A recent Washington Post article proclaimed that “Teachers nationwide are flummoxed by students’ new chess obsession.”
To maximize excitement and community involvement, the tournament included several wrinkles. Organizers told the Razor that each of the 18 participants played three games, with an eight-minute starting time and no delay or increment. Members of the Junior School Chess Club, for whom the tournament served as a club meeting, were also invited to attend. “It was great to see matchups between seniors and junior schoolers,” Huang said.
The speed-of-game, unique matchups, and the public nature of the tournament resulted in gripping action, according to tournament organizers and participants. Said Evan Yan ’25, “Playing in an over the board tournament as opposed to online made it more difficult but also memorable.” Yan noted that “Most people, including myself, play chess online, so playing in person required a surprising level of adjustment and focus.“ As a memorable moment, Huang cited a matchup between Logan Matthews’25 and Henry Foushee ’25, who “decided to play their game standing up, using the piano as a table.” Huang also recalled that, “in a nail-biting finish,” Lucas Llovera ’25 “checkmated his opponent with less than two seconds on the clock.” The clock was not everyone’s friend, however. Junior schooler Toby Huang ’28 said that he “lost a game [he] shouldn’t have” when he “ran out of time.”
Though a champion was meant to be decided on April 5, multiple tiebreakers were needed before a winner could be crowned. In the end, Yan took home the prize— a Hopkins-themed chessboard.
The real winners, of course, were New Haven Reads and the Hopkins community. Said Nate Huang, “The proceeds from the tournament, donations, and the bake sale helped us surpass our goal by a large amount: we were able to raise $368.50 for New Haven Reads. Noted Huang, “It was clear from the tournament that chess brings together the Hopkins community. Hopefully, we can host more tournaments like this in the future.”