Toronto (PTI): Indian Grandmaster Vidit Gujrathi came back firing on all cylinders after previous match defeat and crashed through the defences of second seed Hikaru Nakamura of United States in the ninth round of the Candidates chess tournament here.

The all-Indian duel between D Gukesh and R Praggnanandhaa ended in a draw without much ado as the day saw no other decisive games.

Ian Nepomniachtchi of Russia lived by the sword against Frenchman Firouza Alireza before signing peace while Nijat Abasov of Azerbaijan showed that he was almost impregnable as white and held his forte against American Fabiano Caruana.

With five rounds and two rest days still to come in the biggest event of the year, Nepomniachtchi and Gukesh continued to be joint leaders on 5.5 points out of a possible nine while Praggnanandhaa is the sole third half a point behind.

Nakamura, Gujrathi and Caruana share the fourth spot on 4.5 points and are all within string distance with Alireza on 3.5 and Abasov on three points.

The Candidates had begun with four draws on the opening day and followed up with a brilliant victory by Gujrathi over Nakamura. The second half was just a reminiscent as Gujrathi was in his element yet again to score over the American again.

The Indian might have been predictable as far as the openings are concerned with either colour but clearly he knows his stuff.

Despite losing to Gukesh in the previous round, Gujrathi decided to continue with the Italian opening and got rewarded as Nakamura went for a side variation by pushing his king side pawns too early.

With a timely breakthrough in the centre, the dynamics in the position remained but Gujrathi was quick to spot a tactic missed by Nakamura. What followed was mayhem for black on the board. Nakamura called it a day when checkmate became inevitable.

Gukesh tried his hands at the Ruy Lopez as white but did not get much against Praggnanandhaa. Both the teenagers have been showing great skills here against the world’s best and there was nothing to choose between them when pieces flew off the board in tandem. The game was drawn in 41 moves.

Nepomniachtchi was in definite troubles but he did not show it to Alireza. Playing black, the Russian was looking at a locked position with passivity written all over it for some time but wriggled out thanks to some perfect defense. Alireza might have had some deep strategic chances but the Iranian-turned-French decided to play it safe.

In the other game of the day, Abasov simply gave no chances to Caruana to hold on to another draw with his white pieces.

In the women’s section, R Vaishali’s hope for a turnaround ended with another loss coming at the hands of Zhongyi Tan of China. The Chinese shot back into sole lead on six points in nine games. Tan-Vaishali contest was the lone decisive game of the day.

India's Koneru Humpy improved her position a bit after drawing with Kateryna Lagno of Russia while overnight joint leader Tingjie Lei was held to a draw by Nurgyul Salimova of Bulgaria.

In the other game of the day, Anna Muzychuk of Ukraine played out a draw with Aleksandra Goryachkina of Russia.

Lei shares the second spot with Goryachkina on 5.5 points with Lagno on their toes with a half point adrift.

Salimova and Humpy are bunched together with four points apiece sharing the fifth spot with Muzychuk on 3.5 points. Vaishali now needs a miracle of sorts with just 2.5 points but she might do better to put an end to her string of four losses in a row.

Vaishali lost a quick game against Tan from the white side of a Sicilian defence that took shape more like a French defense.

The Indian was out of book and out-of-sort early in the middle game as she missed the track allowing Tan to take control and a simple tactic proved decisive with the game ending in a mere 21 moves. This was by far the shortest decisive game of the event in both sections so far.

Humpy, as white, faced the Ragozine defence against Lagno and did not get what she might have hoped for. The Russian, who has to play under the FIDE flag here, neutralized white’s initiative early and emerged with an extra pawn in the ensuing rook and pawns endgame that proved to be level.

Results round 9 (Indians unless specified): D Gukesh (5.5) drew with R Praggnanandhaa (5); Vidit Gujrathi (4.5) beat Hikaru Nakamura (Usa, 4.5); Firouza Alireza (Fra, 3.5) drew with Ian Nepomniachtchi (Fid, 5.5); Nijat Abasov (3) drew with Fabiano Caruana (Usa, 4.5).

Women: R Vaishali (2.5) lost to Zhongyi Tan (6); Tingjei Lei (Chn, 5.5) drew with Nurgyul Salimova (Bul, 4); Kateryna Lagno (Fid, 5) drew with Koneru Humpy (4); Anna Muzychuk (Ukr, 3.5) drew with Aleksandra Goryachkina (Fid, 5.5).

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New Delhi (PTI): The Supreme Court on Monday asked the Enforcement Directorate not to "unnecessarily harass" the collectors of five Tamil Nadu districts after the state complained about the officials being made to sit at the central agency's offices till 8:30 p.m. in connection with a money launder probe related alleged illegal sand mining.

The apex court had on April 2 pulled up the five district collectors for not appearing physically before the Enforcement Directorate (ED) despite orders and directed them to present themselves before the agency personally on April 25.

During the hearing on Monday, senior advocate Kapil Sibal, appearing for the state, told a bench of Justices Bela M Trivedi and Pankaj Mithal that the district collectors had appeared before the ED.

The ED's counsel said they had appeared before the ED but so far no details or documents have been submitted to the central anti-money laundering agency.

Sibal countered the ED's claim and said whatever the probe agency had asked for through the summons has been furnished.

"My instructions are that no details or documents have been submitted in furtherance of their (the officials') undertaking," the ED's counsel said, adding, "we can file an affidavit to this effect".

The bench told the ED's counsel to specify the documents which have not been supplied by the district collectors yet.

"They (district collectors) came at 11 O'clock. They made them sit there till 8:30 in the evening," Sibal said.

"You can't do this," the bench told the ED's counsel.

When the lawyer said he will have to find out about this, the bench observed "Don't harass them unnecessarily."

The apex court asked the ED to file a report stating exactly which documents it had sought through the summons that have not been produced by these officers.

It posted the matter for further hearing in July.

During the hearing on April 2, the bench had observed the officials adopted a "cavalier approach" and their actions show they have no respect for the court, law and the Constitution.

"In our opinion, such cavalier approach and disdainful attitude of the District Collectors may land them into a difficult situation. When the Court had passed the order directing them to appear in response to the summons issued by the ED, they were expected to obey the said order and remain present before the ED," the bench had said.

"By not following the order, they have created an impression that they do not have respect either for the Court, or for the law, much less for the Constitution of India. Such an approach is strongly deprecated," it had said.

On February 27, the top court had directed the five district collectors to appear before the ED in connection with the probe.

The Madras High Court had on November 28 last year stayed the summons issued by the central probe agency seeking the presence of district collectors of Vellore, Tiruchirappalli, Karur, Thanjavur and Ariyalur in connection with the probe.

The ED had moved the top court against the high court order, saying it would hamper its probe.

The Supreme Court had stayed the high court order granting relief to the district collectors and said the plea of Tamil Nadu and its officials was "strange and unusual" and may lead to stalling the ED investigation.