2026 Youth Invitational list
Below are the lists of invited players to this years 2026 Youth invitational and event informaiton.
All invites are based on US Chess ratings from the March Supplement.
The top 20 players (expanded if rating tied) have received email invites.
All list of invites can be found HERE!
Denker (9-12th)
Barber (6-8)
Rockefeller (K-5)
Ashely (K-3)
Haring (Girls)
If you believe there was an error or if you were left off the invite list please reach out to This email address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it.
Event Info:
Location: DoubleTree by Hilton-Lisle-Naperville
Dates: April 24-26, 2026
Round Times:
- Friday: 7:00 p.m.
- Saturday: 10:00 a.m., 3:00 p.m.
- Sunday: 10:00 a.m., 3:00 p.m.
Time Control: G/90 plus 30-second increment
Format: Denker (9-12), Barber (5-8), Rockefeller (K-5), Ashley (K-3), and Haring (Girls) will be 5-round Swiss. All sections are US Chess rated and the Denker section is also FIDE-rated.
Entry Fee: $75 by 4/16. Additional $10 after that. There are NO refunds for withdrawing. Anyone who registers who is not on the invitation list will be withdrawn and refunded minus a $15 processing fee.
Prizes: The winners of each competition will be named as the Illinois representatives to the National Denker (High School), Barber (Middle School), Rockefeller (Elementary), Ashley (Primary) and Haring (Girls) Invitational championships, to be held during the 2026 U.S. Open, from August 3rd - 6th, 2026 in Grand Rapids, MI. They will receive a $300 travel stipend to attend, payable after the U.S. Open. In the event that the winner cannot attend the national event, the runner-up will be named the Illinois representative and will receive the travel stipend to attend the tournament.
Links to detailed information about each of these tournaments are provided below:
The Arnold Denker National Tournament of High School Champions: https://new.uschess.org/denker/
The Dewain Barber National Tournament of Middle School State Champions: https://new.uschess.org/barber/
The John D. Rockefeller III National Tournament of Elementary School State Champions: https://new.uschess.org/rockefeller/
The GM Maurice Ashley National Tournament of K-3 State Champions: https://new.uschess.org/ashley
The Ruth Haring National Tournament of Girls Champions: https://new.uschess.org/haring/
Read More
2025 Annual Meeting
On Tuesday December 16th at 6:30pm we will be having our 2025 annual meeting, via zoom.
All members and afiliates will be getting a zoom link to their email.
2025 Annual meeting Agenda - https://drive.google.com/file/d/1RE0ml_PSVN4QaAJGrs9MfRgrwJvZFGfs/view?usp=sharing
ICA Board
Read MoreCall for Bids - 2026/27 Illinois State Championships
The ICA is seeking bids for the upcoming 2026/27 State Championships.
- IL Open Chess Championship
- IL Blitz Championship
- IL Quick Championships
- IL All-Grade Chess Championship (Upstate)
- 2027 IL K-8 Individual and Team Championship (Downstate)
- 2027 IL Girls State Championship
Bid due dates and award dates can be found at the Bid Schedule for 2026 Illinois State Tournaments.
The Bid & tournament guidelines can be found - Bid and Tournament Guidelines 02-06-2025 (PDF)
Send completed bids to This email address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it.
Read More2025 Illinois All Grade Championship
2025 Illinois All Grade Championship
The Illinois Chess Association is happy to congratulate Emily Dawson from Greater Peoria Chess Association for brilliantly organizing our 2025 Illinois All Grade Championship at the historic Pere Marquette Hotel in Peoria, Illinois on November 15, 2025.
The tournament had thirteen sections: 2nd through 8th grade, while kindergarten was combined with 1st grade, each getting their own awards. Each grade for High School represented 9th through 12th grade. In total, almost 300 kids participated.
Kindergarten through third grade had a g/30;d5 for 5 rounds
Fourth grade and fifth grade had a g/45;d5 for 4 rounds
Sixth grade through high school had a g/60;d5 for 4 rounds


Listed below are the results for the different sections:
12th grade, Senior in High School
Washington Community High School senior Brandon Adams secured the top 3.5/4 score in the 12th Grade section with a fourth-round victory over schoolmate Landon Scott. Classmates Samuel Zekany and Nicholas Winchell, secured a runner-up tie with 3.0’s, Samuel drawing Brandon in round three, Nicholas losing to the champion in round two. Brandon increased his rating 78 points to 533 in the event.
The 12th grade had 7 players.
Below are the results for all 7 players.
'
11th grade, Junior in High School
In the 11th Grade section, Arnav Gupta of Palatine Fremd High School and Savan Giri of Peoria-area Dunlap High School shared the top 3.5 score, drawing head-to-head in the third round. Arnav’s rating dropped to 1559, down slightly, while Savan boosted his rating 53 points to 1140.
The 11th grade had 11 players.
Below are the results for all 11 players.

10th grade, Sophomore in High School
10th Grade competition also saw a shared championship with 3.5/4, as Dunlap’s Andres Maldonado and classmate Nathan Pulley both enjoyed three wins and a draw, but did not face-off head-to-head. Andres added a point to his previous 1492 rating while Nathan enhanced his rating 129 points to 996.
The 10th grade had 10 players.
Below are the results for all 10 players.

9th grade, Freshman in High School
Dunlap’s Varun Gurramkonda defeated Normal Community’s Srikar Jayam in the final round of the 9th Grade section to finish with a perfect 4.0/4. Varun’s rating climbed to 1886, up 17 points. Srikar, the highest rated entry of any player in the tournament saw his rating decline 14 points from 1931, as the freshman finished in a four-way tie for second.
The 9th grade had 18 players.
Below are the results for all players that scored at least 2 points out of 4.

8th grade
St Philomena (Peoria) classmates Ben Ibeck and Evan Van Ryn were co-Eighth Grade champions, notching perfect 4.0 scores. Lucas Mideros of Champaign’s Next Generation was third with 3.5/4 .
The 8th grade had 40 players.
Below are the results for all players that scored at least 3 points out of 4.

7th grade
Top-rated Sean Pepper scored the lone 4.0 for 7th Graders, bringing the championship trophy back to Peoria’s Reservoir Gifted School. A three-way tie for runner-up included Srivibhav Rayasam of Dunlap Middle, Lohith Reddy Gongati of Normal Chiddix and Kaushi Dheeravath of Bloomington’s Evans Junior High.
The 7th grade had 43 players.
Below are the results for all players that scored at least 3 points out of 4.

6th grade
Dunlap’s Nabhya Shah brought the highest rating into 6th Grade competition and finished 4.0/4, ahead of a four-way pack at 3.5
The 6th grade had 38 players.
Below are the results for all players that scored at least 2.5 points out of 4.

5th grade
Fifth-grader Rowan Neye of Oak Terrace Elementary in Highwood posted the lone 5.0/5 tally, ahead of a four-pack of downstaters at 4.0.
The 5th grade had 35 players.
Below are the results for all players that scored at least 3 points out of 4.

4th grade
Naperville’s Eesha Kumar of Peterson Elementary was the 4th Grade champion thanks to a fifth-round draw against challenger Tanish Sen of Normal’s Grove Elementary. With the draw, Eesha finished 4.5/5 while Tanish finished in a two-way tie for runner-up with Naperville Patterson’s Brendan Raferty.
The 4th grade had 19 players.
Below are the results for all players that scored at least 2.5 points out of 4.

3rd grade
Third grade competition saw Peterson’s Samarth Gupta of Naperville post the lone 5.0/5 score, ahead of co-runners-up Larin Zeff Rajeev and Yurman Yesuntumur, both with 4.0’s. Larin attends Peoria’s Wilder-Waite and Turman is a student of Earl Pritchett of Buffalo Grove.
The 3rd grade had 20 players.
Below are the results for all players that scored at least 2.5 points out of 4.

2nd grade
Normal’s Vis Santhoshrajan was the solo 5.0/5 scorer in 2nd Grade chess, ahead of runners-up Deekshith Bravin and Shamuel Daniel Raj, both of Dunlap’s Hickory Grove, who compiled 4.0’s. Vis of Normal’s Grove Elementary beat Deekshith in the third round and Shamuel in the fourth round. It was Deekshith’s first rated event.
The 2nd grade had 19 players.
Below are the results for all players that scored at least 2.5 points out of 4.

Combined Kindergarten and 1st grade
Kindergarteners and First Graders were combined for competition purposes, but separate awards were distributed. Nonetheless, kindergarteners were competitive in the 15-player section. Abir Sumbhate of Normal’s Thomas Metcalf was First Grade Champion with a 4.5 tally, drawing Peoria Academy Kindergartner Vijayav Reddivari in the final round. Vijayav was crowned the state Kindergartner Champion, while Meera Patel of Washington’s Lincoln Grade School was the runner-up with a 3.5 score.
The Combined Kindergarten and 1st grade had 15 players.
Below are the results for all players in the kindergarten and 1st grade combined section.

