Another draw for Gelfand in the World Chess Championship
Contenders tied with two matches left in finals
Israeli grandmaster Boris Gelfand and reigning world champion Viswanathan Anand of India played to a draw on Thursday in their tenth match in the World Chess Championship. The two are now even at five points each.
The World Chess Championships, a three-week event, opened in Moscow on Friday, May 11. The title will be decided over 12 matches, and the winner will take home $1.53 million while second place will win $1.02 million.
This is the fifth time Anand is defending his World Champion title, though he no longer holds the top world ranking, falling to No. 4 recently.
Gelfand, ranked 22, was born in Minsk and immigrated to Israel in 1998, quickly dominating the local chess scene and capturing a number of world chess tournaments, including the Chess World Cup in 2009.
He is regarded as a classical player who often has tricks up his sleeve. He defeated the world’s top players in the 2011 Candidates Cup round, which earned him a spot at the board opposite Anand.
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