Showing posts with label Texas Tech. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Texas Tech. Show all posts

Friday, August 19, 2011

First SPICE Training of the new semester



Training session with GM Bykhovsky, GM Meier, GM Boros, SM Aleskerov

Thursday, August 18, 2011

The 2011 Texas Tech Knight Raiders A Team



L to R: Dr. Hal Karlssson (Iceland), SM Faik Aleskerov (Azerbaijan), GM Anatoly Bykhovsky (Israel), Me, GM Georg Meier (Germany), IM Vitaly Neimer (Israel), GM Denes Boros (Hungary), GM Andre Diamant (Brazil)

Tuesday, August 16, 2011

New season for the Texas Tech Knight Raiders





After a successful 2010 season with the Texas Tech Knight Raiders capturing the Division I Collegiate Final Four, the team lost 2 valuable members. GM Davorin Kuljasevic graduated and IM Istvan Sipos is back to Hungary.



We added two new grandmasters and one international master to solidify the team. Below is the new roster for the Fall 2011.



Texas Tech Knight Raiders A team



GM Meier, Georg GER 2656 1987 *

GM Bykhovsky, Anatoly ISR 2521 1988

GM Diamant, Andre BRA 2505 1990

GM Boros, Denes HUN 2502 1988 *



IM Neimer, Vitaly ISR 2373 1988 *

SM Aleskerov, Faik AZE 2316 1985



* Incoming freshman

Thursday, August 11, 2011

Jada Pinkett Smith: What inspires you?



Young chess phenom wins scholarship to Texas Tech at tournament



Dyhemia Young's journey to the Susan Polgar Girls' Invitational chess tournament was long and difficult, and though she didn't win the competition, she did receive a scholarship to Texas Tech.



By Maria L. La Ganga, Los Angeles Times

August 4, 2011



Reporting from East Palo Alto, Calif. -- Dyhemia Young left for Lubbock, Texas, with a black eye — compliments of a girl at her East Palo Alto group home — and returned the proud recipient of a chess scholarship worth $40,000.



Along the way, the 15-year-old from the wrong side of San Francisco, who could not have made it to a prestigious chess tournament without the kindness of strangers, became a nationally rated player.



Photos: Dyhemia Young wins chess scholarship



"My journey here, it was tough, because I had a lot of situations going on at home," she said tearfully after her first win, Game 3 of the six-game Susan Polgar Girls' Invitational.



The tournament takes place each year at Texas Tech University, drawing the top-rated girl from each state. Polgar, the first woman to earn the title of grandmaster, also issues two "wild card" invitations to gifted players who haven't traveled the pricey road of official competition.



Dyhemia, who has spent the last three years in and out of foster care, received one of the wild card bids. But when Adisa Banjoko, her chess mentor, called in June with the good news, Dyhemia had disappeared.



It took nearly a month and the help of a San Francisco police detective to locate Dyhemia; after a short stint in juvenile hall, she had ended up in the teen home.



Then there was the matter of money — nearly $3,000 was needed to send the high-school junior and a chaperone to the six-day event. After reading her story in The Times, generous donors sent thousands of dollars Dyhemia's way.



Problem solved? Not so fast.



The night before her flight to Texas, Dyhemia was sitting in the group home studying for her driver's license test with the help of a staff member. When the woman left the room, Dyhemia continued to drill herself. "Why don't you just shut up?" one of the other girls said before charging Dyhemia and punching her in the face.



"It all stemmed from jealousy," Sheila George, who heads the group home and accompanied Dyhemia to Texas, said in a phone interview from Lubbock. "Dyhemia came down here with all this in her soul and mind and heart. She had to get rid of all that junk."



When the rattled girl and her worried chaperone stepped off the plane in Texas, they were greeted by Polgar and a cheering group of chess players — Dyhemia's competitors and new found friends.



More here.

Wednesday, August 10, 2011

Former World Blitz Champion Dominguez Confirmed for SPICE Cup



The #1 Cuban Player and former World Blitz Champion, GM Leinier Dominguez (2719), has confirmed his participation in the 2011 SPICE Cup A Group.



