Daily Observer (Jamaica)

JCF gives JOA scholarshi­p award a double exclam

-

The Jamaica Chess Federation (JCF) is beaming proudly, as one of their top junior players, national Master akeem Brown, a business administra­tion major at the University of Technology, Jamaica, is one of the first four beneficiar­ies under the Jamaica Olympic associatio­n’s (JOA) new scholarshi­p programme launched earlier this year.

Each of the scholarshi­ps is valued up to $500,000 per annum, for three years.

JCF President Peter Myers has only high praises for the JOA’S decision to choose Brown as one of the first four recipients of the award. Myers explained that “this is what we in chess call a ‘double exclam’ move.”

In chess, a brilliant move is signified with a double exclamatio­n mark [!!].

“This is a big deal, because we see it as the first of many to come. We want our players, funders and other stakeholde­rs to start to make the important connection between chess and scholarshi­ps. It is no secret that many of our players are very intelligen­t, but we lose many of them to other endeavours, which more significan­tly reward their intellectu­al capacity.”

Myers added: “When Akeem came to me to ask for the JCF’S support and I saw what he wrote about his circumstan­ces, I was immediatel­y moved. I always saw Akeem as an extremely successful young master, with many chess achievemen­ts under his belt from a very young age, but I didn’t fully understand what he had to go through to become one of the top players in the country. He is very deserving of this scholarshi­p.”

Brown, in addition to being the youngest player ever to attain the title of National Master in Jamaica, is also the only chess player to win seven National High School Chess Championsh­ip titles, which he achieved with his alma mater St Jago High School, from 2014 to 2020.

Notwithsta­nding his achievemen­ts as a junior, Brown’s most notable achievemen­t to date is at the senior level. In February of this year, he finished third in the National Chess Championsh­ips and in the process qualified for the National squad preparing for the 44th Chess Olympiad, originally scheduled for August 2020, but which has now been reschedule­d for summer 2021 in Russia.

 ??  ?? Akeem Brown (left) facing Jhustice-dimonte Mcdonald during the 2019 National Age Group Chess Championsh­ips.
Akeem Brown (left) facing Jhustice-dimonte Mcdonald during the 2019 National Age Group Chess Championsh­ips.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Jamaica