Saturday, February 11, 2017

Wrap-up

It is truly a joy to accompany these fine young women and men as they compete, and they engage with one another.  Their abilities, their intellects, their sense of humor, their pride, their spirit...  I have seen them display what they have learned to do, I have seen them test their skill in intense, focused competition, I have seen them giddy with success, and I have seen them come to tears when disappointment tore at them.

I hear them laughing next door now.

Round 7 - end

Jonathan Liu held his advantage to win his final game.  Mindren took a draw.  Otherwise, Maine South prevailed.  Isha and Jonathan took their games down to the wire...

Round 7 - in the midst of things

The best news is that Jonathan Liu, on eighth board, is up a piece in the early endgame, so that is looking good.  Going by clocks, Jonathan Lee and Mohammed are up on time, but Mohammed is done two pawns.  George looks like he is in trouble -- low on time, and under attack.  Most of the rest of the team looks to be under stress as well, mostly behind on clocks.

Looking at the evolving results page (almost live), most matches on other tables, whether above or below, have some results now.  Every one of the eight games on long Table 6 is still in contention.  Northside is fighting hard.

Round 7 - Maine South

...promises to be a tough one.  Maine South was the team that upset Whitney Young (known to be vulnerable, but still...).

Aspiring to 6-1

For most good teams, the great aspiration is to win 6 matches.  At 5-1, Northside is now one of the fourteen teams in contention for six wins.  Seven teams will get the six they yearn for.  Seven will finish 5-2, along with many teams that have so far won four, but who will climb to a fifth will n to n the final round.
Round 7 awaits.

Round 6 -- A strong match win!

George fought on in a balanced position.  He was far down on time, but managed his position well, and maneuvered to a place where the last knight and bishop would have been traded down or sacrificed, leaving pawns that neither Board One player would let pass.  Thus, he managed a draw.

Overall, the score came out 62-6 for Northside -- a strong win in the penultimate round.

Round 6 - some great stuff!

Mohammed closed out his game as it looked like he was going to.  Jonathan, who was far down on time with no material advantage and pieces all over the board, seized an opportunity and found victory on eighth board, for his second win of the tournament.  Isha went from a time advantage with equal material to complete domination, and her opponent resigned.  George plays on, down on time, but without other clear disadvantage, so let's see what he will do.

Round 6 -- a couple games fall into place

Matthew finished his game with a win.
Jonathan gave up his bishop, and was technically down a pawn, but evidently, he had the situation in hand.  With his two rooks, he pinned the king to the back row and checked the king from the opposite side of the board, forcing his opponent to interpose with one of his rooks.  But the interposing rook was undefended, so Jonathan took the last remaining impediment to checkmate off the board and claimed the win.
Isha is well ahead on time, though material is equal.  Mohammed looks to be in control in his game.  Jonathan Liu is stil in the mid-game, but down on time.  George is battling on first board.

The four finished games give Northside a score of 36, so the match is clinched for our team.  We are still rooting for George, Isha, Mohammed, and Jonathan.

Round 6 -- first wins after an hour

More than an hour into the match, Northside scores a win with Mindren on third board.
Shortly after, Richard takes board 6.
Meanwhile, Ihsa, Matthew, and Mohammed all have more than double the time on their clocks than their opponents.  Matthew, in fact, is closing out his endgame -- just choosing whether to try to mate the king with queen and bishop, or simply to move in his king for a a queen-king combo.
Jonathan used more of his time than his opponent, but he has used it well.  He is in a rooks and pawn endgame, but he is up a bishop.  His opponent is strong enough not to let him finish easily or soon, but, barring a blunder on Jonathan's part, he is certainly in the driver's seat.

Round 6 -- St Ignatius

In this round, Northside faces one of the Chicago Catholic school teams -- a powerhouse in some years -- St. Ignatius.  This year , St. Ignatius was seeded only #77.  So, again, on paper this looks like a match-up Northside should handle comfortably, but as we have seen, the unexpected often happens. Lets root for our players to show their stuff this round!

--And Jonathan Liu returns on 8th board, so best of luck to him.