Also confirmed so far are:



GM Le Quang Liem (Vietnam) 2715

GM Alexander Onischuk (USA) 2675

GM Georg Meier (GER) 2656



The 2011 SPICE Cup A group will take place on October 15-25, 2011. It will once again be held on the beautiful campus of Texas Tech University.

Tuesday, August 9, 2011

13 year old shined at 2011 SPGI



Chess champ captures honors

Posted: Tuesday, August 9, 2011 10:00 am

SANDPOINT — Savanna Naccarato’s chess skills have been making waves in the Northwest, but now her reputation is spreading across the nation.

The 13-year-old Sandpoint resident placed ninth in the 2011 Susan Polgar Girls Invitational, a national chess tournament held at Texas Tech University in Lubbock, Texas, from July 24-29. Chess masters said Savanna performed remarkably for an eighth-grader at her first national tournament, defeating older, more experienced players and ending with four wins against two losses.

For Savanna’s father Chris, who got her started on chess a few years ago, the national tournament is simply another step toward her goal of becoming Idaho’s first female grandmaster.

“For her first national tournament, she’s done an incredible job,” he said. “I’m really proud of her.”

Savanna earned her invitation by tying for first place with two other players in the Idaho Scholastic Girls Championship in Boise.

Although she qualified for the national event, a few significant challenges stood between her and Texas.

First, the system most frequently used to calculate Savanna’s player rating differed from the tournament standard. In a competitive system where defeating a higher-rated player is more advantageous, point discrepancies can pose a serious problem. Fortunately, tournament organizers converted her established rating to a 1600, placing her squarely in the middle of a pack featuring ratings as high as 1967.

Travel expenses were a more significant problem. However, the community stepped up to the task. Businesses, friends, family and organizations like the Spokane Chess Club, the Idaho Chess Association, the Kiwanis Club and the Lions Club stepped up to finance the trip. The Naccaratos also staged a yard sale that generated $800 in both transactions and donations.

“Even though the trip was really expensive, it was also really worth it,” Naccarato said.

Indeed, the tournament provided an unparalleled learning experience. When she wasn’t in competition, Savanna spent her free time training with her fellow participants. She also attended workshops where chess masters detailed advanced strategies, positioning concepts and tactics.

“They brought up points of the game I didn’t even know existed,” Savanna said.

Luckily, her prior training with Washington chess master John Graves paid off when it counted. Savanna blasted through her first and second opponents during the competition.

More here.

Saturday, August 6, 2011

The long road to a new move


The long road to a new move

By Lisa Suhay

The story of the Chess Cinderella of Palo Alto, Calif., started here in Norfolk in June during a phone call with an international chess grandmaster in Lubbock, Texas. Susan Polgar and I were talking about the free chess program I run at the Lamberts Point Community Center and how hard it is for many to get a shot at a scholarship.

I was complaining that I never see much diversity in scholarship tournaments, and she decided to put a fully charged magic wand in my hands. She offered to give whatever player I recommended a wild card invitation to the Susan Polgar Girls’ Chess Invitational at Texas Tech. Three girls in the tournament would win $40,000 scholarships to Texas Tech, in addition to two days of instruction from Polgar herself.

Because my players are beginners, I knew the wild card girl should be Dyhemia Young, 15, of Palo Alto. Adisa Banjoko, founder of Hip-Hop Chess Federation, had often told me about her many trials. I was struck by how much of a fighter she was and how, no matter what befell her, chess always pulled her through. It was her life raft in a sea of chaos.

She deserved a chance at a scholarship, so I submitted her name, never realizing what an epic saga was being set in motion.

Dyhemia would prove nearly impossible to locate. She was in foster care. Somewhere. Banjoko put the word out to her friends and teachers. For nearly a month we looked for her, with zero results.

In desperation I began to Google her and found a missing child flyer that led me to San Francisco Police Missing Persons Detective Joseph Carroll. After spilling the story, I prepared for the brush-off. Instead, he said, “I am going to find this girl. She deserves her shot. Let’s make something happen.”

He called 30 minutes later. She was in juvenile hall, being held for running away. Carroll hooked me up with the Department of Social Services, and after hearing the story of our Chess Cinderella, they agreed to help. Dyhemia was moved to a group home in Palo Alto.

