1st in Adult Tournament
Reid Creager
Chess isn’t the only game 13-year-old William Shuford plays at adult tournaments. He likes to keep his mother wondering whether he won.
It’s been that way since he started playing in kindergarten. “You can never really tell when he loses a match,” said his mother, Marie Shuford of Charlotte. “In fact, he tries to make me guess when he comes out whether he won or lost.”
That’s the kind of natural calm that William, a Charlotte Preparatory School seventh-grader, displayed on the weekend of Oct. 26-28, when he took first place in two divisions and tied for second in another at the annual Lipkin-Pfefferkorn Open adult chess tournament in Charlotte. He won $250.
William finished first in the U1100 and U1250 divisions and tied for second in the U1400 division. The “U” rating system calculates the strength of a chess player based on performance versus other players in tournaments and matches. The higher the number, the stronger the player.
He’s ranked in the 73rd percentile among U.S. Chess Federation rated junior players and is already in the 59th percentile among all players rated in North Carolina.
William and his mother said everyone he played that weekend was an adult. That’s not unprecedented for a 13-year-old, but it’s pretty rare. He said he’s won “five or six” championships since kindergarten but that the Charlotte event was a highlight for him so far.
“It’s the strategy and the thought to it, having to think through everything” that draws William to chess, he said.
Source: http://www.charlotteobserver.com
What’s his ratings?