Meanwhile, in other news

Big upsets happened Round 5 - Stevenson, a school loaded with top talent, suffered an upset for the third year in a row.  Northside's City rivals, Whitney Young, got upset by Maine South.  Now, they, like Northside, are shooting to be one of the few teams who win 6 out of 7 matches.  But there are 22 teams who have won four matches, all hoping to win the next two in a row, plus four 5-0 teams vying for the state championship, but not planning to lose two in a row in any scenario.  Only six or seven teams will emerge with the coveted 6 wins.

Round 5 -- phew.

Well, we survived.
Mohammed, Richard, Matthew and Mindren won on boards 7, 6, 5 and 3.  That's almost enough to draw the match.  Unfortunately, Isha suffered a tough loss, Jonathan Lee lost and Anna saw her 2-year string of State victories come to and end. It all came down to George's game, and George was running out of time.  In the end, he took a draw, and that pushed us over.  Final score 37-31.

Round 5 - too close for comfort

hoo-wee.  Games contiue to go down to the wire, and not all of them are falling for Northside.
Yikes.

Round 5 - down to the last 30 minutes

At an one and a half into the match, still no games have been decided.  Mohammed's opponent managed to leverage his attack to win back the pawn, so they are again even on material.
Everyone is working hard, thinking hard.

Round 5 - one hour in

After one hour of play, we have no decisions yet.  Most NCP players are up on time.  Jonathan Lee started down on time, but has since caught up.  His position looks sound.  Mohammed, on 7th, has mounted a strong attack on the center, which wins him a pawn, but his opponent has managed to get attacking pieces in place to make the position double-edged.

Time to show resilience -- Day Two, Round 5 - Mt Prospect

After yesterday evening's shock, the team is rested and ready to return to play.  Facing 40-seed Mt Prospect, Northside is strongly favored.  The team is now heading up the six flights of stairs from the skittles area to the competition ballroom.
Go Mustangs!

Friday, February 10, 2017

Round 4 -- Oof.

Well, that turned out to be a setback.  I saw that nearly all our board were behind on time early on, which is not a good sign.  The team has lost this round.

Reflections

As I walked up the rather long aisle of 13 tables from Table 4 to Table 16, I noticed two teams with girl players on first board, at the head of the team.  I saw several other girls and began to form the hopeful impression that there may be more girls playing these days than a few years ago.  I hope there are. Chess is obviously unbalanced, with far more boys than girls.  I decided to count, to check my impression with data.  I walked the length of the aisle.  I counted 16 girls among the 13 tables, each of which seats two teams of eight. So, in this sample, where I was hoping to be impressed that there are more girls than a few years ago, the proportion was about 1 in 16.  Mmm...  I couldn't argue if anyone said they were unimpressed.

I have never heard anyone say that they like it this way.  All three teams who traveled on our bus have at least one or two girls on the team.  That is a little better than past years.  There are quite a few women coaches, although nowhere near gender parity there, either.  I would say that the atmosphere, while filled with nerdy boys (as well as plenty who aren't  nerdy - that's just a stereotype), is basically welcoming and supporting.  

Round 4 -- in action

This is certainly where the going gets challenging for Northside.  Can Northside upset the 6th seed and finish the day 4-0?  Only eight teams will emerge undefeated today, out of the field of 149 who began this morning, nine and a half hours ago.  Every game will be tight; every game will be tense; every game will be contested, and, most likely, every game will go down to the wire, lasting for the full two hours allotted. 
So far, seven Northsiders have won every game they have played - Jonathan Liu one game, Anna, also on 8th board, two games, and Mohammed, Richard, Isha, Mindren, and Jonathan Lee, three games each.  George and Matthew each have won two games and lost one in different matches.
Against New Trier, every game will be fought hard.  Not all will go our way.  But we have our chances.  Northside is the underdog, looking for the upset.

Round 4 upcoming - New Trier

Indeed.  Northside now climbs up to Table 6 to take on New Trier.  Until now, teams have come up
To challenge Northside; now, Northside is the challenger.  Jonathan delivers his pep talk, team member by team member-- issuing decrees for our players to prevail.

Round 3 - wrap-up

Richard ends his game with a win.  The only risk would have been a stalemate, with all the power Richard had on the board.  But he would not make that mistake.
Final score; 60-8

Northside has won all 3 of the first three matches in dominating fashion.



