After finishing day one on 2.5 points out of a possible five, Anand yet again started with two smashing victories at the expense of Vladimir Belov of Russia and Andrei Volokitin of Ukraine but his comeback was seriously dented when he lost to Mamedov in the eighth round. In the ninth round Anand bounced back beating Viktor Bologan of Moldova but lost to Khismatullin again in the next game.
Defending champion in the faster format, Magnus Carlsen of Norway shot his way to joint lead along with Sergei Zhigalko of Belarus on eight points from ten rounds. Carlsen yet again gave away just two draw and won the remaining three games to find himself at the top of the tables.
Leader after day one, Sergey Karjakin of Russia suffered heavily on second day when he could muster just two points from five games. Karjakin is on 6.5 points.
Anand's second in three world championships, Surya Shekhar Ganguly was on 5/8 but lost steam as he went down to Ernesto Inarkiev of Russia and Zoltan Almasi of Hungary in the ninth and tenth round respectively.
The Kolkata based player, however, had the satisfaction of beating former FIDE world champion Ruslan Ponomariov of Ukraine in the eighth round.
