Checkmate: Huron High School junior crowned national K-12 chess champion
Courtesy of Atulya Shetty
The 11 students carpooled to Nashville April 5-7 to compete with thousands of students in grades K-12 in the United States Chess Federation’s SuperNationals tournament.
After three days of competition and seven games of chess, Shetty was named the K-12 SuperNationals champion, clinching the first-place trophy for individual play and a $2,000 scholarship. The Huron High School team took second place in the K-12 championship division, the highest division at the event. A team from Edward R. Murrow High School in New York was the overall team champion.
Five students from Huron competed in the K-12 championship division. They were Shetty, sophomores Alexander Deatrick and Jeffery Zhang and freshmen Justin Chen and Marco Lorenzon. The four best individual scores were totaled to determine the overall team score.
Courtesy of Atulya Shetty
The five other lower-division players from Huron were Adam Abu-Shtayyah, Franklin Bromberg, Andy Hsiao, Hao Tang and Valerie Peng.
"I am very, very proud of them," said Huron chess coach Ken Long. "Atulya (Shetty) is the best player I have ever had the acquaintance of. ... He's just a true genius. But not only is he a great kid with chess, he's a great leader and a great student who's also had tremendous success academically."
Long said Shetty and the Huron chess club also volunteer their time at Mitchell Elementary School running a chess program there.
Shetty began playing chess when he was about 4 1/2 years old. He said it was his two preschool teachers who sparked his interest in the game and first taught him to play. Unlike many chess prodigies, the strategy game was not a skill passed down through his family.
"I think people usually learn from their parents or grandparents. A love of chess seems to run in families," Shetty said. "If it weren't for those teachers, I probably would have learned from my dad (who plays chess casually) at some point ... but I might not have been as serious with the game."
Shetty also is the No. 1 player in Michigan across all age groups, including those who are his elders. Shetty said the one thing he enjoys most about chess is it never gets old.
"You are never done learning," he said. "There is always something you can get better at ... You find a new weakness you have to improve and then you start slipping in old weaknesses ... it's always a challenge."
Despite popular misconceptions, chess is akin to a varsity sport in the amount of practice and preparation needed before a competition, Long said.
In the weeks before the SuperNationals, Shetty said he did a variety of "chess puzzles" to keep his mind active and alert. The puzzles involve trying to get out of check and other sticky situations in check.
During a game, the Huron chess players take notations of what moves they make in order to review the moves after the match to determine what mistakes were made and what they can do better next time. Shetty said there also are databases to look up one's opponent and see what opening moves and plays they make most frequently, similar to reviewing tape before a football or basketball contest.
It was Long's first trip to the national chess tournament and he described the event as very exciting with a lot of energy. He said going into the seventh round, the team buckled down.
"It was really intense," he said. "We knew we had a chance at first place, so everybody played really tight and made their best moves."
The event drew more than 5,300 participants from 44 states, the District of Columbia, Puerto Rico and an overseas military base.
"It's awe-inspiring being in a massive convention center with that many people," Deatrick said. "And you all share the same interest, so you've got something in common with everyone and can make a lot of friends."
Long said the great thing about chess is it's a game of opportunity. It also teaches children about consequences, the benefit of thinking things through in advance and how that sometimes in life, you have to make sacrifices, he said.
"Chess doesn't care about your age, ethnic background, religion, who your grandpa is, your athletic ability — anybody can win games in chess. Anybody can study chess and become successful ... and studies have shown brain games help sharpen mental skills."
Danielle Arndt covers K-12 education for AnnArbor.com. Follow her on Twitter @DanielleArndt or email her at daniellearndt@annarbor.com.
Comments
selamet
Thu, Apr 18, 2013 : 11:29 p.m.
Great work River Rats!!!
mr_annarbor
Thu, Apr 18, 2013 : 1:09 p.m.
Way to go, Huron!
Carole
Thu, Apr 18, 2013 : 10:53 a.m.
Love the game of chess and so very happy that it is back. Congratulations to the youngster who won. Enjoy to the fullest.
Stephen Lange Ranzini
Thu, Apr 18, 2013 : 10:34 a.m.
Awesome! Well done! Having been a chess player in my youth, I am sure this is the result of the proverbial "more than 10,000 hours" of hard work!
a2cat
Thu, Apr 18, 2013 : 9:01 a.m.
I love this kind of news. Congratulations to Mr. Long, Atulya and the rest of the River Rats! What an accomplishment!!! And what a great experience to go to Nashville and meet other students from all over!
DJBudSonic
Thu, Apr 18, 2013 : 4:48 a.m.
Congratulations! Cannot wait to share this good news with my wife (a former River rat) and my middle-school son - who I used to be able to beat in chess. Chess is a great game; and these are the kind of accomplishments that help make Ann Arbor Schools great.
Schneb
Thu, Apr 18, 2013 : 3:07 a.m.
Thanks for the great job to all involved--and to Ken Long who for the love of the game, and from being a great teacher, gave his time to support and develop that club. Great job to Shetty and all on the team for their efforts, and to their families for supporting them.
snark12
Wed, Apr 17, 2013 : 5:58 p.m.
As a former competitive chess player (and it's not always cool to say that), congratulations to Atulya and the whole Huron team!
Jenn McKee
Wed, Apr 17, 2013 : 4:23 p.m.
Congrats to Shetty and the rest of the team! What an accomplishment. My husband (a former River Rat) has been starting to teach our four and a half year old daughter how to play chess – and given the paucity of girls involved in this particular pursuit (it seems like there's only one girl on this particular chess team), I'm hoping more and more young girls learn the ropes of the game while they're young. It seems like there are SO many benefits to learning and playing this game.
DBH
Wed, Apr 17, 2013 : 2:27 p.m.
That is quite an accomplishment for Atulya Shetty and for the rest of the team — congratulations! I would be interested in knowing what Shetty's USCF (United States Chess Federation) rating is considering he is the #1 rated player in Michigan. There are some highly rated players in Michigan, so Shetty's rating must be well over 2000 easily. And, from the article, "The puzzles involve trying to get out of checkmate and other sticky situations in check." For the record, you never get out of checkmate. If you're in checkmate, you're toast. I think you meant check, not checkmate.
DBH
Wed, Apr 17, 2013 : 4:11 p.m.
Thanks for the information and link, Ms. Arndt. Quite remarkable is right!
Danielle Arndt
Wed, Apr 17, 2013 : 2:54 p.m.
DBH, thank you, I did mean check. I will change it in the story. Also, on Atulya's rating, I did a quick search on the USCF. His regular rating is 2446 and his quick rating is 2182. His state ranking is 1 out of 1,502, his junior ranking is 23 out of 40,593 and his overall ranking is 146 out of 53,984. Here's a link to his player profile on the USCF: http://www.uschess.org/component/option,com_wrapper/Itemid,181/. Quite remarkable.
dotdash
Wed, Apr 17, 2013 : 1:58 p.m.
Fabulous! What a great piece of news. Very impressive.
Christine Stead
Wed, Apr 17, 2013 : 1:31 p.m.
Congratulations! What a wonderful accomplishment in a fantastic game of strategy. I'm looking forward to seeing much more success from Atulya - and from the rest of the Huron team - in Chess and in many other areas in life! Keep up the good work.