Competition can be expected to stiffen up in Round 4 and beyond.

Round 3 - George found the edge

From a balanced position with no obvious advantage, George found a way to get his pawn past the line and earn a queen.  Soon after, he cornered the king for a win.
Current score 53-8
Only Richard remains on the board now, but all the pieces on the board are his white ones, except the lone black king.  It appears Richard is playing cat-and-mouse.  It is all but over.

Round 3 - first decisions

As usual, the first decisions are on the lower boards.
For starters, congratulations to Jonathan -- in his first State game he earns a win!

Further up the boards, Mohammed wins on seven, but Matthew lost on board five, and Isha wins on four.
Richard is still playing, in a position that he dominates.
Mindren plays, and Jonathan Lee... wins -- his opponent tipped over his king just now.
George has lots of time on his clock, but with pawns and a knight, his position looks susceptible to a draw.

Round 3 - Jonathan Liu comes in

Jonathan Liu is making his State Championship debut on Board 8.  Go, Jonathan!

Round 3 - Schaumburg

On paper, this ought to be the easiest round.  Northside faces the #121 seed, Schuamburg.  But you have to play the games, and when a player says, "we have nothing to worry about", I have to reply, "except over-confidence".

Round 2 - Benet - final

George was not able to work out of time pressure, but both Jonathan and Mindren pulled out wins on their boards.  Almost everyone came away with a victory -- seven wins and one loss.  Board 1 is worth 12 points, so the score is 56-12.

Great start for Northside 2017!

Round 2 - Benet -- decisive

Well, Anna won, Mohammed won, Richard won, Matthew won, and Isha won.  Five wins takes the match.  But we still want to score extra points, which go into the final rating, known as "tiebreak points".  George is up on time.  Jonathan is far down on his clock.  Mindren is crowded into a corner, though he is even on material.

Round 2 -- Benet

Benet was very strong a couple of years ago, but all their best players graduated at once.  Seeded 30 this year.

Then I turned around, and…

Boom.
When I walked back into the competition area, I was greeted by Mindren carrying the results sheet up to the records table.
Not only did Jonathan, Isha, and Mohammed wrap up their winning games, but everyone without exception won their board.
Northside sweep 68-0
Beautiful start.

Round 1 - after 1 hour, everyone is still playing

Jonathan Lee is in command on second board - up two pawns and about 20 minutes time.  Isha on fourth has been taking her time, and it is clearly paying off -- she is up a piece and two pawns, so that looks.  Mohammed, on seven, is also up a piece and two pawns.
And, this round, Anna is playing eighth board.

Round 1 - Bartlett

Opening of the tournament -- handshake.  


Warming up before competition begins Day One

The team is installed in the skittles room prior to start of competition.  Everyone was up early today, well-rested from a good night's sleep.  That will be important twelve hours from now, as the final round winds up, and the team is likely to be facing its strongest competitor of the day.  Four rounds of play are coming today -- up to two hours over the board each round.
Here is the team, first in a portrait, when coach asked them to look up and smile; second, when they have returned to their natural state of intense concentration on tactical practice.




Thursday, February 9, 2017

Pep Talk

I wish you could be here to get the feel of the team's preparation.  While we sit at Steak and Shake waiting for seven different flavors of milkshakes, Jonathan Lee is sizing up the competition from around the state in an authoritative survey.  He knows the competition out there, and he is assessing their strengths and vulnerabilities -- making the case that Northside has a good shot this year.  He is looking at match-ups for each of our players, and, largely, the match-ups look promising. Our players are strong, and the team has good chances.
That's what the players are up to on their own.

As soon as we return to the hotel, Florin is here.

First, it is time to hand out new uniforms (a.k.a. team T-shirts) to the squad.

OK, everyone is clad in maroon and silver.  Now, back to chess.

As I said, Florin is here.  That means it is time to get to work.  Knights and bishops begin to fly as pawns march and then get eaten up or make a stand.  New lines and old lines thread through the flitting pieces.  Preparing for competition, eagerly, avidly, hungrily.

