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2018 ChessKid Online Championship Broadcast Live This Weekend

2018 ChessKid Online Championship Broadcast Live This Weekend

MikeKlein
| 19 | Chess Event Coverage

[Update: Rounds 2-5 of the 2018 ChessKid Online Championship, this Saturday and Sunday (9 a.m. and 3 p.m. Pacific both days), will be on both Chess.com/TV and the brand-new channel Twitch.TV/ChessKid. Commentary will be provided by longtime ChessKid video creators IM David Pruess, WFM Alexandra Botez, and David Petty. Tune in to see the stars of tomorrow—many future GMs have played in CONIC in years past!]

FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE:

ChessKid.com to host the 7th Annual Online National Chess Championship (CONIC), June 1-3

April 11. 2018—ChessKid.com is set to host the 7th Annual Online National Chess Championship (CONIC), June 1-3.

This year's event promises to be the strongest ever!
The championship was founded in June of 2012, and last year's event was the sixth edition of the only "online" national chess championship. CONIC is both U.S. Chess-rated and recognized by U.S. Chess as the only national championship of its kind.

IM David Pruess' full recap of last year's event can be found here

As ChessKid.com CEO Carey Fan explains, competitions of this nature are run to give top-level juniors a taste for what it's like to compete in an elite round-robin.

"I would expect to see a few of these kids competing in the U.S. championship in future years," Fan said. "We're excited to host them on ChessKid first!"

Indeed, future U.S. championship players like GMs Kayden Troff and Jeffery Xiong both played in CONIC years ago. U.S. women's championship players have also played past editions, like FM Carissa Yip.

The "invitation-only" round robin format is just one of the things that makes this tournament a special occasion. With all the games played online, travel expenses and other logistical inconveniences are not an issue in bringing the nation's best together.

 

 

Just as last year, the 2018 edition will feature five rounds, and will remain with seven sections! The sections will be: 6 and Under; Age 7; Age 8; Ages 9-10; Ages 11-12; Girls 9 and Under; Girls Ages 10-13. You may not "play up"—qualifiers may only play in the section that aligns with their age (girls qualifying in both an open section and a girls section can pick which one they wish you play in).

All games will be played on Chess.com. As usual, games will be broadcast live at www.Chess.com/TV.

For the full details, including rules and prizes, see below. Look for an updated announcement (closer to tournament time) once the field of 42 players is confirmed. For further information, or to confirm interest or participation, please email CONIC head organizer Kele Perkins (note this is now closed).

ChessKid.com is the "scholastic extension" of the world's largest chess website: Chess.com. By bringing so many of the nation's best and brightest youth chess players together for an event of this magnitude, ChessKid.com and U.S. Chess hope to provide more exposure for the great game of chess, as well as all the benefits the game has on a child's cognitive development and critical thinking skills. 

Top 15 Age 6 & Under as of January 2018 List

#1.  Patil, Dhruva (1529)

#2.  Rajaram, Rohan (1344)

#3.  Zhu, Ryan (1318)

#4.  Wu, Stanley (1228)

#5.  Jiang, Lucas (1207)

#6.  Ho, Carter (1160)

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Alternates:

#7.  Tse, Whitney (1119)

#8.  Judy, Jack (1114)

#9.  Vellore, Inay (1066)

#10.  Petrella, Gerard (1050)

#11.  Meister, Maxwell (1018)

#12.  Phung, Alexandra (1000)

#13.  Faissal, Jack (987)

#14.  Kannan, Vijay (981)

#15.  Shi, Ted (977)

 

Top 15 Age 7 as of January 2018 List

#1.  Emrikian, Aren (1836)

#2.  Li, Rachael (1725)

#3.  Chennareddy, Yuvraj (1693)

#4.  Yin, Ruohan (1648)

#5.  Wang, Alexander (1587)

#6.  Farragut, Cannon (1536)

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Alternates:

#7.  Jiang, Andrew (1500)

#8.  Meister, Xan (1499)

#9.  Vidyarthi, Omya (1451)

#10.  Shetty, Anshul (1447)

#11.  Marian, Aaron (1409)

#12.  Mei, Ethan (1391)

#13.  Gu, Crystal (1386)

#13.  Woodward, Andy (1386)

#15.  Faitelson, Nevo (1370)

 

Top 15 Age 8 as of January 2018 List

#1.  Mishra, Abhimanyu (2094)

#2.  Wongso, Steve (1968)

#3.  Prestia, Sebastian (1924)

#4.  Xie, Bryan (1902)

#5.  Kunka, Harshid (1855)

#6.  Hardaway, Brewington (1853)

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Alternates:

#7.  Chen, Eddison (1835)

#8.  Duong, Kevin (1813)

#9.  Dinesh, Abinav (1806)

