23/05/2026
unpacked
The halls were loud long before the clocks began ticking. Not loud in the way football stadiums roar, no. This was a different kind of thunder — the rustling of score sheets, the nervous tapping of tiny fingers on wooden tables, the quiet confidence of children carrying entire nations on backpacks bigger than their shoulders. Somewhere between the silence of concentration and the chaos of hope, Kenya’s young chess army marched onto the continental battlefield and reminded Africa that chess is not just a game here. It is inheritance. It is rebellion. It is poetry with pawns.
And if chess truly mirrors life, then Kenya spent this championship playing the Sicilian Defense against destiny itself.
The Under-8 Open category became the kingdom of tiny giants. Kenya’s prodigy, Rayvon Kirega, danced through the tournament like a player who had secretly borrowed Magnus Carlsen’s instincts and hidden them inside a child’s smile. With an astonishing 8.5 points out of 9, Rayvon finished with continental silver only on tiebreaks — the cruel mathematical cousin of heartbreak. Yet silver never looked this golden. Every round he played felt like watching someone solve algebra with fireworks. Opponents came prepared for a chess match and left looking like they had accidentally walked into a tactical ambush.
Right behind him stood Matthias Cherere, collecting bronze with 7 points and enough courage to make grown men study opening theory again. His only losses came against the eventual Egyptian gold medalist and Rayvon himself — which is the chess equivalent of saying, “I only lost to gravity and time.” Matthias played with maturity far beyond his years, turning every position into a battlefield where pawns marched like warriors.
Then there was Timothy Karugo, the seasoned little gladiator of Kenyan junior chess, finishing 5th overall with 6.5 points. Timothy’s tournament was less a sprint and more a safari through Africa’s chess map — defeating players from Uganda, Tanzania, South Africa, Namibia, and Madagascar while surviving brutal encounters against Rayvon and Uganda’s finest. In another universe, Timothy is probably a war general. In this one, he simply sacrifices knights for initiative.
And then came the Under-8 Girls — the division where tiny hands carried enormous dreams and every chessboard looked like a battlefield disguised as a classroom desk.
Kenya’s brightest spark in the category was the phenomenal Aaliyah Jasmine McKenzie, rated 1508 and notably the only rated player in the entire section — a detail that already hinted she had arrived with reputation sitting beside her at the board. But ratings alone never win championships. Courage does. Precision does. Calmness when your clock is bleeding does.
Aaliyah delivered all three.
Scoring a magnificent 8 points, she finished joint first overall but settled for continental silver after the merciless mathematics of tiebreaks sliced gold away by the smallest margins imaginable. Chess can sometimes feel like writing an exam and losing marks for handwriting. Yet her performance remained one of Kenya’s most commanding displays of the tournament.
Her only upsetting encounter came against Uganda’s Mbabazi Jacinta, in a clash that felt less like a junior game and more like two future continental queens testing each other’s nerves. Beyond that single stumble, Aaliyah swept through the field with the authority of a player who seemed to understand the board several moves deeper than everyone else. Opponents from Kenya, South Africa, Botswana, Uganda, and Madagascar all fell before her tactical sharpness. She did not merely play chess; she conducted it like music.
Closely behind her was Zawadi Zoe Ebba, whose tournament became a painful lesson in how cruel tiebreak systems can be. With 7 points, Zawadi finished joint third yet painfully landed 4th overall after calculations separated podium glory from “almost.” In sport, there are losses. Then there are the ones that stay in your chest for a while.
Her toughest battles came against players from Egypt and South Africa, but Zawadi responded with grit and resilience, collecting critical wins against opponents from Kenya, Botswana, Zimbabwe, and Uganda. She played with the fighting spirit of someone who refuses to let the board intimidate her, every move carrying the energy of a child discovering that bravery itself can be a weapon.
Completing Kenya’s trio was Emma Emela Wamwenje, finishing 10th overall with 6 points. Emma’s journey through the tournament was filled with difficult encounters against strong Ugandan and South African opposition, yet she still carved out important victories against Kenyan and Botswana players. Her tournament may not have ended with a medal, but it carried something equally important: proof of growth. And in junior chess, growth is often the first checkmate against fear.