The night before

The players are prepared and enthusiastic.  Over the next two days, they will be in competition for about 21 hours.  In their spare time, they will go over their games with coach Florin Felecan, spar with one another, play bughouse among themselves and other teams.  They will also joke around, socialize with players from Lincoln Park, Lane Tech, Whitney Young, Payton, Lakeview, and elsewhere.  They will undoubtedly find time to eat, play cards, solve rubik's cubes and play video games.  And, still, they will sleep at night.

2017 IHSA Chess Championship Tournament Weekend

Greetings, parents, siblings, Northside community and chess fans!
The team is cruising into Peoria soon, aboard a bus filled with most of Chicago's top high school chess players-- Northside, Lane Tech, and Lincoln Park all travel together.
Northside's squad this year is:
1st Board   George McCoy
2nd Board  Jonathan Lee
3rd Board  Mindren Lu
4th Board  Isha Gani
5th Board  Matthew Kosova
6th Board  Richard Lam
7th Board  Mohammed Lotfi
8th Board  Jonathan Liu
Alternate   Anna Alvarez






















Saturday, February 13, 2016

Mindren draws. Final 34-34. The match is a tie!

I guess only three players actually had draws -- it seems like more than that.  Anyway, the vastly improbable happened.  Of all the ways that 68 points can be divided between eight players winning, losing, and drawing, with different numbers of points at stake for each player's board, there is almost always an asymmetry.
But the improbable sometimes happens.
It just did.
Tied with Evanston 34-34.

Northside finishes 5.5-1.5

Mindren...

looked like he would win for a while.  Then it got complicated.  Somehow, he has a minute on his clock.  A whole minute

George draws 30 -30. Mindren still playing

NCP 24, Evanston 24. 40 seconds to play, two games undecided

Ronald lost

Then Jonathan wins!

exciting.
still too close to call

Then Ryan wins

nice
still behind

Isha draws, but Alejandro loses

Time is running out

Evanston scored 7 points, and no other games are done.
Less than 12 minutes remain out of the two hours time allotted to compete

Round 7

Matthew's game looks lost.  Alejandro is down a piece.
Isha actually has two pieces to her opponent's rook.
Mindren has lost his rook, while his opponent has two knights roaming the board against Mindren's one.  Mindren captured his opponent's last pawn.  Apparently, he sacrificed the rook in order to promote one of his two pawns, which sounds like it would certainly be worth it, but he does not have a clear path to promotion for either of his two pawns.

Round 7 - tension continues to ratchet up

With nearly 3/4 of the time allotted now passed, there are still no settled games.
Mindren's opponent seems to be milking what his position allows, adding a bit of an edge to what I thought Mindren almost had wrapped up.  It looks like Isha was about to lose an exchange of her rook for opponent's knight.  Matthew looks none too happy.  The Evanston coach (who knows chess better than I do) accosts me and whispers "I hear you have an edge."  I have to hope he's right.  Hard for me to see.

Round 7 - developments, no decisions

All eight players are still working.  Both Ryan and Mindren are up an exchange - Ryan has a rook where his opponent has a bishop, and Mindren is up a rook to a knight.  Ryan's game is still dense, but Mindren's looks very close to the endgame, and he has chased his opponent's king out into the center of the board, looking highly vulnerable.  Mindren ought to win -- fairly soon.
Alejandro, unfortunately, is down a piece, so it looks bad for him.

Championship Round

This is the brutal round. No more easy sweeps.  Teams face their equals. The quality of play is high, games are long, the stakes are high, and the tension is immense.

I think we can take them

Northside can beat Evanston.
In case you were interested to know my opinion.

3 Chicago teams

This photo shows Northside, Lincoln Park, and Lane Tech all seated at top Tables 4, 5, 6 in Round 7 of IHSA State championship 2016.  It does.  Really.  Believe me, OK?

Round 7 -- the Final showdown. Chance to make Chicago history.

Whitney Young is challenging #1 seed Stevenson (there's a lot of that going around) on Table 1.  Lane Tech challenges 8th-seeded Highland Park on Table 4.  Lincoln Park defends Table 5 against 14th-seeded Hinsdale Central.  NCP defend Table 6 against Evanston, the 15th seed.
Four Chicago teams with 21 wins and only 3 losses among them, playing on 4 of the top 6 Tables.
Probably the strongest concentration of CPS teams in history* at this point in the tournament.  Fighting to make that history stick, with wins in the final round.

