Tag: Chess Tournaments

 

RESULTS OF THE 2024 JANUARY SCHOLASTIC CHESS TOURNAMENT ARE IN!

Forty-four students (K-12) competed in the 2024 January Scholastic USCF-rated Chess Tournament on Saturday, January 27. The event was sponsored by Rochester Chess, an educational nonprofit whose mission is to provide opportunities for youth and adults to play chess and receive chess instruction. The tournament has been rated by USCF: https://www.uschess.org/msa/XtblMain.php?202401278182.0-30755720.

Thanks to all of our dedicated volunteers for helping make this event successful! You are too numerous to name. 🙂

Stay tuned for more information on the next local scholastic tournament and the Minnesota State Scholastic Championship by subscribing to receive periodic updates at our site: https://rochesterchess.com/

The playing field was divided into 4 sections based on chess experience. Twelve students played in their first ever USCF-rated event!

Although there were individual winners in the tournament, in reality the competitors were all winners. They shared their passion for chess, met others who enjoyed the game, and most importantly improved their critical thinking skills by playing chess.

Super-talented Cole Lappi (9th grader at Century) won the championship section with a perfect 4-0. Isaac Gommels (7th grader at Schaeffer Academy) finished in clear second place with a score of 3-1.

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Akhshar Vijayakumar (5th grader at Byron Middle School) and Chase Stenzel (8th grader at Byron Middle School) tied for first place in the reserve section with scores of 3.5/4.0.

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Noah Mannix (7th grader at Stewartville Middle School) defeated all of his nearest rivals to finish undefeated 4./4 in the Bantam section. Caleb Laber and Logan Anderson (both (4th graders at Ben Franklin) finished tied for second place with scores of 3/4.

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William Zhao (8th grader at Byron Middle School) easily finished with a perfect 4/4 score in the unrated section. Henry Frank (5th grader at Franklin Elementary) was close behind with a score of 3/4 in second place, losing only to the eventual winner.

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PICK YOUR POISON! COMPETE IN CHESS GOALS ON SEPTEMBER 22 OR 23.

You can play for free in either the blitz on Friday or in the regular-quick rated event on Saturday or both!

Odds blitz is great fun. You may have a chance to play National Master Matt Jensen without his queen.

Friday Night: Odds Chess Blitz: Starts at 7 PM – 6 rounds of 3+2 with $40 to first and $20 to second! Playoffs used to split ties. For ratings – Use chess.com blitz first option, Lichess.org blitz minus 200 as second option, USCF as third option.

Saturday: USCF regular and quick-rated Mini Swiss event. G/30 d5, sections of 4 by rating. Rounds are at 10 and 11:30. $40 and a free ChessGoals course to winners of each section. 

Register here to reserve your place in the tournament: https://docs.google.com/forms/d/e/1FAIpQLScFufFcdxNPyur-LkesFqc_SaLHBiJP7gzZoEOpT-SQgYNggw/viewform?usp=pp_url

RESULTS OF THE USCF-RATED JUNE SCHOLASTIC SWISS ARE IN!

Twenty four scholastic chess players competed in the USCF-rated June Scholastic Swiss which was held on June 10 at Mayo Clinic. Five of the participants were playing in their first ever USCF-rated event. One of the five, Joshua Wang, finished in first place with 5/5 points in the reserve swiss. Joshua, a 7th grader at Kellogg Middle School, is a fearsome competitor. Andrew Markel (7th grade, Kellogg), Dylan Park (8th grade, St. John’s), Max Tiede (7th grade, John Adams), and Gavin Zabel (9th grade, Byron HS) all tied for 2nd place with 3/5 points in the reserve swiss.

The Championship Swiss was won by Cole Lappi who finished with a perfect score of 5/5. Cole will be attending Century High School next year and plans to play on their varsity chess team as a freshman. Ryder Selnes (7th grade, Dakota) finished in clear second place with 3.5/5 points. Jayan Jayachandran (12th grade, Century), Nolan Schnaedter (12th grade, Century), and Wilson Wang (6th grade, John Adams) all tied for 3rd place with 3/5 points.

Chess coaches Kevin Gaustad, Justin Ricker, Jacob Arroyo, Chuck Handlon, Matt Markland, and Grant Jones helped make this an immersive chess event by analyzing games with the participants between rounds. Thanks to parents Walter Park and Megan Garrity-Park for their tireless assistance with this and other scholastic chess events.

The tournament has been rated by USCF: https://www.uschess.org/msa/XtblMain.php?202306109242.2-16917452

We are hopeful that many of the players will compete in the Rochester Open on July 8, 9. You can register at this link https://onlineregistration.cc/tournaments/index.php?txn=1t7l&view=zt7g2Q==&tid=mqekow==