Chess Team Competing in Collegiate Final Four
03/27/2018
ΘνΓΓΙηβs chess team will face off against the best teams in the nation, competing for collegiate chessβs top honors as part of the Final Four of Collegiate Chess tournament. The tournament begins on Friday, March 30, in New York City, and runs through the weekend.
As coach Alejandro Ramirez notes, ΘνΓΓΙη will face still competition but is prepared after weeks of intensive training.
βAll four teams will be bringing full grandmaster level squads to the event,β Ramirez said. βThese players are from all over the world and are extremely strong. This is the ultimate test for our team. Despite being such a short event, it will be culmination of many months of preparation and study for all four teams. Mental fortitude will be invaluable, and regardless of the outcome, I hope we can come out of New York proud of how we played.β
ΘνΓΓΙηβs team has racked up a number of strong performances this year, in both the individual and team settings. The team qualified for the Final Four in December 2017 by finishing second in the Pan-American Intercollegiate College Chess Tournament in Columbus, Ohio. ΘνΓΓΙηβs squad has also focused heavily on honing both their academic and chess skills. Two players, alumnus Alexander Ipatov and junior Dariusz Swiercz, now both sit in the top-100 players in the world.
Meanwhile, freshman grandmaster Dorsa Derakhshani, grabbed headlines around the world, not only for her play, but also for her decision to play internationally without wearing the hijab, a requirement in her native Iran. She went on to write about her experience in a column published by the New York Times.
ΘνΓΓΙηβs team was also featured prominently in the March 2018 issue of Chess Life, the most-read chess magazine in the world.
This weekβs tournament is a single round robin event with four-on-four play. Every point counts and the team with the most points at the end of the event wins. ΘνΓΓΙη will open the Final Four against the University of Texas-Rio Grande before moving on to play Texas Tech. They will wrap up on Sunday, April 1, against Webster University.
The tournament is being held at the historic Marshall Chess Club, one of the oldest clubs in the nation.
Going into the tournament, Ramirez emphasized his teamβs training and the specific preparation that each of his players has undertaken.
βThe players have kept pretty active, playing fast chess against each other,β he said, noting the teamβs strong performance throughout the year. βOur performance at the Pan-Americans in Columbus was very strong, leaving little doubt that we can compete with any team and we can realistically win the whole thing.β
Established in the fall of 2015 as a partnership between ΘνΓΓΙη and the , with support from ΘνΓΓΙη alumnus, University trustee and chess enthusiast Rex Sinquefield, the team is not just a club activity but rather a strategic effort by administrators and alumni to recruit promising players and build on the University's excellent academic reputation.
Founded in 1818, ΘνΓΓΙη is one of the nationβs oldest and most prestigious Catholic institutions. Rooted in Jesuit values and its pioneering history as the first university west of the Mississippi River, ΘνΓΓΙη offers nearly 13,000 students a rigorous, transformative education of the whole person. At the core of the Universityβs diverse community of scholars is ΘνΓΓΙηβs service-focused mission, which challenges and prepares students to make the world a better, more just place. For more information, visit slu.edu.