As the tournament to decide the U.S. chess champion reaches the virtual halfway mark, Minnetonka's Wesley So is in a two-way tie for first place, reflecting a sharp turnaround from his erratic performance last year.
So's aggressive play has been praised by experts as the most scintillating and entertaining of the tournament in St. Louis so far, and after five games he remains undefeated. So and fellow grandmaster Fabiano Caruana share first place atop the elite 12-player field, each with three wins and two draws.
Last year, in his first attempt at the U.S. chess title, So stumbled as distractions off the board affected his performance in the playing hall. An unexpected visit from his estranged mother rattled him, and over the board he became hesitant, missed winning opportunities and even forfeited a game because of a rules violation.
"Last year was a very difficult tournament for me," he said after his fifth-round win on Monday. "But as they say, the first is always the hardest."
This year, the 22-year-old So is playing with confidence. He began the tournament with a bang, sacrificing his knight to open lines of attack against his opponent's king and soon forcing resignation. On Monday, So doubled down, first sacrificing a knight and then sacrificing a rook on the very next move for just two pawns. Again, his opponent's king had nowhere to hide, despite the huge material advantage.
In a lighthearted mood after the victory, So said he had intended at the start of the game to play cautiously, "but then I couldn't control myself."
"That was a scorcher," said tournament commentator Yasser Seirawan.
"A massacre," commentator Maurice Ashley told So as he interviewed him. "You've had two of the most scintillating attacks in the tournament so far."