Then the city attorney got involved, banning Dyhemia from traveling without a Social Services chaperone. We needed a court order, plus an additional order allowing her to speak to the media so we could raise money for both plane tickets and double room and board.

The orders were obtained. Dyhemia, who had just 72 hours until the start of the tournament, talked to the press, and a story ran on the front page of The Los Angeles Times.

More here.

Friday, August 5, 2011

It was nice to be with just girls


Bits 'n' Pieces: Teen vies in girls’ chess tournament

By Columbian Staff
Friday, August 5, 2011

It was nice to be with just girls


Bits 'n' Pieces: Teen vies in girls’ chess tournament

By Columbian Staff
Friday, August 5, 2011

Thursday, August 4, 2011

Checkmating Hardship

SPICE Checkmates Hardship
August 4, 2011

The Susan Polgar Institute for Chess Excellence Invitational was a life-changing event for two young women.

Written by Melanie Hess

At Texas Tech, chess represents more than a challenging game and checkered board.

For two young women who visited Texas Tech last week to participate in the Susan Polgar Institute for Chess Excellence (SPICE) Invitational, it was a life-changing event. Meet Dyhemia Young and Vanita Young.

Dyhemia, age 15, has spent most of her life in the California foster care system. She was selected as a wild-card invitee by Susan Polgar. The SPICE invitational was Dyhemia’s first officially rated tournament. Vanita, a 17-year-old who lost both of her parents by her early teens, currently lives in Pennsylvania with her grandparents. Vanita beat out 600 other young women in her state to win a spot at the Polgar invitational.

But there was one problem. In the few weeks leading up to the invitational, neither girl was in a position to pay for travel expenses.

SPICE and many other generous donors, namely Will and Jada Pinkett-Smith and Pennsylvania U.S. Rep. Bob Brady, helped sponsor the two young ladies, and at the end of the competition, Dyhemia and Vanita were awarded out-of-state scholarships worth up to $40,000 to attend Texas Tech once they graduate high school.

Dyhemia and Vanita, who are not related, recently shared their experiences of their time at Texas Tech with Texas Tech Today.

Q & A:

How did you feel when you found out you had been invited?

Dyhemia: It’s been really exciting. I was just, wow. That’s all I could say. “Wow! For real? Really?”

Vanita: I was definitely more excited than nervous. Since I was top at state, I had a big head for a while. I thought I could beat anybody, but when weeks turned into days, I got nervous.

How did you feel about the support you received from so many people?

D: When they asked me that question before, I nearly started crying. When I started talking about Susan, I never, ever, ever thought I was going to meet her in person. And then I met her, and now I’m teary-eyed because I’ve been here all week, and now I’m fixing to leave. I have learned so much.

How was your time with Susan Polgar?

D: I’d always heard of her. People spoke very highly of her, and then when I met her when we got off the plane, we talked. She gave me a ride all the way to the dorm and showed me around. She gave me some gifts, and I got so emotional I nearly cried. Well, I did cry. I was so emotional today. I think I cried about four different times for just about ten minutes straight. I’ve really enjoyed my time being here.

Again, I’m speechless. Susan, I think you know I am very thankful and happy to have you in my life. Oh my gosh, I’m going to have tears again, but Susan has done a lot for me while I’ve been here, and I am most definitely going to keep in touch with her when I do leave. I think so highly of her.

V: You would not believe the first time I saw her. I was at middle school nationals in Fort Worth and I was in the elevator with her. I was running late, and I didn’t know who she was at the time. I was in eighth grade. Then later people were talking about her and I asked, “Who’s Susan Polgar?” and they said, “top female,” and they showed me her and I was like, “Wait, I was on the elevator with her!”

What kind of training did you receive last week?

D: My class was kind of like Vanita’s, but she’s a higher level. We mainly focused on puzzle solving and basically making sure you know the main key things when you open, making sure you know your openings and key pieces, making sure each move you do is either to attack, or you’re defending. Then we played against each other in class using the tactics and notations. I had to learn notations. I don’t use them well, but I do know how to notate now.

