“There are going to be fireworks, I promise you!” joked 84-year-old Mau-Seng Lee, as his game against 11-year-old Luke Pulfer got underway on Saturday, the opening day of at the Langley Open chess tournament.

“There are going to be fireworks, I promise you!” joked 84-year-old Mau-Seng Lee, as his game against 11-year-old Luke Pulfer got underway on Saturday, the opening day of at the Langley Open chess tournament.

The Kids are all right at Langley Open Chess tourney

When it comes to age, chess is the great equalizer.

It was a surreal sight Saturday afternoon at the Brookswood Seniors Centre: a man in his 30s sitting across a table from a boy who looks like he’s barely into elementary school.

The older player’s hands are clasped on his forehead; he’s staring pensively at the chess pieces in front of him, pondering his next move.

With chess, age has no boundaries.

And at the 10th annual Langley Open, held over the Labour Day long weekend, ability, not years, dictates who plays whom.

PHOTO: (Troy Landreville/Langley Advance) Tournament winner Tanraj Sohal pondered his next move.

 

Fifty-two players ranging in age from seven to 80-plus tested their abilities from Sept. 5 to 7, a healthy turnout but not quite a record: in 2012, 60 chess players took part.

Langley Chess Club president Hugh Long has been playing the game for 57 years and admitted he’s “scared to death” to play against the little ones.

“They are amazing, absolutely amazing,” Long said. “A lot of them are coached by master strength players and they do their homework, and almost 30 moves deep, they know their opening, so when I play a kid, I try to get them out of the opening.”

Tournament director Brian Davidson said chess is “the great equalizer” when it comes to age.

The Langley Open consisted of six rounds, wrapped up on Labour Day Monday.

Among the higher profile pre-registered players was Tanraj Sohal from Surrey, who captured the first prize of $550.

Daniel Wang, who won the biggest upset prize of $50, is only seven years old.

This event determined the final qualifier for the B.C. Closed Championship taking place in Surrey over the Thanksgiving weekend, and will award a provincial champion.

PHOTO: Patrick Huang travelled from Victoria to compete. (Troy Landreville/Langley Advance)

The last qualifier for the provincials is James Chan, who took second at the Langley Open.

The tournament also had several players from northern B.C. and a couple Americans, Ray Kaufman and H.G. Pitre.

PHOTO: The Langley Open chess tournament pitted men against boys, in some cases.  (Troy Landreville/Langley Advance)

About the club

The Langley Chess Club meets on Mondays at 7 p.m. at the Brookswood Seniors Centre, 19899 36th Ave. For more on the Langley Chess Club, visit langleychess.com.

 

PHOTO: Troy Landreville/Langley Advance) The 10th annual Langley Open chess tournament ran from Sept. 5 to 7.

Langley Advance