Meet the Commentators & Arbiters

Live Broadcast Commentators

GM Yasser SeirawanGM Yasser Seirawan
2677 (USCF) | 2620 (FIDE)
4-time U.S. Champion

Few names in U.S. Chess are more recognizable than Grandmaster Yasser Seirawan. A four-time U.S. Champion and former World Championship contender, Seirawan was the dominant force in American chess in the 1980s.

Born in Damascus, Syria in 1960, Seirawan’s family immigrated to the United States when he was 7 years old and settled in Seattle. He picked up the game of chess at age 12 and honed his skills playing against top players in the area, including Latvian-born master Viktors Pupols and six-time Washington State Champion James Harley McCormick.

At 13, just a year after learning the game, Seirawan became the Washington State Junior Chess Champion, and by 1979 he won the World Junior Championship.

Seirawan went on to dominate the American chess scene, winning the U.S. Championship title in 1981, 1986 and 1989. He claimed the U.S. Championship title once again in 2000 and continued to play in major world-class events, including serving 10 times as a member of the U.S. team at the World Chess Olympiad, until he announced his retirement in 2003.

Seirawan was lured out of retirement in 2011 to once again play in the U.S. Championship, which was held in Saint Louis. He cited the exciting developments of the Saint Louis chess scene as a contributing factor for his renewed interest in competitive chess.

"Yaz," as he is commonly known, followed the 2011 U.S. Championship with a stunning performance at the 2011 World Team Championship, where he earned an individual silver medal for his performance on board four, defeating some of the best players in the world along the way.

Seirawan is a highly respected teacher, commentator and author and has written several books including Chess Duels, the 2010 Chesscafe.com's book of the year. He is regularly featured as the Resident Grandmaster for the Chess Club and Scholastic Center of Saint Louis.


WGM Jennifer ShahadeWGM Jennifer Shahade
2301 (USCF) | 2322 (FIDE)
2-time U.S. Women's Champion

Jennifer Shahade is a chess champion, author, commentator, and poker player. For her the essentials of life involve chess and art. As an author of multiple chess books and writer for Chess Life, Shahade has communicated her passion for both to a broad audience, and has been a strong advocate for greater female participation in chess. Her over-the-board chess career has been just as successful. She is two-time U.S. Women’s Champion winning in 2002 and 2004.

Her first book, Chess Bitch: Women in the Ultimate Intellectual Sport (2005), intertwined autobiographical elements with the stories of great women chess champions, past and present. Shahade also co-authored Marcel Duchamp: The Art of Chess (2009). Shahade’s Play Like a Girl! Tactics by 9 Queens (2010) is the first book featuring solely combinations that are all executed by female chess champions.

Always a viewer favorite, Shahade returns to the Chess Club and Scholastic Center of Saint Louis to add her perspective to this year’s broadcast commentary. 

 


GM Maurice Ashley

GM Maurice Ashley

2459 (USCF) | 2440 (FIDE)
Millionaire Chess Organizer

Through chess, Maurice Ashley has not only made history as the first African-American International Grandmaster in 1999, but has translated his talents to others as a three-time national championship coach, two-time author, ESPN commentator, iPhone app designer, puzzle inventor and motivational speaker. Ashley now works as a Research Affiliate at MIT’s Media Lab to bring the benefits of chess and other classic games to a wider educational audience through the innovative use of technology.

He has traveled the world as an ardent spokesperson of the character-building effects of chess. Ashley’s book, “Chess for Success” (Broadway Books, 2005), crystallizes his vision of the many benefits of chess, particularly for at-risk youth, and he continuously spreads his message of living one’s dream to universities, businesses, chess clubs and non-profit organizations around the globe. His app, “Learn Chess! With Maurice Ashley,” has been sold in over 30 countries, and he has received multiple community service awards from city governments, universities and community groups for his work.

In the fall of 2011, Ashley toured six Caribbean nations to bring chess, books and technology to kids in the region. In 2015, Maurice announced a partnership with the Chess Club and Scholastic Center of Saint Louis and Ascension, Your Move Chess. This program supports after school chess in the Florissant-Ferguson School District alongside other schools in the Saint Louis area. Longer term, the goal is to expand the program on a national level.