It was like a 180-degree turn around from when I got here. My first game, it was like I was playing blitz. For real, I got down to the end and had to resign because the girl didn’t want to draw, and I knew I was going to lose. Then my second game was way better. I was down a bishop. I could have won if I had a bishop, but it was a good game. I gave the girl a run for her money. The game I played after that, I won. And the one I just played, I lost. But I had the girl show me the moves that I made that I should have not done. Luckily, she was my friend, so she was able to show me.

V: We had a lot of training this week. They were three-hour classes each, four classes altogether. We did a lot of analyzing, deep analyzing, and imagining things in your head without looking at the board. It was fun.

What was your favorite experience about last week?

D: I finally won a game! Oh, and I have my face on my own chess board. It’s my face on the board, and it says Dyhemia Young Cinderella! It has a list of all the people that helped me get here.

V: Meeting female chess players and working with top chess players. Susan and her husband have been amazing this week. I’ve learned so much from them in thinking steps ahead in my game. You know, when he said the tactic of visualize the pawn? I’d never thought of looking at the board like that, so I definitely learned something new.

What are your plans after high school?

D: Oh yeah. I’m going to college, I am going to college!

At first I didn’t know anything about Texas Tech, so I couldn’t really give an answer of whether I wanted to come here or not, but now I’ve read the brochure and spent some time here. I will always keep Texas Tech in mind, especially since I know I’d be on the same campus as Susan. I know if I needed anything, I could just call her and be like, “Susan, can you please come to my dorm? I need help!”

V: I definitely plan on going to college. I wouldn’t mind going to Texas Tech because I want to be in computer science as a computer engineer, and I want to be part of Susan’s chess team.

Polgar on Dyhemia and Vanita

Polgar said both girls represent hope for many other young women in difficult situations.

Speaking specifically about Dyhemia’s story, Polgar said last week’s experience was not only life changing for Dyhemia, but for many others.

“I think Dyhemia is a very special girl. The way I look at it is that she’s just one of the many Cinderella potentials, and her story can inspire thousands of other girls in difficult situations that they are in. It can become hope and encouragement.”

Source: http://today.ttu.edu

Checkmating Hardship

SPICE Checkmates Hardship
August 4, 2011

The Susan Polgar Institute for Chess Excellence Invitational was a life-changing event for two young women.

Written by Melanie Hess

At Texas Tech, chess represents more than a challenging game and checkered board.

For two young women who visited Texas Tech last week to participate in the Susan Polgar Institute for Chess Excellence (SPICE) Invitational, it was a life-changing event. Meet Dyhemia Young and Vanita Young.

Dyhemia, age 15, has spent most of her life in the California foster care system. She was selected as a wild-card invitee by Susan Polgar. The SPICE invitational was Dyhemia’s first officially rated tournament. Vanita, a 17-year-old who lost both of her parents by her early teens, currently lives in Pennsylvania with her grandparents. Vanita beat out 600 other young women in her state to win a spot at the Polgar invitational.

But there was one problem. In the few weeks leading up to the invitational, neither girl was in a position to pay for travel expenses.

SPICE and many other generous donors, namely Will and Jada Pinkett-Smith and Pennsylvania U.S. Rep. Bob Brady, helped sponsor the two young ladies, and at the end of the competition, Dyhemia and Vanita were awarded out-of-state scholarships worth up to $40,000 to attend Texas Tech once they graduate high school.

Dyhemia and Vanita, who are not related, recently shared their experiences of their time at Texas Tech with Texas Tech Today.

Q & A:

How did you feel when you found out you had been invited?

Dyhemia: It’s been really exciting. I was just, wow. That’s all I could say. “Wow! For real? Really?”

Vanita: I was definitely more excited than nervous. Since I was top at state, I had a big head for a while. I thought I could beat anybody, but when weeks turned into days, I got nervous.

How did you feel about the support you received from so many people?

D: When they asked me that question before, I nearly started crying. When I started talking about Susan, I never, ever, ever thought I was going to meet her in person. And then I met her, and now I’m teary-eyed because I’ve been here all week, and now I’m fixing to leave. I have learned so much.

How was your time with Susan Polgar?

