Sheldon Wong | |
---|---|
Country | Jamaica |
Born | Spanish Town, Jamaica | 13 July 1960
Title | National Master (Jamaica and United States) |
Sheldon Wong (born 13 July 1960) is a Jamaican chess player who now resides in Orlando, Florida. He holds the National Master titles of both Jamaica and the United States.
In 1976, the 16-year-old Wong won the Jamaican Chess Championship and became the country's youngest National Master. [1] That same year he represented Jamaica at the World Student Team Championship in Caracas, scoring 3½/8. [2] In late 1976 and early 1977 he played for Jamaica at the World Junior Chess Championship in Groningen, where he was awarded a brilliancy prize for his win against the Israeli junior champion Nir Grinberg. [3] After winning his first three games to co-lead the tournament, he suffered five consecutive losses, eventually finishing with 5½/13. [4] He won the Jamaican championship again in 1977, [5] and represented Jamaica at both the World Student Team Championship in Mexico City, where he scored 7/13, [6] and the 1978 Chess Olympiad in Buenos Aires, where he scored 7½/14. [7]
He later moved to the United States, where he gained the National Master title in 1992; however, he has played no rated tournaments since 1997. [8]
Sheldon Wong | |
---|---|
Country | Jamaica |
Born | Spanish Town, Jamaica | 13 July 1960
Title | National Master (Jamaica and United States) |
Sheldon Wong (born 13 July 1960) is a Jamaican chess player who now resides in Orlando, Florida. He holds the National Master titles of both Jamaica and the United States.
In 1976, the 16-year-old Wong won the Jamaican Chess Championship and became the country's youngest National Master. [1] That same year he represented Jamaica at the World Student Team Championship in Caracas, scoring 3½/8. [2] In late 1976 and early 1977 he played for Jamaica at the World Junior Chess Championship in Groningen, where he was awarded a brilliancy prize for his win against the Israeli junior champion Nir Grinberg. [3] After winning his first three games to co-lead the tournament, he suffered five consecutive losses, eventually finishing with 5½/13. [4] He won the Jamaican championship again in 1977, [5] and represented Jamaica at both the World Student Team Championship in Mexico City, where he scored 7/13, [6] and the 1978 Chess Olympiad in Buenos Aires, where he scored 7½/14. [7]
He later moved to the United States, where he gained the National Master title in 1992; however, he has played no rated tournaments since 1997. [8]