 *Unless, of course, you consider Northside playing Whitney Young in Round 7 of 2013 for the overall championship to be the greatest concentration of Chicago Public School chess talent in State history.  A case can be made...

After Round 6 - standings and other teams

Lincoln Park escaped a real scare.  After starting the day with their first loss, at the hands of Stevenson, just like NCP, they played a lower-seeded team, but only survived by the skin of their teeth.  Lane Tech, similarly, lost at the hands of Stevenson, one round before NCP did.  In Round 6, to the contrary, Lane nearly wept their opponent, losing only on 6th board.  Whitney Young was challenged, but won their sixth in a row.
CPS teams currently stand at 6-0, 5-1. 5-1, and 5-1.

Round 6 - solid victory

Matthew won, Isha drew, and Anna drew.  In the end, Northside earned 56.5 points vs. 11.5
Solid.

Round 6 - George the Defender, Mindren wins

Down an exchange on first board.  Usually, this would be fatal at this level.  But George held on and forced a draw.  
Mindren won 5th board.  
Meanwhile, Matthew, Isha, and Anna battle on.

Round 6 - 2, 3, 4 for NCP

Jonathan, Ryan, and Ronald have won their games, while everyone else continues to play.
George is in trouble, while everyone else's games are closer.

Round 6 - Kaneland (Maple Park)

Facing Kaneland HS of Maple Park, a team Northside has seen in previous years*.  Seeded #22, they are likely to provide a challenge, but NCP is decidedly favored.  Let's root for our team to put a stamp of authority on this match.

* 1st round in 2013, then 1st round again in 2014

Round 5 - win, if not easy

Jonathan, Ronald, Matthew, and Isha all won, while George, Ryan, and Anna wound up drawing boards 1, 3, and 8.  Mindren suffered a tough loss on board 5.  Final tally 46.5-21.5, which is a decisive win, though it came tougher than we would have hoped.

Round 5 early

Matthew won 6th board to begin the scoring.
All NCP players have a time advantage over their Heyworth counterparts.

Here is a good story:
Isha has taken all her opponents pieces, and he has no hope to win, but the other player has not resigned, providing an illustration of the literal interpretation of "never surrender".  Sometimes this attitude is futile, but at early levels of chess play, one can always hope that the winning player will blunder into a stalemate, giving one a draw as a gift.  A player of Isha's strength will not blunder into a stalemate.
But you gotta give the guy recognition for trying.  Watch this:
Isha got a pawn to seventh rank and was in postion to promote.  The other player helpfully picked up a queen and set it on the board before Isha waved it off.  Had he gotten away with this "act of politeness", he would have been stalemated and he'd have stolen a draw out of the game.  Isha did not fall for it, and let his king take that pawn for free.  Meanwhile, she turned to her remaining fistful of pawns to promote to a useful queen and finish off the game summarily.

Round 5 - Heyworth -begins with a handshake

Every round begins with handshakes between opponents.  Here Jonathan greets his.

Saturday Morning Round 5

After being sent up to Table 1 to take on Stevenson yesterday evening, Northside is sent back down to Table 7 to face a challenge from the lower-seeded Heyworth (#38).

Other Chicago schools: Lincoln Park, 4-0, being undefeated, now goes up to Table 1 against Stevenson. Whitney Young, 4-0, tries to defend Table 2 from a challenge by Hinsdale Central, who upset Naperville North yesterday to enter round 5 undefeated.  Lane Tech, 3-1, is in a position similar to NCP, defending Table 10 -- playing a Chicago Catholic school, St. Patrick's.

MIndren undefeated so far - tops Board 5 rankings after round 4

Click on the table and you can actually read it!

Friday, February 12, 2016

Chicago Public Chess has a very good day

Northside's 3-1, losing only to the top seed, is a good showing.
Lane Tech also went 3-1 today.
Whitney Young was undefeated, and..  Lincoln Park went 4-0 for the first time!
Among the four teams representing CPS schools, we complied a combined record of 14-2, with the only two losses coming against the first seed and third seed of the tournament.
That is the way to represent!!