D: I’d always heard of her. People spoke very highly of her, and then when I met her when we got off the plane, we talked. She gave me a ride all the way to the dorm and showed me around. She gave me some gifts, and I got so emotional I nearly cried. Well, I did cry. I was so emotional today. I think I cried about four different times for just about ten minutes straight. I’ve really enjoyed my time being here.

Again, I’m speechless. Susan, I think you know I am very thankful and happy to have you in my life. Oh my gosh, I’m going to have tears again, but Susan has done a lot for me while I’ve been here, and I am most definitely going to keep in touch with her when I do leave. I think so highly of her.

V: You would not believe the first time I saw her. I was at middle school nationals in Fort Worth and I was in the elevator with her. I was running late, and I didn’t know who she was at the time. I was in eighth grade. Then later people were talking about her and I asked, “Who’s Susan Polgar?” and they said, “top female,” and they showed me her and I was like, “Wait, I was on the elevator with her!”

What kind of training did you receive last week?

D: My class was kind of like Vanita’s, but she’s a higher level. We mainly focused on puzzle solving and basically making sure you know the main key things when you open, making sure you know your openings and key pieces, making sure each move you do is either to attack, or you’re defending. Then we played against each other in class using the tactics and notations. I had to learn notations. I don’t use them well, but I do know how to notate now.

It was like a 180-degree turn around from when I got here. My first game, it was like I was playing blitz. For real, I got down to the end and had to resign because the girl didn’t want to draw, and I knew I was going to lose. Then my second game was way better. I was down a bishop. I could have won if I had a bishop, but it was a good game. I gave the girl a run for her money. The game I played after that, I won. And the one I just played, I lost. But I had the girl show me the moves that I made that I should have not done. Luckily, she was my friend, so she was able to show me.

V: We had a lot of training this week. They were three-hour classes each, four classes altogether. We did a lot of analyzing, deep analyzing, and imagining things in your head without looking at the board. It was fun.

What was your favorite experience about last week?

D: I finally won a game! Oh, and I have my face on my own chess board. It’s my face on the board, and it says Dyhemia Young Cinderella! It has a list of all the people that helped me get here.

V: Meeting female chess players and working with top chess players. Susan and her husband have been amazing this week. I’ve learned so much from them in thinking steps ahead in my game. You know, when he said the tactic of visualize the pawn? I’d never thought of looking at the board like that, so I definitely learned something new.

What are your plans after high school?

D: Oh yeah. I’m going to college, I am going to college!

At first I didn’t know anything about Texas Tech, so I couldn’t really give an answer of whether I wanted to come here or not, but now I’ve read the brochure and spent some time here. I will always keep Texas Tech in mind, especially since I know I’d be on the same campus as Susan. I know if I needed anything, I could just call her and be like, “Susan, can you please come to my dorm? I need help!”

V: I definitely plan on going to college. I wouldn’t mind going to Texas Tech because I want to be in computer science as a computer engineer, and I want to be part of Susan’s chess team.

Polgar on Dyhemia and Vanita

Polgar said both girls represent hope for many other young women in difficult situations.

Speaking specifically about Dyhemia’s story, Polgar said last week’s experience was not only life changing for Dyhemia, but for many others.

“I think Dyhemia is a very special girl. The way I look at it is that she’s just one of the many Cinderella potentials, and her story can inspire thousands of other girls in difficult situations that they are in. It can become hope and encouragement.”

Source: http://today.ttu.edu

Some Queens are born, others grow into the role



Some Queens are born, others grow into the role

By Lisa Suhay



NORFOLK, VA --The story of the Chess Cinderella of Palo Alto, Ca. started here in Norfolk during a phone call with Chess Grandmaster Susan Polgar of Lubbock, TX. We were discussing the off-beat free chess programs I run on this coast and how hard it is for many at-risk children to get a shot at a scholarship tournament.



She decided to put the fully-charged magic wand in my hands by offering to give a Wild Card invitation to a player of my recommendation for the Susan Polgar Foundation Girls’ Chess Invitational at Texas Tech University in Lubbock, Texas July 24th-30th. Three of the 46 girls would win $40,000 scholarships to Texas Tech, plus having three days of instruction by Polgar herself.