Live Audience Commentators

GM Ben FinegoldGM Ben Finegold
2590 (USCF) | 2501 (FIDE)
U.S. Open Champion

Grandmaster Ben Finegold learned the rules of chess at age 5 and received his first USCF rating at age 6. It wasn't long, around his mid-teens, until he realized he wanted to play chess professionally. GM Finegold's first major tournament win came in 1989 when he finished in a tie for first-place at the U.S. Junior Closed Championship. Also in 1989, Finegold scored his biggest victory to date with a win against Boris Gelfand at the Euwe Memorial tournament in Amsterdam, Holland. According to Finegold, this was the most famous player he had beaten at the time, and the fact that it was a Swiss tournament and he was unable to prepare for Gelfand specifically made the win that much more exciting. Finegold said he played an excellent tactical game to secure the victory. He obtained his first IM norm at the event, gained 40 FIDE points and eventually earned the title of International Master in 1990.

In 1991, Finegold won his first major international, Swiss-paired tournament in Antwerp, Belgium. From 1988 to 1992, Finegold lived in Brussels, Belgium. He returned to the U.S. in 1992 and, in 1993, he was awarded the Samford Chess Fellowship.

In 1994, Finegold finished in a six-way tie for first place at the U.S Open in Chicago, and then in 2002 he finished in a first-place tie with eight players at the World Open in Philadelphia where he secured his first GM norm. He won the Chicago Spring Invitational in 2005 to earn his second GM norm, and then achieved his third GM norm at the 2009 Spice Cup Chess Festival in Lubbock, Texas.

A familiar face around the Chess Club and Scholastic Center of Saint Louis and a popular name within the Club's Resident Grandmaster rotation, Finegold has offered outstanding commentary - both live and on the broadcast - for several of the Club's elite events, including the U.S. Championships, the U.S. Junior Championships and the Sinquefield Cup. Still active as a tournament player, GM Finegold is currently enjoying a 15 month undefeated streak in over-the-board chess.


GM Ben FinegoldGM Eric Hansen
2616 (FIDE)
Canadian Open Champion

This charismatic and sporty Canadian became a Grandmaster in 2012 and has been a rising star in the chess community since. His internet presence on YouTube and Twitch, chessbrahs, involves himself and other titled players playing chess online for fun. Hansen’s online chess fame has given him many devoted fans and followers. In 2007, Hansen became a National Master, and placed second in the 2008 World U-16 Championships. Later that year he became a FIDE Master, and by 2010 he earned the International Master title. He tied for first in the 2011 Canadian Championship and won the 2012 Canadian Open. Other accomplishments in Hansen’s career include him qualifing for two World Cups and becoming a member of the Canadian National Team, representing Canada in the 2012 Olympiad and putting up another spectacular performance at the 2016 Olympiad. Hansen is also a member of the PRO Chess League, the Montreal Chess Brahs, who reached the final four in the first season.

 


Live Audience Commentators - Spanish

GM Alejandro RamirezGM Alejandro Ramirez
2545 (USCF) | 2568 (FIDE)
U.S. Open Champion 

Alejandro Ramirez has become a frequent face the Chess Club and Scholastic Center of Saint Louis, through roles as both the Club’s Resident Grandmaster and as a player in the nation’s elite events. He currently serves as the chess coach for Saint Louis University and is recruiting its inaugural team to start play in Fall of 2016.

Ramirez was inspired by the movie Searching for Bobby Fischer when he was four years old. He became FIDE Master at the age of 9, an International Master at 13, and earned his Grandmaster title by the age of 15. That achievement set Ramirez as the first Centro-American to earn the elite title and, at the time, the second youngest grandmaster.

A competitor in the last three U.S. Championships, Ramirez displayed some of his finest chess in May 2013, when he pushed reigning champion Gata Kamsky to a playoff for the national title. He drew the first two playoff games with Kamsky before losing an Armageddon game where he had 19 minutes and 45 seconds against Kamsky's 45 minutes.

Ramirez studied video game design at the University of Texas at Dallas, earning a master’s degree in Arts & Technology, and he now currently serves as an editor for the popular chess news website ChessBase. His personal familiarity with both fields of the 2016 U.S. Championships, coupled with his outstanding, plain-talk understanding of the King’s game, makes Ramirez an outstanding commentating option for the live audience at the 2017 U.S. Chess Championships.


GM Alejandro RamirezWIM Lili Fuentes
2114 (URS) | 2078 (FIDE)
U20 PanAmerican Champion 

Lilia Ivonne  Fuentes Godoy is a Woman International Master playing with the Mexican Federation. She is currently the second highest rated female player in her federation. Lili's chess highlights include being part of the Mexican Chess Olympiad team and winning the U20 PanAmerican Championships. This will be Lili's first time at the Chess Club and Scholastic Center of Saint Louis and she will be part of the first ever live audience commentary team for the 2017 U.S. Championships. 


2017 Tournament Arbiters 

Rudy AbateCarol Jarecki
Chief Women's Championship Arbiter 

IA, NTA Chief Arbiter International Arbiter (1984) National Tournament Director Chief Arbiter for the U.S. and U.S. Women’s Championship, Carol Jarecki’s credentials are extensive. Awarded the International Arbiter title by FIDE in 1984 she served as deputy in several Olympiads and Candidates matches as well as the FIDE World Championship in Lyon, France, 1990, and Las Vegas 1999. Carol was Chief Arbiter for the FIDE World Youth Festival held in Fonddu-Lac, WI, the only time it was organized in the U.S. She was also chief arbiter for the 2009, 2010 and 2013 U.S. Championship and U.S. Women’s Championship, all of which were held in Saint Louis. She was Chief of the 1994 and 1995 PCA Grand Prix events in New York, the PCA World Championship match Kasparov-Anand at the top of the World Trade Center in 1995 as well as the famous IBM Deep Blue-Kasparov match in 1997. Jarecki even was arbiter for the original Kasparov-Deep Thought match in NY, the program developed by the team that then went on to work with IBM on Deep Blue. In 1989, as Chief Arbiter of the Karpov-Hjartarson FIDE World Championship Quarterfinals in Seattle, she was the first woman to serve in that position for any world-championship-cycle match. Among many other international events she has been the Chief of the annual Bermuda Open and Invitationals for the past 21 years. As a U.S. National Tournament Director (NTD) she has covered an array of events, large and small, from National Scholastics to previous U. S. Championships. Carol is a member of the FIDE Rules and Tournament Regulations Commission. She co-authored the USCF Official Rules of Chess, 4th edition. In 1993 Carol received the USCF Distinguished Service Award and, subsequently, the initial award for the Top Tournament Director of the Year. Jarecki graduated from the Graduate Hospital, University of PA, with a certificate in anesthesia and worked in that field in NJ for several years before starting a family and spending seven years living in Europe. There she took up aviation as a hobby and has been an avid pilot ever since. She has two daughters, one living in Sydney, Australia, the other in the British Virgin Islands. Her son, John, once the youngest U.S. Master at age 12, lives in New York City.


Rudy AbateFrancisco Guadalupe
Chief U.S. Chess Arbiter 

Francisco (Franc) Guadalupe is a FIDE International Arbiter, FIDE International Organizer as well as a US Chess National Tournament Director.  From October 2010 to August 2016, he held the position of FIDE Zone 2.1 President and currently he is the Director of Events for the US Chess Federation.

Franc was the Deputy Chief Arbiter for the 2006 and 2010 U.S. Championships and well as the Chief Arbiter for the 2013 U.S. Championship.  More recently, he was the Deputy Chief Arbiter for the 2016 World Chess Championship Match in New York City between World Champion Magnus Carlsen and GM Sergey Karjakin.  Franc, who received the 2009 US Chess Tournament Director of the Year award, has also been the Chief Tournament Director for many National events including SuperNationals IV and V, and the 2010, 2011 and 2013 U.S. Open.

Franc is originally from Ponce, Puerto Rico and spent over 23 years in the U.S. Army.  His wife Bonnie also served for 12 years. The Guadalupes reside in one of the suburbs of Houston, Texas.



Rudy AbateRudy Abate
Deputy Arbiter 

Rudy Abate started playing chess about the age of 5 and organize chess when he joined the USCF in 2008.In the past 8 years, he has started chess programs at a number of our local schools. Rudy started a chess club in Henderson NC, known as the Henderson/Vance Chess Club. He was President of The North Carolina Chess Association. Rudy is a level III USCF chess coach, A FIDE International Trainer. He is an evaluator for the BSA for their chess merit badge. Rudy obtained NTD certification, as well as FIDE FA certification and he is one norm from my IA certification. After the US Championship, Rudy should get his last norm and apply for my IA certification. He is on the USCF TDCC. Rudy has been a TD/Arbiter for most of the major NC weekend tournaments, as well as National tournaments. Just to name a few; North American Youth Championship, Super Nationals, US Masters, Millionaire Chess, World Open, and a number of other national events.

Prior to moving to North Carolina from New York, Rudy was a home maintenance, home building contractor. He is now the owner/ operator of Liberty Kennels, a boarding , grooming, and training facility. One of his many hobbies is showing dogs specifically Shiba Inus and German Shorthaired Pointers. Rudy has competed at many dog shows to name a few of the most prestigious ones; The Westminster Kennel Club Dog Show, The Eukanuba Tournament of Champions, The Westchester Annual Dog Show. He showed a Shiba Inu, that he owned, to a National ranking of 9th.

Rudy was a High School Basketball Coach and help coach a team to a State Title in North Carolina.

Rudy was a NY State Track and Field official.