#10.  Yang, Jack (1793)

#11.  Buchanan, Royal (1775)

#12.  Mou, Iris (1737)

#13.  Lee, Alice (1727)

#14.  Chin, Spencer (1706)

#15.  Nath, Nitish (1685)

 

Top 15 Age 9-10 as of January 2018 List

#1.  Zhou, Liran (2216)

#2.  Park, Evan (2138)

#3.  Li, Eric (2099)

#4.  Vidyarthi, Vyom (2097)

#5.  Mardov, Dimitar (2089)

#6.  Murgescu, Adi (2056)

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Alternates:

#7.  Krishnakumar, Sriram (2053)

#8.  Rama, Tejas (2043)

#9.  Sethuraman, Sandeep (2034)

#10. Jin, Derek (2032)

#11.  Liang, Jason (2026)

#12.  Vanapalli, Vishnu (2023)

#13.  Gao, Marvin (2016)

#14.  Putnam, Liam (2012)

#15.  Ngo, Bach (2011)

 

Top 15 Age 11-12 as of January 2018 List

#1.  Wang, Justin (2404)

#2.  He, Anthony (2326)

#3.  Daggupati, Balaji (2322)

#4.  Guo, Arthur (2307)

#5.  Yoo, Christopher (2302)

#6.  Lu, Maximillian (2279)

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Alternates:

#7.  Tsay, Vincent (2255)

#8.  Wang, Jason (2237)

#9.  Wu, Rochelle (2233)

#10.  Shlyakhtenko, Robert (2229)

#11.  Eidelman, Gabriel (2189)

#12.  Matus, Nastassja (2178)

#13.  Wu, Logan (2170)

#13.  Hu, Merric (2170)

#15.  Li, Jerry (2161)


Top 15 Girls Age 9 & Under as of January 2018 List

#1.  Velea, Sophie (1764)

#2.  Mou, Iris (1737)

#3.  Lee, Alice (1727)

#4.  Li, Rachael (1725)

#5.  Liu, Kelsey (1677)

#6.  Rajaram, Anika (1654)

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Alternates:

#7.  Tang, Zoey (1624)

#8.  Wu, Abbie (1598)

#8.  Pollard, Teja (1561)

#10.  Atwell, Rose (1552)

#11.  Elangovan, Ramya (1539)

#12.  Wen, Kally (1515)

#13.  Gao, Tianwen (1481)

#14.  Chu, Joy (1466)

#14.  Kanury, Riya (1466)

 

Top 15 Girls Age 10-13 as of January 2018 List

#1.  Wu, Rochelle (2233)

#2.  Samadashvili, Martha (2196)

#3.  Matus, Nastassja (2178)

#4.  Zhu, Evelyn (2158)

#5.  Zeng, Sheena (1979)

#6.  Yan, Rui (1977)

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Alternates:

#7.  Wang, Ellen (1971)
#8.  Nguyen, Anh (1969)
#9.  Cao, Claire (1964)

#10.  Zhou, Iris (1953)

#11.  Prasanna, Gracy (1929)

#12.  Qi, Katherene (1911)

#13.  Ehsani, Yassamin (1898)

#13.  Yisrael, Shama (1898)

#15.  Chen, Minda (1892)

 


 

TOURNAMENT DESCRIPTION

  • WHEN: This event will take place June 1-3, with a total of five rounds over three days (1/2/2 rounds on Fri/Sa/Su). Round one: Friday at 7 pm Eastern, 4 pm Pacific. Round two: Saturday 12 pm Eastern, 9 am Pacific. Round three: Saturday 6pm Eastern, 3 pm Pacific. Round four: Sunday 12 pm Eastern, 9 am Pacific. Round five: Sunday 6 pm Eastern, 3 pm Pacific.  
  • WHAT: The event is a national championship, which means the winner will be the official "6 and under national champion," etc. The games are also "U.S. Chess-rated" meaning the results will affect the official U.S. Chess rating of the participants.
  • SECTIONS: 6 and Under; Age 7; Age 8; Ages 9-10; Ages 11-12; Girls 9 and Under; Girls Ages 10-13.

  • HOW PLAYERS ARE DETERMINED: This is an invitational tournament, with six players per section. This means 42 total kids over the seven sections will compete. The invitees are determined by the USCF Top Rated Players list, January, 2018. Age eligibility is as of January 1, 2018.

  • INVITATIONS: The top 15 players in each age group will receive participation invites (either as a confirmed invite or "alternate," should someone ahead of them decline participation). A player may not "play up" into an older section. A girl qualifying in both an open and girls sections may choose which one she prefers to play in.

  • RATING TIES: In the event that two players' ratings are tied in the Top 100 lists, the exact decimal rating will be used to break the tie. In the extremely unlikely event that the players are still tied, ChessKid.com reserves the right to find another tiebreak method.