Since my efforts here have centered more on attracting children to chess than running competitions, I knew the girl should be Dyhemia Young, 15, of Palo Alto, Ca. Dyhemia's chess mentor there had often told me about her local tournament wins and it had stuck with me. I submitted her name, never realizing what an epic saga was being set in motion.



As most people now know, Dyhemia would prove nearly impossible to locate. She was in foster care. Somewhere. Her mentor put the word out to her friends and teachers with zero results.



I found a missing child flyer in Google images that led me to San Francisco Police Missing Persons Detective Joseph Carroll. After spilling the story I prepared for the brush-off. Instead he said, “I am going to find this girl. She deserves her shot. Let’s make something happen.”



She was being held in juvenile hall for running away. Carroll hooked me up with Social Services and after hearing the story of our Chess Cinderella they agreed to help. Dyhemia was moved to a group home in Palo Alto.



Then the City Attorney got into the act, mandating Dyhemia not travel without a Social Services chaperone. A court order would have to be obtained, plus an additional order to allow her to speak to the media so we could try and raise the money for both plane tickets and double room and board.



The orders were obtained. Dyhemia, with just 72-hours until the start of the tournament, talked to the press and a story ran in The Los Angeles Times.



Federal Express was so moved they paid for the plane tickets.



Actress Jada Pinkett-Smith had her agent send payment for the rooms and all meals for Dyhemia and her chaperone, Sheila George.



I flew to Texas for the tournament. The moment I met her I knew this really was meant to be. Despite all her trials, Dyhemia is effervescent.



She arrived with a black eye from a jealous girl at the group home that nearly cost her the dream, but the attacker's arm was too short to box with God and Dyhemia made the flight in time.



But like the hundreds of children with whom I work, Dyhemia has not had a personal chess coach and the money to pay for tournament fees and membership in the US Chess Federation. She didn’t know how to use a clock, or take fast enough chess notation. So she was not a rated player and would have to learn the rules under fire.



Day one of competition, with two games to play and a FOX/CNN affiliate’s camera staring her in the face Cinderella wept on my shoulder. “What if I lose all my games and disappoint everybody who believed in me? What is gonna happen to me if I lose?”



I said, “It will rain frogs. The earth will open and swallow you and you will come back as a chubby white lady from Virginia.” She gave me her, “UH-HUH” look, grinned and said, “Well if that’s all then I better just get started. That ain’t nothin’.”



But she rushed her game like it was street blitz and lost. A chess dad/coach, Abdul Shakoor and his daughter Diamond, took her out of the building and reset her mental clock. While she still lost Game 2 it was tight. Dyhemia was on her game.



The next day Susan Polgar, Shakoor and I paced, agonizing over every move. You would have thought we all had money on that game.



With three moves to Mate and Dyhemia winning, the local TV cameraman cluelessly clunked his lens right onto the edge of the board nearly toppling her game.



Without thinking I grabbed him by the neck and dragged him backward, camera and all, hissing in his ear, “Do that again and I promise you I will give you your first jiu-jitsu lesson!” I pointed to his new spot and hissed, "STAY!" He did.



Moments later Dyhemia made her move and her opponent's King toppled. She did a silent little victory hop and shimmy out the door.



She would lose all her following games. Despite quantum leaps she could not close the disadvantage gap.



With only one victory, the award ceremony was a formality until Polgar pulled me aside. She said, “Dyhemia. She is going into the 11th grade yes?” Yes. So?



Apparently, the three Grand Prizes are not awarded to the top three overall, but the top 3 girls entering the 11th and 12th grades because they are $40,000 scholarships to Texas Tech carry a caveat and must be used within a certain time frame.



Between her win, her age and the fact that another girl, a senior, was already committed to another school, Dyhemia was one of the three new Queens.



As I waived good-bye and ran to catch my flight home I looked back at the room filled with happy endings and wondered where the next Chess Cinderella will hail from. I found myself mentally rewriting the opening line to the classic tale to read, "More than once upon a time..."