Mindren adds a grueling win

.. but that is it for NCP this round.  We suffer our first loss of the day.
  Stevenson lived up to their billing, and gave us a difficult round.  Final score 54-14.

Isha gets a win!

She put the first points up for Northside.
Four more games.  No-one has more than 7 minutes left

George and Matthew have taken losses

Tough games, and two more losses.

Round 4 first decision, and tension

Ryan has lost third board.  Ryan had a tremendous run at State over the past two years - undefeated two years running!
Meanwhile, Jonathan has a strong position, but it is double-edged, and he is short on time, so he will need to capitalize on his assets relatively soon.
All other players are in the thick of things -- very challenging.

Round 4 wrestling the heavyweight, Stevenson

45 minutes into NCP's match with #1 seed Stevenson, and every game is tight.  Not a single clock is outside the 31-37 minute range -- some we're up, some they are, George and Alex Bian have exactly 35 minutes each.  Tough matches always take longer -- whether you win or you lose, quality chess takes a long time to play.

Round 4. Oh, boy.

Competition we expected-- competition we got. Heading up to Table One to face the top-seeded Stevenson.  
The team says, "HOO!!"
Wish us luck!!

After 3 rounds, Northside is one of 10 undefeated teams

Standings mean something now, and, with only ten undefeated teams, Northside is ready for some serious competition now!

So does Ryan, so does Jonathan, so does George -- Sweep.

The three top boards continued playing longest - one of them was a close game.  All won. Northside secures a second sweep in three rounds.  
Northside has handled the three lower seeds they have faced so far.

Next round, we expect to play a higher seed, so the team need to be prepared for a serious challenge.

Anna plays, Anna wins, Anna clinches match

In her first State appearance, Anna won on eighth board, scoring 5 points for the team.  With the 30 already on the record, this raised Northside's team score to 35, and clinched the match.

Way to go!

4 boards win to start 3rd round -- Downers Grove South

Ronald, Mindren, Matthew, and Isha all win.  30 points.

3rd Round -- Anna plays 8th board

Anna has substituted in for Alejandro this round, so she is now playing in her first State Championship tournament.
Everybody cheer for her -- Go Anna!

The team faces Downers Grove South.

2nd round 48-20 (5 1/2 wins out of 8)

Northside won on five boards and drew on one.
Jonathan, Ryan, Ronald, and Mindren followed Matthew with wins on their boards.  George and Alejandro lost.  Isha's game was going against her, but she managed to find a draw.

Have you been wondering how the points work?
How the points work:  Teams score more for top boards,
12   11  10  9  8  7  6  5
All the points together total 68, so a perfect score is 68-0.  Half of 68 is 34, so it takes 34.5 points minimum to win the match.  Even though first board scores more than twice as many points as eighth board, a team cannot win with the top three alone: 12+11+10=33.  Alternatively, you could say that players winning on any five boards will win the match.

Can you build up an insurmountable lead, or seize momentum by winning games early?
No.  Once you have scored 34.5 points or more, your team will win the match.  Nonetheless, going up 33-0 early does not mean your team is winning.  Although odds are in your favor that someone on the team will score, and then you will win, at least one player must win or draw his or her game for this actually to happen.

Two more wins, while the match may still be tight

Jonathan and Ronald have won, bringing the team to 27 points scored-- it takes over 34 points to win the match.
George looks like he is in trouble.

Cheap thrill

If you like to see things that make your team look great, without looking deeply at whether it really means anything, check out the standings after round one.  Northside is listed in third, after IMSA and Lane Tech.  --Ahead of Whitney Young.  -- And way ahead of the number one seed, Stevenson!

But if you look at the points that rank the teams, all are below 1.0 -- by the end of the tournament, top teams will be over 100, and most teams will be separated from their nearest competitors by a greater margin than the span of scores for the entire field now.

By the way, look quick, because as soon as this round is over, they will recalculate, and you can expect everything to be different.

Matthew wins first

Matthew has won and given Northside the first points in this match.
Alejandro just lost a bishop, which I don't see any compensation for, so I am afraid he has dropped it.
the remaining 6 games are close.