TOURNAMENT FORMAT & RULES

  • ROUND ROBIN: This is a single round-robin tournament, which means every player will play every other player exactly one time. We will attempt to provide exact pairings two weeks in advance of the event, but we may experience delays based on player participation confirmation.

  • TIME CONTROL: The games will be played online on Chess.com with a time control of G/90 + 30 sec increment, which means both players get 90 minutes for all their moves and each time they make a move they get an additional 30 seconds added to their clock. 

  • LIVE COVERAGE: Every round will be covered live and viewable on Chess.com/TV

  • WHERE THE KIDS PLAY FROM: Because the games are played online, most players will be playing locally. Some kids will play from home, and others from public locations in their home towns (or nearby), like local chess clubs or a public library, or even a rented conference room at a hotel, in the case of several players in the same area. All kids will be encouraged to play from a highly stable internet connection and possibly a hard-wired (ethernet) setup. *Note that you will NOT be confirmed to play until you have secured a location and TD for the dates and times of the rounds.

  • T.D. MONITORED: Most typical over-the-board tournaments are monitored loosely by the tournament director, or TD, who is physically present to discourage any type of cheating. Online tournaments are different because your opponent and the TD can't see you. Because of this, all players must provide a local, neutral adult chaperone to be present and monitor them at all times while they play. The adult may not be a family member or coach of the player. In addition to this, Chess.com has top-of-the-line cheat detection which will be used. All relevant U.S. Chess rules are in use, including all prohibitions against using notes, printed or electronic chess materials, or other forms of outside help.

  • TAKEBACKS: Though "mouse slips" can and do happen in an online setting, this year we will not allow any takebacks to be issued under any circumstances. We recommend the most careful observation of your position and usage of the mouse before making a move!

  • RELAYING MOVES TO A BOARD: While all players will be allowed to use a real board to show only the current position in their game (no moving the piece for analysis), no player is allowed to have someone else enter their moves on the computer.  This rule/clarification has two reasons behind it:  1) If a player in severe time trouble calls out a move and the relayer doesn't make the move in time, then there will be difficult questions about whether the player deserves to lose on time; 2) If a relayer makes a different move for any reason—accidentally or on purpose—then the opponent will be analyzing the wrong move. It's also possible to mouse-slip a superior move. Both of these scenarios are best avoided.

  • TIE-BREAKS: In the event of a tie for first place, a clear winner will be determined via an Armageddon rapid game. White will receive 20 minutes, Black will receive 10 minutes and draw odds. A five-second time increment will be in place. The lower-rated player will have choice of color.  

  • In the event of a tie for other places, U.S. Chess standard tiebreaks will be used.

PRIZES

  • Each player will receive a free 1 year Diamond Membership on Chess.com.

  • Each player will receive a free 1 year Gold Membership on ChessKid.com. 

  • Each player will receive a free ChessKid.com or Chess.com T-shirt and a wristband.

  • Top 3 finishers in each section will receive a custom plaque with their name engraved.

  • 1st place in each section will receive a $300 scholarship (an estimated 3-5 hours of lesson time) toward lessons with a top chess trainer (coaches assigned by Chess.com). 

Full rules and details will be shared with participants and on-site proctors / directors upon accepting invitations.


ChessKid.com is the scholastic extension of the world's largest chess website: Chess.com. By bringing so many of the nation's best and brightest youth chess players together for an event of this magnitude, ChessKid.com and U.S. Chess hope to provide more exposure for the great game of chess, as well as all the benefits the game has on a child's cognitive development and critical-thinking skills.

MikeKlein
FM Mike Klein

Company Contact and News Accreditation: 

  • Email: [email protected]
  • Phone: 1 (800) 318-2827
  • Address: PO Box 60400 Palo Alto, CA 94306

Mike Klein began playing chess at the age of four in Charlotte, NC. In 1986, he lost to Josh Waitzkin at the National Championship featured in the movie "Searching for Bobby Fischer." A year later, Mike became the youngest member of the very first All-America Chess Team, and was on the team a total of eight times. In 1988, he won the K-3 National Championship, and eventually became North Carolina's youngest-ever master. In 1996, he won clear first for under-2250 players in the top section of the World Open. Mike has taught chess full-time for a dozen years in New York City and Charlotte, with his students and teams winning many national championships. He now works at Chess.com as a Senior Journalist and at ChessKid.com as the Chief Chess Officer. In 2012, 2015, and 2018, he was awarded Chess Journalist of the Year by the Chess Journalists of America. He has also previously won other awards from the CJA such as Best Tournament Report, and also several writing awards for mainstream newspapers. His chess writing and personal travels have now brought him to more than 85 countries.

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