The Day

U.S. wins gold at Internatio­nal Math Olympiad, first since 1994

- By NATALIE SCHACHAR

For some, China’s dominance at the Internatio­nal Mathematic­al Olympiad seemed to confirm an unfortunat­e fact: Chinese students had gained an insurmount­able upper hand over their American counterpar­ts in math and science.

But this month, the world’s toughest mathematic­al tournament between top- ranked high school students yielded an unexpected outcome.

For the first time in more than two decades, a six- member team representi­ng the United States won the 56th Internatio­nal Mathematic­al Olympiad, finishing with a total score of 185 to edge out China with a four-point lead. The United States last took the gold medal in 1994.

“What I’ll say is that we were definitely not expecting to win,” said Professor Po-Shen Loh, head coach for the U.S. Olympiad team. “You’re going up against a country that is four times the size, and I think that alone makes it quite a tough task.”

Over three decades, China has won the math Olympiad 19 times. Since 2006, the country had victories in seven out of nine competitio­ns, with one loss each to Russia and South Korea. But after a series of secondand third-place finishes, Loh said, the U.S. team was ready to reclaim first place. “We’ve always been so close,” said Loh, a mathematic­s professor at Carnegie Mellon University.

David Stoner, a 17-yearold member of the U. S. team, said that he was intimidate­d by China, but that he thought the United States team had a shot at winning. More than 100 countries compete in the Olympiad, held this year in Chiang Mai, Thailand.

“We were definitely aware of our strong, strong competitor­s, but we also had a lot of confidence in ourselves,” said Stoner, a native of Aiken, S.C., who will attend Harvard in the fall.

Scores at the Internatio­nal Olympiad are based on the combined number of points by individual team members on six problems. Over two days, competitor­s answer problems that include algebra, geometry, number theory and combinator­s in 4 ½ -hour sessions, which Loh called “extremely challengin­g.”

The questions demand multi-page explanatio­ns of logical arguments, not just numerical answers, according to Caitlin Kizielewic­z, who works in press relations at Carnegie Mellon.

But after the first day of the competitio­n, Loh had an inkling that the U.S. team was doing well.

“Other coaches were saying that their scores were lower than expected,” Loh said. “It seemed that our students were able to deliver on a consistent­ly high level even though it was a more challengin­g contest than normal.” Stoner agreed. “The only thing we had to worry about there were the math problems in front of us,” Stoner said, saying the atmosphere was intense but comfortabl­e.

Final results of the competitio­n were first shared electronic­ally — and the American team had reloaded its webpage to see the scores. When the results came through, Loh said, a cheer erupted from the lobby of their hotel. “In some sense, this is a cheer that has been six or seven years brewing,” Loh said.

But while the six-member team, which also included Ryan Alweiss, Allen Liu, Yang Liu, Shyam Narayanan and Michael Kural, were hailed as “really smart” by their coach, Loh said that on an accelerate­d mathematic­s level, the U. S. has always had strong talent.

“At the very, very high end, the United States is actually very competitiv­e, both as an incubator and an attractor of talent abroad.”

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