final four rounds of the event. Narayanan will have to defend his lead against the formidable 2021 World Rapid Champion, GM Nodirbek Abdusattorov, while Carlsen again faces a teenage Indian star, this time IM Samant Aditya S.

Jorden van Foreest, like Carlsen and Gukesh, is a point behind the leader on 3.5/5. Photo: Keti Tsatsalashvili/Qatar Masters.

The standings look as follows with four rounds to go.

Qatar Masters | Standings After Round 5 (Top 33)

Rk. Seed No. Name Age Sex FED Rating Points TB1 TB2
1 13 GM Narayanan.S.L, 2651 4.5 13 2939
2 2 GM Nakamura, Hikaru 2780 4 2 2780
3 5 GM Abdusattorov, Nodirbek U20 2716 4 5 2712
4 6 GM Erigaisi, Arjun U20 2712 4 6 2782
5 7 GM Maghsoodloo, Parham 2707 4 7 2736
6 12 GM Sindarov, Javokhir U18 2658 4 12 2800
7 19 GM Yakubboev, Nodirbek 2616 4 19 2726
8 20 GM Karthikeyan, Murali 2611 4 20 2693
9 23 GM Paravyan, David 2599 4 23 2705
10 25 GM Jumabayev, Rinat 2585 4 25 2772
11 30 GM Aditya, Mittal U18 2572 4 30 2747
12 37 IM Makarian, Rudik U20 2548 4 37 2686
13 75 IM Vaishali, Rameshbabu w 2448 4 75 2773
14 1 GM Carlsen, Magnus 2839 3.5 1 2636
15 4 GM Gukesh, D U18 2758 3.5 4 2629
16 8 GM Van Foreest, Jorden 2707 3.5 8 2625
17 15 GM Aryan, Chopra 2634 3.5 15 2607
18 16 GM Salem, A.R. Saleh 2632 3.5 16 2669
19 18 GM Puranik, Abhimanyu 2618 3.5 18 2569
20 22 GM Vakhidov, Jakhongir 2607 3.5 22 2624
21 24 GM Sethuraman, S.P. 2598 3.5 24 2599
22 26 GM Kuybokarov, Temur 2584 3.5 26 2563
23 27 GM Pranav, V U18 2579 3.5 27 2554
24 31 GM Shimanov, Aleksandr 2566 3.5 31 2578
25 35 GM Kaidanov, Gregory 2554 3.5 35 2554
26 43 GM Kevlishvili, Robby 2521 3.5 43 2663
27 45 GM Sankalp, Gupta U20 2518 3.5 45 2544
28 46 GM Pranesh, M U18 2515 3.5 46 2643
29 48 IM Samant, Aditya S U18 2511 3.5 48 2613
30 55 IM Ahmadzada, Ahmad U20 2494 3.5 55 2673
31 79 IM Srihari, L R U18 2438 3.5 80 2676
32 102 IM Panda, Sambit U20 2395 3.5 103 2662
33 3 GM Giri, Anish 2760 3 3 2598

Full standings

Qatar Masters | All Games Round 5


The 2023 Qatar Masters is a nine-round open tournament for players rated 2300+. It takes place in Lusail, Qatar, on October 11-20 and boasts a $108,250 prize fund with $25,000 for first place, as well as a $5,000 prize for the top female player.


Previous Coverage:

Colin_McGourty
Colin McGourty

Colin McGourty led news at Chess24 from its launch until it merged with Chess.com a decade later. An amateur player, he got into chess writing when he set up the website Chess in Translation after previously studying Slavic languages and literature in St. Andrews, Odesa, Oxford, and Krakow.

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