Queens of the chessboard
At tournament, area girls show they can make all the right moves

Washington Post

Tuesday, November 3, 2009

It was a sunny fall day, the kind of day your mom insists you spend outside, running around, laughing and making noise. But for 30 girls, in grades one to eight, it was a day for concentration, strategy and competition.

Girls from the District, Maryland and Virginia competed in the U.S. Chess Center’s first all-girls chess tournament last month. The day included four rounds of games. Each girl had 30 minutes per game to make her moves.

The girls sat quietly, stared at the boards and scribbled down their moves to study later. Naomi Miller, a sixth-grader at Springfield Estates Elementary School in Springfield won two matches, drew one (meaning it was a tie) and lost one.

“There really are so many new things to learn,” she said. “I don’t think it matters if I’ve lost or not. I like thinking back and seeing if I could have made another move.”

This was Naomi’s second chess tournament and her first all-girls matchup. This one, she said, “was way more casual.” When a boy opponent says to her at the beginning of a match, “Are you ready to play?” Naomi feels as though what he is really saying is, “Are you ready to lose?”

This kind of attitude is in part why the U.S. Chess Center decided to host an all-girls event. At most youth chess tournaments, according to Chris Kim, the tournament director, only about 5 percent of players are girls. That means, out of 100 players, only five of them are girls. That’s a lot of boys.

“Most girls feel intimidated,” Kim said, as his daughters, Madeline and Charlotte Kim, battled it out over the chess board. Girls may pick up the game in elementary school, but as they get older, they stop playing because of peer pressure. “My daughters’ main complaint was, ‘How come we always have to play boys?’ “

Here is the full article.

Posted by Picasa
Chess Daily News from Susan Polgar
Tags: