Ten new players have entered (or returned to) the pantheon of top 100 youth in their respective age group nationwide. Say hello (or welcome back) to Sam Fayn (7), Adam Bareket (8), Adam Pastor (9), Edward Zhang (10), Nathan Sobery (11), Andrew Fei (13), Oliver Natarajan (16), David Paykin (18) and Matthew Yang (18), along with Shvetali Thatte (U13 Girls).

Aydin Turgut (1st in age 8), David Peng (2nd in age 10), Adarsh Jayakumar (now 3rd in age 18), Sam Schmakel (5th in age 17), and Jonathan Kogan (9th in age 17) remain the Illinois players in the top ten of their respective age groups in the country.

Players newly achieving the top slot in Illinois for their respective age include Ricky Wang (9), Matthew Stevens and Akhil Kalghatgi (tied for age 12), Jonathan Hrach (15) and Max Zinski (16). Shayna Provine and Miranda Liu have broken the 1700-barrier with Shayna remaining our top female under 16, while Miranda becomes the top girl under 13.

Aged 18 years or younger, Illinois currently boasts three masters, Sam, Jonathan and Adarsh, along with ten experts.

With new personal bests, several youth have achieved ratings sufficient to qualify for Warren Scholars activities including Tej Rai, Eli Goering and David Korobov. Jonathan Hrach has met the magic 1900 mark, but has yet to play the required ten games against all-age competition this year.

By contrast, in just the past six months, Tej has entered all-age tournaments in Missouri, Ohio, Wisconsin, Indiana as well as in his home state. (He's also played in scholastic events in Florida and Tennessee in the past year). Talk about a roving chess ambassador!

According to USCF specifications, ratings as of August 17 were used for this report and the top 100 lists were published September 16.

 

September Top 100 Youth

US RankNameRating
Age 7 and under
32 Aaron Gan 1292
60 Jai Mahajan 1139
87 Sam Fayn 1031
Age 8
1 Aydin Turgut 1938
29 Stefan Musikic 1578
80 Adam Bareket 1307
Age 9
43 Ricky Wang 1595
51 Advaith Prabu 1565
58 Brian Gong 1552
93 Emmett Madigan 1429
96 Adam Pastor 1422
Age 10
2 David Peng 2151
27 Jason Daniels 1786
45 Shreya Mangalam 1693
82 Ishaar Ganesan 1591
91T Edward Zhang 1567
Age 11
12 Vincent Do 2018
39 Hanson Hao 1840
48 Tej Rai 1783
64 Miranda Liu 1710
99 Nathan Sobery 1614
Age 12
24T Matthew Stevens 1985
24T Akhil Kalghatgi 1964
39 Daniel Bronfeyn 1891
50 Abe Sun 1874
53 Nikhil Kalghatgi 1816
69 Jonathan Tan 1853
Age 13
20 Zhaozhi Li 2098
22 Alex Bian 2086
41T Anshul Adve 1977
69T Jack Curcio 1896
71 James Wei 1874
86 Ian Gilchrist 1815
95 Andrew Fei 1797
Age 14
34 Zachary Holecek 2031
66T Spencer Lehmann 1893
89 Phillip Parker-Turner 1835
Age 15
64 Jonathan Hrach 1900
Age 16
30 Max Zinski 2089
34T Gavin McClanahan 2072
39 Nathan Kranjc 2060
57 Penny Xu 1966
77T Timothy Zhou 1946
90T Eli Goering 1908
97T Jimi Akintonde 1850
100 Oliver Natarajan 1843
Age 17
5 Sam Schmakel 2373
9 Jonathan Kogan 2257
68 Duncan Shepherd 1971
76 Joe Fennessey 1954
Age 18
3 Adarsh Jayakumar 2386
37 Robert Moskwa 2087
49 Chengliang Luo 2032
69T Charles Swan 1939
72 Benjamin Stern 1925
81T David Korobov 1906
89 David Paykin 1883
99 Matthew Yang 1836
Girls Under 16
55T Shayna Provine (13) 1717
57 Miranda Liu (11) 1710
62 Shreya Mangalam (10) 1693
Girls Under 13
17 Miranda Liu (11) 1710
21 Shreya Mangalam (10) 1693
50 Marissa Li (10) 1531
97 Shvetali Thatte (12) 1314

18 years old is hardly ancient. Alas, in chess years it can feel like a long time. In this case, it means that three Illinois stalwarts among the top 100 youth in America have aged out of this report.

As of the August compilation, Matthew Wilber was rated 2183, Kent Cen was rated 2086. Rafeh Qazi was rated 1936. I will miss typing their names each and every month and charting their ever-increasing ratings.

In the immortal words of one of my chess heroes: continued good chess to this impressive trio and I hope each finds a way to keep active with this magnificent game despite increased demands on their time.