Home Page Press Vigorito is Champion of Champions
Vigorito is Champion of Champions |
By John Henderson | |||||||
April 21, 2008 | |||||||
World Chess Live - April 20, 2008 - The United States Chess Federation and World Chess Live are pleased to announce that, after a close competition, IM David Vigorito, representing Massachusetts, has won the fourth U.S. State Champion of Champions event and will now go forward to the 2008 Frank K. Berry U.S. Chess Championship, 13-21 May, in Tulsa, Oklahoma.
Fifty
state champions from Alaska through California to Hawaii, and from
Maine through to New York and Florida battled their way through the
Eastern and Western Conferences held on WCL (www.worldchesslive.com, the new sister-site of the Internet Chess Club), with the top four contesting the Finals.
The four who battled their way through the Blitz Conference qualifiers to the Finals Weekend were: Western Conference: IM Vinay Bhat (Northern California) and IM Enrico Sevillano (Southern California). Eastern Conference: IM David Vigorito (Massachusetts) and IM-elect Ray Robson (Florida).
In
the semifinals, both Vigorito and Sevillano scored convincing 2-0 wins,
respectively, against Robson and Bhat to set-up the final match-up of
Southern California versus Massachusetts. And in that final, it was
David Vigorito, 37, from Lowell, MA, who snatched the final U.S. Chess
Championship qualifying spot by taking the title 1.5-0.5.
“It’s
[The U.S. State Champion of Champions event] tough and demanding, yet
at the same time innovative by being played online,” commented David
Vigorito after winning the title. “It will be nice to be able to go to Tulsa having made it through this event-- and doubly so by representing my home-state
of Massachusetts.”
This unique event demonstrates that online chess and over-the-board chess can indeed be a perfect mix – even for one of the world’s most famous national championships. First, each player in the tournament had to prove themselves OTB by winning (or scoring highly in) their relevant state championship to be invited, then they had to play online on WCL (both in an all-play-all Blitz for the conference qualifiers, and then the
G\60 knockout finals, with independent proctors officiating at each
venue to ensure fairness throughout), with the winner going forward to
the U.S. Chess Championship.
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