On Sunday, Vietnam lost 1.5-4.5 to defending champions China in the seventh game of Pool A.

The only positive note was Vietnamese grandmaster Nguyen Ngoc Truong Son (Elo 2,630)’s triumph over China’s former Asian Games runner-up Bu Xiangzhi (Elo 2,642).

Meanwhile, Le Quang Liem (Elo 2,744) drew with Wei Yi (Elo 2.752), the pool’s second-strongest player Elo-wise behind only his own teammate Ding Liren (Elo 2,836).

The consecutive defeats clearly exhausted the Vietnamese players both mentally and physically, so it was not surprising to see the team suffering a 2-4 loss before Iran in the eighth game on Sunday.

At this point Vietnam was already effectively eliminated from the tournament, after having lost to India, Uzbekistan, Germany, Indonesia on Friday and Saturday while only securing wins against Mongolia and Georgia.

Vietnam’s ninth and final game against underdog Zimbabwe was only procedural.

With young players like Le Tuan Minh, Tran Tuan Minh, Tran Minh Thang, and Nguyen Hong Anh given the chance to compete, the team secured a 6-0 win against their rival.

Overall, Vietnam was ranked 9th out of ten teams in Pool A of the Top Division, above only Zimbabwe, with six points after three wins and six losses.

The top three teams of Pool A — India (17 points), China (16 points), and Germany (11 points) — will advance to the knockout stage, to be held between August 27 and 30.

The FIDE Online Olympiad 2020 runs from July 25 to August 30 on the chess.com website with 163 teams and over 1,500 participants from all over the world.

According to the website, 223 grandmasters have signed up to compete in the tournament among over 1,000 titled players in total.

Some of the biggest names participating include grandmasters Ding Liren, Ian Nepomniachtchi, Alexander Grischuk, Levon Aronian, Viswanathan Anand, Anish Giri, and Wesley So.

The online tournament was introduced for the first time as a major new competition by the International Chess Federation (FIDE) this year as the biennial Chess Olympiad had been postponed until 2021 due to the novel coronavirus disease (COVID-19) pandemic.

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