YouTube video of Dyhemia’s first win: http://youtu.be/tJjxWy1r4vM



• Lisa Suhay runs free urban chess programs and events on the East Coast and is a children’s book author. Contact her at Lsuhays2@cox.net. Learn more at www.lisasuhay.com



Photos: https://picasaweb.google.com/SPICEChess/SPGirlsInvitational2011



Final standings



Overall Champion: Apurva Virkud (Acer netbook computer)

2nd: Mandy Lu

3rd - 4th: Maggie Feng and Kristen Sarna



Under 13: Mandy Lu (Acer netbook computer)

Under 10: Chenyi Zhao (Acer netbook computer)



Scholarships to Texas Tech (approximately $40,000 each for out of state students):



Vanita Young

Cheryl Liu

Dyhemia Young



Parents / Friends:



1. David Chris Miller

2-4 Angelito Abella

2-4 Martha Underwood

2-4 Abdul Abdus-Shakoor



Puzzle Solving:



1. Maggie Feng 20/20

2. Katherine Davis 19/20

3. Rebecca Deland 19/20



Blitz:



1-2. Mandy Liu (Winner by playoff)

1-2. Evelyn Chen



Bughouse:



1-3. Kristen Sarna / Clarissa Abella (Winners on tiebreaks)

1-3. Apurva Virkud / Katherine Davis

1-3. Mandy Lu / Maggie Feng



Tournament Director: Frank Niro

Assistant Tournament Directors: Martha Underwood and Ken Wyzywany

Wednesday, August 3, 2011

Competition and lasting friendship


Young chess phenom wins scholarship to Texas Tech at tournament

Dyhemia Young's journey to the Susan Polgar Girls' Invitational chess tournament was long and difficult, and though she didn't win the competition, she did receive a scholarship to Texas Tech.

http://youtu.be/E71oE-zrwWk


Dyhemia Young left for Lubbock, Texas, with a black eye — compliments of a girl at her East Palo Alto group home — and returned the proud recipient of a chess scholarship worth $40,000.

Along the way, the 15-year-old from the wrong side of San Francisco, who could not have made it to a prestigious chess tournament without the kindness of strangers, became a nationally rated player.

"My journey here, it was tough, because I had a lot of situations going on at home," she said tearfully after her first win, Game 3 of the six-game Susan Polgar Girls' Invitational.

The tournament takes place each year at Texas Tech University, drawing the top-rated girl from each state. Polgar, the first woman to earn the title of grandmaster, also issues two "wild card" invitations to gifted players who haven't traveled the pricey road of official competition.

Dyhemia, who has spent the last three years in and out of foster care, received one of the wild card bids. But when Adisa Banjoko, her chess mentor, called in June with the good news, Dyhemia had disappeared.

It took nearly a month and the help of a San Francisco police detective to locate Dyhemia; after a short stint in juvenile hall, she had ended up in the teen home.

Then there was the matter of money — nearly $3,000 was needed to send the high-school junior and a chaperone to the six-day event. After reading her story in The Times, generous donors sent thousands of dollars Dyhemia's way.

Problem solved? Not so fast.

The night before her flight to Texas, Dyhemia was sitting in the group home studying for her driver's license test with the help of a staff member. When the woman left the room, Dyhemia continued to drill herself. "Why don't you just shut up?" one of the other girls said before charging Dyhemia and punching her in the face.

"It all stemmed from jealousy," Sheila George, who heads the group home and accompanied Dyhemia to Texas, said in a phone interview from Lubbock. "Dyhemia came down here with all this in her soul and mind and heart. She had to get rid of all that junk."

When the rattled girl and her worried chaperone stepped off the plane in Texas, they were greeted by Polgar and a cheering group of chess players — Dyhemia's competitors and newfound friends.

More here:

http://www.latimes.com/news/local/la-me-0804-chess-girl-follow-20110804,0,14884.story

http://www.latimes.com/news/local/la-me-chess-girl-pictures,0,3756581.photogallery

Competition and lasting friendship


Young chess phenom wins scholarship to Texas Tech at tournament

Dyhemia Young's journey to the Susan Polgar Girls' Invitational chess tournament was long and difficult, and though she didn't win the competition, she did receive a scholarship to Texas Tech.

http://youtu.be/E71oE-zrwWk


Dyhemia Young left for Lubbock, Texas, with a black eye — compliments of a girl at her East Palo Alto group home — and returned the proud recipient of a chess scholarship worth $40,000.