2nd Round - vs. Wheaton-Warrenville South

Another example of change - Wheaton-Warrenville South has been a top-ten or top-fifteen team for many years.  Now we face them early in the tournament with them seeded #30.
Looks like they are substantially stronger than Lincoln-Way North was, though -- after 25 minutes, many of our players are behind on time, and boards all look complex and balanced.  Doesn't look like Northside will get a cakewalk this time.

Boards 1-4, boards 5-8, the full house




1,200 competitors

In case you didn't know, the State chess championship is a remarkable, and possibly unique, competitive event.  There are 146 teams competing.  Every team has 8 players competing every round - no elimination.  So, after they shake hands to start a round, there are 1,168 players "on the field" simultaneously.  --and you can hear a pin drop.

First round - sweep - sweet

George closed out the endgame, and it's a clean sweep to start the tournament

First round - possible sweep

Alejandro described his position as "double-edged".  But after his opponent dropped a bishop, followed by a pawn, the edge was his alone.
Isha took her game.
George is up a pawn in king and pawns endgame.

First round - wrapping it up

Isha is up two pieces now, finishing off her opponent.  Alejandro took opponent's queen, though he gave up a room and a piece in exchange.  Down on time, his game is still interesting.  George still looks good to me - material is equal

First round - after 85 minutes

Matthew finished off his opponent.
George is dramatically ahead on time.  I looked at his board and saw one more piece for his opponent -- as George contemplates which of two options he will choose to complete a trade.
Isha is way ahead on time, with many pieces still out on the board.
Alejandro is well behind on time, but his opponent's queen may not be in a comfortable position herself.  Perhaps Alejandro will find a way to get her in trouble.

First round after 70 minutes of play

Jonathan won, Ryan won, Ronald won and Mindren won.  This means Northside is already the winner of this round.
Four games are still under way.   George looks to be in a commanding position.  Even on material, way up on time, looking confident and relaxed.  Matthew is up a piece and two pawns in the endgame - his game looks to be in the bag.  Isha is in a tight position, her board crowded with pieces still.  Alejandro is down on time, looking at a board with the opponent's queen wedged in among his pieces -- an uncomfortable position, it appears.

Preview - Seedings and History

Northside is seeded 10th this year.  While not the highest seeding in the last few years, Northside is showing consistency over time.  Seeded below us are a number of previous powerhouse schools and even the perennial champions from 2000-2005, Niles North at 27.  Hinsdale Central is at 14, Evanston at 15, and #2 finisher two years ago, Benet Academy all the way down at 62.  Chess programs can fluctuate a lot.  It is a tribute to Northside students and coach Florin that Northside continues to be one of the power players in Illinois.

First Round match-up -- Lincoln-Way North

Northside is seeded 10th of 146 teams.  Teams sit at tables arranged hierarchically by seeding, so we are in the position of defending Table 10 against challengers to start.  Later, if we win, we may move up to challenge one of the top nine seeded teams and try to take their table.

 We face Lincoln-Way North first round.

Thursday, February 11, 2016

Correction - Alejandro was playing original compositions

...mind blown.
I was already flabbergasted when I just thought that the chess team featured three virtuosos playing the piano.  I thought Alejandro was playing pieces that I was unfamiliar with, composed by, say, Chopin's nephew.  I stand corrected -- and in awe -- Alejandro was performing his own original work.

Mindren sends us off with a performance of The Entertainer, by Scott Joplin.  Next, Alejandro inspired us with some more romantic pieces, and Anna played an even wider repertoire.  You can see her at the keyboard in the photo below
Chess team prepared to embark.  Anna is on the piano.  She was preceded by Alejandro and Mindren, all wowing me with virtuosity and setting an auspicious mood to our setting-out.

2016 IHSA State Chess Championship

Our team line-up this year:
George McCoy
Jonathan Lee
Ryan Toepfer
Ronald Rodriguez
Mindren Lu
Matthew Kosova
Isha Gani
Alejandro Linan

Alternate Anna Alvarez

Ready to rock!

Sunday, February 15, 2015

The team schmoozes and jokes at the IHOP, eating chicken and waffles, and sharing stories that sometimes just stop.

Back at the hotel, games of bughouse emerge, and bargain chess is invented.  Players from Lane and Lincoln Park and Northside merge into a lively chess community.

It's in their veins.