Linked here is a complete rating report cross-table for the event. Following these links, you can view the full results across any sections instead of the abbreviated standings above.
Once again, we want to congratulate everybody who participated and gave it their best in the tournament and to congratulate Emily Dawson from Greater Peoria Chess Association for running the tournament so smoothly on behalf of the Illinois Chess Association.
Illinois' other annual scholastic championship, the two-day K-8's, will be held in March 2026 in upstate Schaumburg.
Read MoreAugust 2025 Top Youth
August 2025 Top 100 Youth
Congragations to the following people for outstanding improvements for August 2025.
Shivakumaran Minor VelaPandi first time Regular Top Age 7 and Under
Reshmitha Sai Dabburi reaching #84 from #100 Top Girl Age 11
Rohan Dileep Menon reach #58 from #74 Top Age 15
Justin Lee reach #22 from #35 Top Age 13
Bishrelt Aiden Munkhsuld, Top 8, has played in 29 tournaments so far in 2025
The following young ladies made the Top Women category
Natalie Wisniowski #51
Stella Xin #60
Aria Hoesley #65
Robecca Cortez #76
Elizabeth Xia #96
Total players from Illinois 86.
Please report errors or questions to This email address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it..
Read MoreSeptember 2025 Top Youth
September 2025 Top 100 Youth
Congragations to the following people for their remarkable accomplishments for September 2025.
Three new players reach the top 100
Shrinika Biswal Top Girl under 7
Adam Elgat Top Age 17
Adan Pena Faris Top Age 18
Movers and shakers
Banoth, Shanaya has reached #69 from #93 Top Girl Age 9
Hari, Nila has reached #64 from #79 Top Girl Age 14
Pittala, Ashvath Reddy has reached #63 from #77 Top Age 13
Cortez, Rebecca has reached #70 from #84 Top Age 18
Malladi, Sadkrith has reached #35 from #46 Top Age 18
Sun,Yuanli has reached #66 from #75 Top Girl Age 12
Total Top 100 Players 88
Please report errors or questions to This email address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it..
Read More22nd Susan Polgar Foundation Girls' Invitational
22nd Susan Polgar Foundation Girls' Invitational
The Illinois Chess Association proudly congratulates our two state representatives, Rebecca Cortez and Stella Xin, for representing Illinois at the 22nd Susan Polgar Foundation Girls’ Invitational (SPFGI), held from June 23–25, 2025. They earned their invitations by placing first and second, respectively, in the Haring Division at the 2025 Illinois Chess Association Youth Invitational. You can read the full write-up of that event here.
Founded in 2004, the Susan Polgar Foundation Girls’ Invitational has been hosted at Webster University in Missouri since 2012, with the exception of several years during the COVID-19 pandemic.
This year’s tournament featured 62 players representing 33 states and the District of Columbia.
Stella Xin finished with 4 out of 6 points, tying for 8th place (11th after tiebreaks). Rebecca Cortez scored 3.5 out of 6 points, tying for 18th place (23rd after tiebreaks). Both players demonstrated impressive skill and determination on the national stage.
Partial standings from the main event are listed below, and a complete spreadsheet provided by SPFGI—including Blitz, Bughouse, and Puzzle competition results—is available here. The official US Chess crosstables can also be found here.
|
# |
Name |
Rd 1 |
Rd 2 |
Rd 3 |
Rd 4 |
Rd 5 |
Rd 6 |
Total |
T-Mod. Med |
|
1 |
FM Ruiyang Yan |
W16 |
W12 |
W10 |
W8 |
D2 |
W5 |
5.5 |
21.5 |
|
2 |
WIM Chloe Gaw |
W38 |
W41 |
W18 |
D5 |
D1 |
W12 |
5.0 |
20.5 |
|
3 |
Lilianna Gao |
W46 |
W26 |
L5 |
W13 |
W11 |
W14 |
5.0 |
19.5 |
|
4 |
WFM Aimee Yang |
W33 |
L18 |
W38 |
W41 |
W19 |
W8 |
5.0 |
17.0 |
|
5 |
Elizabeth Braddy |
W35 |
W44 |
W3 |
D2 |
W9 |
L1 |
4.5 |
22.5 |
|
6 |
Vivian Yang |
D42 |
W30 |
W31 |
L9 |
W22 |
W20 |
4.5 |
17.0 |
|
7 |
Wan Qin Li |
W59 |
D13 |
L9 |
W42 |
W29 |
W21 |
4.5 |
17.0 |
|
8 |
Emel Bayrambeyli |
W56 |
W23 |
W11 |
L1 |
W26 |
L4 |
4.0 |
21.0 |
|
9 |
Keya Jha |
W40 |
D27 |
W7 |
W6 |
L5 |
D10 |
4.0 |
20.5 |
|
10 |
Caroline Q Jiang |
W36 |
W17 |
L1 |
D20 |
W27 |
D9 |
4.0 |
20.0 |
|
11 |
WCM Stella Xin |
W34 |
W20 |
L8 |
W22 |
L3 |
W19 |
4.0 |
19.5 |
|
12 |
Joy Zhang |
W53 |
L1 |
W33 |
W43 |
W28 |
L2 |
4.0 |
19.0 |
|
13 |
Ellery Zhang |
W48 |
D7 |
D29 |
L3 |
W30 |
W39 |
4.0 |