Along the way, the 15-year-old from the wrong side of San Francisco, who could not have made it to a prestigious chess tournament without the kindness of strangers, became a nationally rated player.

"My journey here, it was tough, because I had a lot of situations going on at home," she said tearfully after her first win, Game 3 of the six-game Susan Polgar Girls' Invitational.

The tournament takes place each year at Texas Tech University, drawing the top-rated girl from each state. Polgar, the first woman to earn the title of grandmaster, also issues two "wild card" invitations to gifted players who haven't traveled the pricey road of official competition.

Dyhemia, who has spent the last three years in and out of foster care, received one of the wild card bids. But when Adisa Banjoko, her chess mentor, called in June with the good news, Dyhemia had disappeared.

It took nearly a month and the help of a San Francisco police detective to locate Dyhemia; after a short stint in juvenile hall, she had ended up in the teen home.

Then there was the matter of money — nearly $3,000 was needed to send the high-school junior and a chaperone to the six-day event. After reading her story in The Times, generous donors sent thousands of dollars Dyhemia's way.

Problem solved? Not so fast.

The night before her flight to Texas, Dyhemia was sitting in the group home studying for her driver's license test with the help of a staff member. When the woman left the room, Dyhemia continued to drill herself. "Why don't you just shut up?" one of the other girls said before charging Dyhemia and punching her in the face.

"It all stemmed from jealousy," Sheila George, who heads the group home and accompanied Dyhemia to Texas, said in a phone interview from Lubbock. "Dyhemia came down here with all this in her soul and mind and heart. She had to get rid of all that junk."

When the rattled girl and her worried chaperone stepped off the plane in Texas, they were greeted by Polgar and a cheering group of chess players — Dyhemia's competitors and newfound friends.

More here:

http://www.latimes.com/news/local/la-me-0804-chess-girl-follow-20110804,0,14884.story

http://www.latimes.com/news/local/la-me-chess-girl-pictures,0,3756581.photogallery

Making the best of the one shot


San Francisco Bayview’s Chess Star Wins Big
by Julianne Hing
Wednesday, August 3 2011, 6:38 PM EST

They’re calling her a “Chess Cinderella.” Dyhemia Young is a 16-year-old chess star who won a coveted wild card seat in the prestigious all-girls annual Susan Polgar Girls’ Invitational chess tournament in Lubbock, Texas. But there were a couple obstacles standing in her way. For one, airfare from Young’s home town of San Francisco to Texas was steep, and then Young’s mentor Adisa Banjoko had trouble locating her when he heard the news about her invitation.

Banjoko mentored Young in chess through the Hip-Hop Chess Federation, a non-profit that uses music, chess and martial arts to help young people in rough neighborhoods navigate their tricky lives.

It turned out that Young had been bouncing around the foster care system for the last three years, and it was only after finding a missing person’s poster and scouring leads that led them to the San Francisco police that Banjoko was able to get ahold of Young.

More here.

Making the best of the one shot


San Francisco Bayview’s Chess Star Wins Big
by Julianne Hing
Wednesday, August 3 2011, 6:38 PM EST

They’re calling her a “Chess Cinderella.” Dyhemia Young is a 16-year-old chess star who won a coveted wild card seat in the prestigious all-girls annual Susan Polgar Girls’ Invitational chess tournament in Lubbock, Texas. But there were a couple obstacles standing in her way. For one, airfare from Young’s home town of San Francisco to Texas was steep, and then Young’s mentor Adisa Banjoko had trouble locating her when he heard the news about her invitation.

Banjoko mentored Young in chess through the Hip-Hop Chess Federation, a non-profit that uses music, chess and martial arts to help young people in rough neighborhoods navigate their tricky lives.

It turned out that Young had been bouncing around the foster care system for the last three years, and it was only after finding a missing person’s poster and scouring leads that led them to the San Francisco police that Banjoko was able to get ahold of Young.

More here.