Samuel Sevian becomes America's youngest-ever grandmaster at 13December 2, 2014 - 17:04 AMT PanARMENIAN.Net - Not many people can claim to have shattered a major American record at 13 years, 10 months and 27 days. But chess prodigy Samuel Sevian can. At a chess tournament in St Louis on Nov 23, Samuel Sevian won all four of his games to push his World Chess Federation rating past 2,500 points – enough to secure himself the title of America's youngest-ever grandmaster, easily besting the country's previous record holder by more than a year, The Star reports. "I feel really good and somewhat relieved. This was one of my best tournament performances," says the teen, noting that he had beaten three Grandmasters during the event in only 20-25 moves. His father Armen – a scientist born and raised in Armenia who later emigrated to the United States – is bursting with pride. "He really outplayed his opponents in three games. But the fourth, it was really back and forth, it wasn't clear," he recalls. "It was like a blitz, it came down to the last seconds. Both players were shaking." The previous record for the youngest U.S. grandmaster was held by Ray Robson, who achieved the title two weeks before he turned 15. American legend Bobby Fischer also once held the record. The young chess wizard is well accustomed to setting U.S. records, having become the youngest American Expert (another ranking) shortly before his 10th birthday. At 12 years and 10 months, he became the country's youngest International Master. The chess star's father says he is the sixth-youngest grandmaster in the world. The youngest person to win the status is Russia's Sergey Karjakin, who became a grandmaster when he was just 12 years and seven months old. Sevian's next target is to get to 2,600 points, which would secure him invitations to the most prestigious tournaments. Ultimately, however, his dream is to become world champion. The question is when he will be ready to tackle the challenge. "It's way out in the future and I don't want to busy my head with it now. First, I would need to improve my game," he says. "After my big win in St Louis, my confidence level is high. This definitely helps." Top stories Armenian gymnast, Olympic bronze medalist Artur Davtyan has reached the finals of the World Cup. Gor Manvelyan has denied reports alleging that he has expressed a desire to one day play for the French national team. Roma midfielder Henrikh Mkhitaryan is not considering FC Spartak Moscow as his next haven, according to fresh reports. 10 Armenian lifters will compete in the 2021 World Championships scheduled to be held from 7 to 17 December in Tashkent. Partner news | Titus, Bilirakis lead legislation to sanction Azerbaijani war criminals Representatives Dina Titus (D-NV) and Gus Bilirakis (R-FL) have introduced the bipartisan legislation. Azerbaijan must respect human rights, Scholz tells Aliyev German Chancellor Olaf Scholz has called for greater respect for human rights in Azerbaijan. Armenia: Defense Ministry warns against involving army in political processes The Ministry’s statement came after a video surfaced online, showing soldiers joining the protests in Tavush. Scholz hopes Armenia-Azerbaijan peace treaty will be signed this year German Chancellor Olaf Scholz hopes that a peace treaty between Armenia and Azerbaijan will be signed this year. |