Wilson wins two categories at National Scholastics Championships

Hannah Wilson, who won the Girls’ Under-15 and Under-17 sections, playing against Alex Sargeant, the Under-17 Open champion. (BCF Pictures)

Wilson wins two categories at National Scholastics Championships

Reigning national ladies chess champion Hannah Wilson dominated the National Scholastics Championships by winning two of the categories.

In the first local over-the-board action for juniors since the start of the COVID-19 pandemic, Wilson captured the Girls’ Under-15 and Under-17 sections when the Championships concluded last Saturday at the Coles Building on Bay Street in Bridgetown.

In the Under-15 age-group in which the boys and girls were merged due to insufficient entries among the females, the 13-year-old Queen’s College student took the Girls’ category with five and a half out of a maximum six points. She had to settle for a draw against Aaron Jaikaran in the fifth round but had her way for the rest of the competition. Naomi Lewis of Harrison College finished second in the Under-15 Girls’ category with three points, while Sahara Brathwaite of Queen’s College was third with two points.

Samuel Greenidge and Kanye Williams, both of Queen’s College, made a favourable impression in the Under-15 Open section and both finished with five points, losing only to Wilson. Greenidge, however, was declared the champion on the tie-break ahead of Williams with Jaikaran taking third place on four and a half points.

Wilson completed a 100 per cent winning record in the Under-17 Girls’ age-group in which the boys and girls were also merged. She went into the final round in a top-of-the-table clash against the previously unbeaten Alesha Lovell and duly won to record a maximum five points with Lovell taking second place on four points.

Alex Sargeant was the Under-17 Open champion with three points, while Jamani Bowen took second place with two points.

Jaikaran, of Harrison College, dominated the Under-11 Open category by scoring a perfect six points to win by one and a half points ahead of Chaz Reifer-Belle of Charles F. Broome Primary. Alexander Berry of Harrison College placed third on the tie-break ahead of Nathan Patterson-Simmons of Charles F. Broome Primary after both players ended on four points.

In the Under-11 Girls’ category, Jaeda Herbert of Luther Thorne Primary and Kayla Culpepper of Harrison College emerged as joint champions with four and a half points each. They were unable to be separated after the third tie-breaker. Makayla St. Aimee was third with three points.

The Championships, which attracted 44 players, were contested over six successive days, with the Under-11s in action last week Monday and Tuesday, the Under-15s on Wednesday and Thursday and the Under-17s on Friday and Saturday. (BCF)

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Four Barbadians conditionally awarded titles after Olympiad

Four Barbadians conditionally awarded titles after Olympiad

Four Barbadian chess players have been conditionally awarded titles following their performance at the 44th FIDE Olympiad in Chennai, India.

The four are reigning national ladies champion Hannah Wilson, double Pan American Youth Championships gold medallist Chanon Reifer-Belle, former national Under-20 and Under-18 female champion Kiarra Eversley and former national Under-20 champion Justin Parsons.

Parsons has been conditionally awarded the title of Candidate Master, while Wilson, Reifer-Belle and Eversley have been conditionally awarded the title of Woman Candidate Master.

The quartet, competing at their first Olympiad, achieved the requirement of attaining a 50 per cent record from a minimum seven games during the July 29 to August 9 event. They must now fulfil a minimum rating requirement to be fully awarded the title.

Parsons, who scored six out of ten points and moved his rating to 1795 after the Olympiad, needs to achieve a rating of 2000 to be awarded the Candidate Master title, while the requirement for the three female players to be awarded the Woman Candidate Master title is a rating of 1800.

The 13-year-old Wilson, who was crowned as the youngest Barbados ladies national champion in April, scored five and a half out of ten points at the Olympiad and improved her rating to 1573.

Reifer-Belle, 12, who captured gold medals in the online rapid and blitz events at the Pan American Youth Championships earlier this year and became the youngest Barbadian to compete at an Olympiad, achieved three and a half out of seven points and moved her rating to 1269.

Eversley, 20, who is also a CARIFTA medallist, gained four points out of ten – she satisfied the requirement for the conditional title by having four points after eight rounds – and now has a rating of 1374.

Two other Barbadians narrowly missed out of achieving conditional titles. Emar Edwards collected four and a half points from ten games, while Gaybrianna Moore scored three points from six games. (BCF)

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