18.5 |
|
14 |
WCM Anagha Aniket Sinkar |
W32 |
D31 |
D27 |
W37 |
W15 |
L3 |
4.0 |
18.0 |
|
15 |
Freya Austin |
W45 |
L19 |
W34 |
W16 |
L14 |
W35 |
4.0 |
17.5 |
|
16 |
Candice Liang |
L1 |
W53 |
W51 |
L15 |
W32 |
W26 |
4.0 |
17.5 |
|
17 |
Bonnie He |
W55 |
L10 |
W24 |
L26 |
W36 |
W28 |
4.0 |
16.5 |
|
18 |
Aarna Nitin Warekar |
W49 |
W4 |
L2 |
W29 |
L21 |
D24 |
3.5 |
20.0 |
|
19 |
Tanya Gurpur Madke Prabhu |
W60 |
W15 |
W21 |
D28 |
L4 |
L11 |
3.5 |
19.5 |
|
20 |
Parinya Jain |
W52 |
L11 |
W36 |
D10 |
W23 |
L6 |
3.5 |
19.0 |
|
21 |
WCM Khanim Ismayilova |
D30 |
W25 |
L19 |
W32 |
W18 |
L7 |
3.5 |
18.0 |
|
22 |
Marina Xiao |
W51 |
W37 |
D28 |
L11 |
L6 |
W44 |
3.5 |
17.0 |
|
23 |
Rebecca Cortez |
W43 |
L8 |
W39 |
D27 |
L20 |
W33 |
3.5 |
16.5 |
Please join us in congratulating Rebecca and Stella for their excellent performances and for representing Illinois with distinction at one of the most prestigious national girls’ chess events in the country.
Read MoreIllinois Elementary School Association Recognizes Betsy Zacate for Lifetime Achievement and Jim Aman for Distinguished Service for Chess
Illinois Elementary School Association Recognizes Betsy Zacate for Lifetime Achievement and Jim Aman for Distinguished Service for Chess
The Illinois Elementary School Association (IESA) has long championed extracurricular enrichment across the state, offering students opportunities to grow beyond the classroom through both athletic and academic opportunities to elementary aged students. In 2011, chess officially joined that roster: a quiet but powerful addition that has since nurtured critical thinking, sportsmanship, and community among thousands of young minds. The tournament-style program is unique: individual play, team scoring, and a deliberate emphasis on accessibility. What started as a pilot program has grown into a statewide tradition thanks to a handful of devoted visionaries who saw not just a game, but a chance to shape lives.
His story began, fittingly enough, in a library. As a child growing up in Fort Worth during the height of the Bobby Fischer craze, Jim Aman spotted a Chess Life magazine at the public library while accompanying his mother. Though he didn’t yet know how to play, he was instantly hooked on the mystique of the game. Chess had captured his imagination before it ever captured his mind.
He finally learned to play at 16, taught by a friend at the time. That casual encounter set in motion a journey that would span decades and state lines: from reviving a local club in Texas to becoming a driving force behind Illinois’s growing scholastic chess scene.
In Fort Worth, he restarted the Greater Fort Worth Chess Club and became a tournament director to help it thrive. For a time, he even played competitively. But life moved on: he married, had children, and set the game aside. It wasn’t until his youngest son, then in second grade, wanted to start a school chess team that his passion reignited. Sitting through tournaments as a parent, he realized he could help by directing events again. That decision quickly snowballed into nearly full-time weekend work.
One of his most important early collaborations came through a friendship with fellow Director Grant Perks. Together, they organized major events, including one at the Cincinnati Bengals stadium with around 500 players – a logistical feat that would pave the way for the future. Through Grant, he was introduced to Mike Zacate, a chess pioneer in Illinois involved in the Illinois High School Association (IHSA) chess tournament. That connection led to his first invitation to work with IHSA, preparing for a lifetime of involvement in Illinois chess.
But it was in the middle school scene under the IESA where the next chapter would unfold. That initiative had its roots in a family legacy.
For Betsy Zacate, chess wasn’t just a hobby; it was a heritage. Her father had helped found the IHSA chess tournament, and she grew up trailing him at events, absorbing the facets of chess. Taught to play at five, she competed sporadically but gravitated more naturally to directing. Organization came easily, and so did empathy – two key traits emphasized by Betsy for anyone running a tournament where chaos is inevitable.
