
Tony
Cao gets ready for a chess match
Three
St. Louis area kids
win state chess titles
Eleven-year-old Tony Cao of Ballwin is the youngest of three
St. Louis area state chess champions. They won titles in
last month's Missouri state youth tournament held in Jefferson
City.
The
Chinese-born fifth grader at Henry Elementary School took
the 5th-grade-and-under title. He was unbeaten in his six
matches in the state meet.
A
fellow fifth grader at Henry School, William Cheng, won
second in the same division. The Chinese-American Cheng
had five wins and one draw to earn the runner-up spot.
Tony
said, "I wasn't the favorite to win. But, I beat the
favorite in my fifth match." He added that Cheng fought
to a draw with the favorite to help him finish second.
Cao
said there were between 40 and 50 entrants in the 5th-and-under
division.
Other
individual division winners from St. Louis included:
In
the 9th and under division, Jeremy Volkmann from Francis
Howell High School. In the 6th-and-under division, Stephanie
Hulsey of Barrington Elementary School.
Cao
said he started playing chess when he was very young. But,
he didn't get serious about the game until his family moved
to St. Louis and he joined the chess club at Henry School
in West St. Louis County.
"I
had played chess before but I think I was playing it wrong,"
he said.
While
in the Henry School chess club, he began playing in the
Gateway Chess League. That's an organization that puts on
a wide variety of chess competitions throughout the St.
Louis area.
"I
played in my first tournament in Belleville, Ill., in November,
2000," he said.
Brad
Schmidt of Belleville is the administrator of the Gateway
Chess League. He can be reached at (618) 566-2951.
The group is also affiliated with the U.S. Chess Foundation.
Another
good local contact is Ed Bauer of Vianney High School. He
is the president of the Missouri Chess Assn. His school
number is (314) 965-4853.
Chess
is a fast-growing activity for kids in the St. Louis area.
And there are plenty of chances for competition. Just one
week after the state meet, Cao was back competing in a league
meet at Parkway South High School.
Tony
said his father, Shimin Cao, gave him good advice on how
to improve his game.
"He
noticed I was playing mostly with other kids. He suggested
I start playing with adults," Tony said.
"So
I started to go to the Borders Book Store on Olive on Thursday
nights. I got a chance to play against adults. And, after
awhile, I started winning there too," he said.
Also,
in the Parkway regional competition, the players get a chance
to play against kids of different ages.
Although
he likes chess a lot, Tony said, "I don't want to be
another Bobby Fischer."
He
was referring the American who was the first U.S. citizen
to win the title of world chess champion. He won the title
years ago when he defeated Boris Spassky, one of a series
of Russians to hold that title.
Fischer
then refused to defend his title against Spassky in a rematch
because he felt the tournament conditions favored the Russian.
Fischer pretty much dropped out of the world chess scene
after that.
Tony
said he wanted to keep chess as a favored hobby as he grows
up. "But, I don't think I could make a living as a
chess player," he said.
Rather,
he wants to make a career in the medical field, like his
father.
Tony
said his family moved from China to the U.S. when he was
three. First, the family lived in Galveston, Tex., and moved
to St. Louis nearly two years ago.
Asked
about chess in China, Tony said, "China has the best
women players in the world. But, the men aren't quite as
good." He said the Russians continue to be dominant
in world chess competitions.
If
you are interested, you can get involved in chess. The U.S.
Chess Foundation's website is www.uschess.org.
The Gateway Chess League has a website at www.gatewaychess.org.