Having done badly in the second edition of the Grand Chess tour following a couple of early defeats, Anand took the safer approach and it was a cautious start by the Indian ace to set the pace in the tournament.
The day in fact produced as many as four draws out of five games and only Dutchman Anish Giri was lucky enough to have scored a full point when his opponent Veselin Topalov failed to spot a relatively simple tactic.
In the other game of the day, Fabiano Caruana of Italy too played it solidly against Levon Aronian of Armenia.
Giri, thus, emerged as the early leader in this final edition of the Grand Chess Tour that will decide the top three winners.
As of now, Anand shares the sixth spot in the tour rankings and needs a big win here to match the higher ranked players like Topalov and Aronian who occupy the top two spots in the tour.
Commentator Jennifer Shahade asked Anand on how confident he felt about winning the Grand Chess Tour.
"My first aim is to play a good tournament and win the London Chess Classic and then think about the Grand Chess Tour," Anand said.
It was an English opening by Anand wherein Adams remained impregnable. The minor pieces changed hands at regular intervals and the position was soon level. The peace was signed in 32 moves.
It turned out to be a lucky day for Giri as Topalov missed a little tactic in a still-playable position. Giri pounced on his chance and sacrificed a rook to rip apart Topalov's kingside and it was soon a dead-end for the Bulgarian.
Results Round 1: V Anand (Ind) drew with Michael Adams (Eng); Maxime Vachier-Lagrave (Fra) drew with Magnus Carlsen (Nor); Alexander Grischuk (Rus) drew with Hikaru Nakamura (Usa); VeselinTopalov (Bul) lost to Anish Giri (Ned); Fabiano Caruana (Usa) drew with Levon Aronian (Arm).