Eventually, Betsy and Mike began pitching the idea of a middle school state tournament to the IESA. It wasn’t easy. IESA was a small organization with limited resources, and chess didn’t yet have a foothold at that level. “The challenge wasn’t convincing them chess was worthwhile,” Betsy said. “It was proving enough schools would show up.”
They built the foundation through persistence, not pressure. The first events were pilot programs with no entry fees, designed to remove barriers. One year, the venue fell through at the last minute and the tournament had to be relocated to a hockey rink. “It was chaos,” Betsy laughed. “But the kids were excited. Everyone was. That day, we knew we’d started something that mattered.”
The amazing IESA administrators, such as Nicole Schaefbauer helped turn this vision into reality. She has been the IESA Executive Director since 2021 previously the Associate Executive Director from 2001-2021 and before that an Assistant Executive Director 1999-2001. She organized logistics and formed a core committee that included Betsy, Mike, and Jim to help in other facets such as adapting the IHSA rulebook for younger players. They ran the first tournament in 2011, and as the opening round began, there was a spark. “We knew we had started something that was going to continue for a long time,” Jim recalled.
Inaugural IESA Chess Championship
Over the years, IESA chess has grown slowly but deliberately, particularly in rural areas and towns south of Chicago. Unlike the faster pace of major urban leagues, this model of steady expansion builds sustainability. One school might send two students one year, then return with a full team the next. The program has become a feeder for high school chess, seeding long-term interest and keeping the game accessible to kids from every background for extended periods of time.
The human element has always been the most rewarding aspect of being involved in chess. “So many friendships have developed through IESA and IHSA events,” Jim said. “And I love seeing the look on the kids’ faces—watching them grow not just as players, but as people.” Chess, for him, is more than a game. It’s a tradition, a tool for life. “It teaches patience, self-control, critical thinking, and respect for rules,” he reflects. “It keeps the mind active. And it connects kids to something timeless.”
Betsy echoes the sentiment. “In basketball, you can always pass blame. In chess, it’s just you and one other person. You learn to be accountable. To slow down. To think.” She’s proudest not of any specific rulebook or milestone, but of the community they’ve built: coworkers, scorekeepers, parents, and kids who come back year after year, a little older, a little more confident.
Even after stepping back from frequent directing, Betsy remains a fixture. Her background in writing and photography helped document the journey, from event coverage in Chess Life to candid tournament photos. When she received a Lifetime Achievement Award for her work, she called it “a delightful surprise.” But the real reward, she says, is knowing that IESA chess will outlive her. “It’s something kids can carry forever.” Likewise for Jim, the achievement of his Distinguished Service Award pales in comparison to the gift IESA has given to every kid involved in the chess program.
Betsy and Jim receiving their awards from IESA
Today, both Betsy and Jim remain committed to the mission: to grow the game, make it inclusive, and nurture the next generation of players, directors, and mentors. Regional tournaments are on the horizon. Looking to the future, more schools might be integrating chess into classrooms: not just as a game but as a developmental tool.
If there’s one lesson they would pass on to others, it’s this: show up. Volunteers, coaches, organizers – every adult who gets involved makes it possible for another kid to benefit. Not everyone will be Bobby Fischer or be the best tournament director, but not everybody needs to; that is the beauty of chess. Everyone can show up with their own skills and interests and make a distinct contribution to the overall chess community, which contributes to the continued success of IESA chess. And if Jim could give his younger self advice? “Be ready for the friendships. That’s what matters most.”
Whether through scholastic chess or other facets of the community, they’ve built a life around community. A life around tradition. A life around the quiet, powerful game of chess. And IESA is working towards bringing this community to kids all throughout the state so they too can become members of this instrumental community.
Read More2025 Illinois Senior State Championship
The 2025 Illinois State Senior Championship was held concurrently with our Youth Invitational in Evanston. The tournament featured two sections, Reserve and Open, with the winner of the Open section earning entry into the Senior Tournament at the US Open in Middleton, WI.
Reserve Section
The Reserve Section consisted of sixteen players. Heading into the final round, Craig Sandford and Gee Leong were tied with 3 points out of 4. Since the two faced off in Round 4, they were paired against different opponents in the final round: Craig Sandford defeated Kelvin McAlister while Gee Leong defeated Edward Lozano.
With these victories, both players finished with 4 points, splitting first place.
Shown below is the final cross-table:
Open Section
The Open Section featured twenty players and delivered an exciting finish. Entering the final round two players were tied with 3.5 points out of 4 and two players were tied with 3 points.
In those final games Florentino Inumerable and FM Camillo drew, each finishing with 4 points. Meanwhile, CM Glen Gratz defeated William Brock, creating a three-way tie for first place with 4 points each.
The final cross-table is shown below:
2025 ICA Youth Invitational
Thanks to our new President, Dan Wilson, and our Warren Scholars Chairman, Edwin Walker—along with his technical expertise—the ICA took a fresh approach to selecting this year’s players. Invitations were extended to the highest-rated players in Illinois, with a goal of up to twenty players in each division. The four divisions were: Denker (High School), Barber (Grades 6–8), Rockefeller (Grades K–5), and Haring (Girls, Grades K–12).
The winners of each division will represent Illinois in their respective divisions in the U.S. Open in Middleton, WI July 28th-July 31st. The ICA will award each of the four winners a $300 stipend for travel to be able to participate in the tournament.
This year’s event featured a remarkable finish, with three of the four divisions decided by playoffs.
Denker (High School)
Entering the final round, Anjaneya led with 3.5 points out of 4, while Anshul Shetty (both from Waubonsie Valley High School) had 3 points. Their game ended in a draw, giving Anjaneya a final score of 4 points. Meanwhile, Avi Kaplan, who started the round with 3 points, defeated Dario Pjevic, bringing his total to 4 points—tying Anjaneya.
This led to a two-game blitz playoff (G/3+2). Avi beat Anjaneya in both games, crowning him the 2025 Denker Champion. A complete crosstable is below:
Barber (Grades 6-8)
Heading into the last round, Artemii Khanbutaev and Sachit Rajkumar were tied with 3.5 points each. Since they had already played each other earlier, Artemii drew Ashvath Puttala to finish with 4 points. Meanwhile, Ryan Zhang played Sachit Rajkumar and won, also ending with 4 points—forcing a playoff with Artemii.
In the two-game blitz (G/3+2), Artemil defeated Ryan in both games, securing his title as the 2025 Barber Champion. A complete crosstable is below:
Rockefeller (Grades K-5)
Before the final round, Matthew Yu and Lucas Silvestre were tied with 3.5 points each. Due to pairing rules, Matthew drew against Ryun Fei, while Aiden Li, who entered with 3 points, defeated Lucas, leaving both Matthew and Aiden tied at 4 points.
Similarly to the previous sections, the two-game blitz playoff (G/3+2) saw Aiden defeat Matthew in both games, making him the 2025 Rockefeller Champion. A complete crosstable is below:
.
Haring (Girls)
In the final round, Rebecca Cortez and Stella Xia were tied with 3.5 points each. Rebecca defeated Stella to claim the 2025 Haring Championship.
Additionally, there was a three-way tie for third place with 2.5 points between Elizabeth Xia, Victoria Chen, and Emily Tang entering the final round. Elizabeth and Victoria drew their game, finishing with 3 points; while Emily lost to Linda Pham. A complete crosstable is below:
Congratulations to everybody who participated; being able to participate is a testament to your effort and skill thus far. And best of luck to our state champions in Wisconsion!
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