Together, the Kenyan girls transformed the Under-8 section into something far bigger than standings and trophies. They reminded everyone watching that chess genius does not arrive with age. Sometimes it arrives with missing teeth, tiny backpacks, nervous smiles, and an ability to spot checkmate faster than adults can spot their car keys.
The Under-10 Girls section was a reminder that chess can sometimes be beautifully cruel. Egypt and Uganda dominated the headlines, but Kenya’s girls refused to become footnotes. Naomi Wamwenje emerged as Kenya’s best finisher in 7th place with 6.5 points, carrying herself with the composure of someone twice her age. One of her brightest moments came against a South African opponent where she secured a hard-fought draw — the kind of draw that feels emotionally like a win and mathematically like a statement.
Mali Mugo, finishing 9th overall also on 6.5 points, endured a schedule tougher than a queen trapped in the corner. Egyptians. Ugandans. Endless pressure. Yet she stood firm. Her draw against fellow Kenyan Zhanna Naitore was one of those bittersweet sibling battles where both players leave the board slightly victorious and slightly wounded. Zhanna herself, finishing 12th, quietly assembled a respectable campaign with gritty draws and key wins that proved she belongs on bigger stages.
Then came the fireworks division: the Under-10 Open.
Jeremy Aden Duke, rated 1575, did not merely win silver. He announced himself to Africa. Scoring 7.5 points, Jeremy battled like a child who had discovered chess engines in his dreams. Against a dangerous 1607-rated Botswana player he survived the storm, and against a mighty 1697-rated Egyptian he squeezed out a draw that echoed across the tournament hall. By the end, he had gained a massive 27.6 rating points and probably a few new fans from countries he had just defeated.
Not far behind was Andy Zane Wright, another Kenyan warrior rated 1576, who brought home bronze with the same 7.5 points. Andy’s tournament was pure cinema. He stumbled against a 1699-rated Ugandan but then turned around and treated the rest of the field like an unfinished homework assignment. South Africans, Zimbabweans, Malagasy, Ugandans — all fell before him as he harvested rating points with terrifying efficiency.
Jayden Kiogora Mwendwa, rated 1486, completed Kenya’s strong showing by finishing 10th overall with 6.5 points. Despite a bruising encounter against Kenya’s own Marc Antoinne Ishimwe Ndagijimana, Jayden found redemption against Ugandan and Namibian opposition. In chess, recovery is often more impressive than perfection.
And then came the queens.
The Under-12 Girls category belonged to Kenya’s own WCM Winnie Kaburo. Calm. Precise. Ruthless when necessary. Winnie captured continental gold with 8 points and played the tournament like someone writing a love letter to Kenyan chess history. She held a powerful 1700-rated Egyptian to a draw and also split the point with fellow Kenyan Riley Matingi, proving once again that Kenyan rivalries are often harder than international games.
Winnie gained 22 elo points, defeating players from South Africa, Uganda, Zimbabwe, and Madagascar along the way. Her performance was not just victorious — it was authoritative.
Riley Matingi, finishing 4th overall, showed remarkable resilience after a difficult encounter against a Namibian opponent rated 1423. Yet Riley bounced back with strong results against Zambia, Uganda, and South Africa, collecting 16.4 rating points and enough experience to become even deadlier next season.
Kim Vivica, rated 1413, completed Kenya’s top trio with 6.5 points and a 10th-place finish. Though she lost rating points overall, her tournament still contained moments of brilliance, including a draw against a 1519-rated Namibian and important victories against Ugandan and Kenyan opponents. Sometimes chess teaches harder lessons than school ever will.
The Under-12 Open category felt like a Shakespearean tragedy written on 64 squares.
Nathaniel Manyeki, rated 1914, stood inches away from continental gold. Inches. A dramatic final-round draw against 1837-rated Faraja Muli cost him the title, turning what could have been a coronation into silver. Another draw against Jayson Kimani and Uganda’s top seed became the tiny details that separated triumph from “almost.” But Manyeki still delivered 7.5 points and gained elo in the process — because true champions do not collapse under disappointment; they evolve.
Faraja Muli, meanwhile, secured bronze with the same score after also drawing against Uganda’s top seed. His tournament was fearless, calculating, and deeply entertaining. Somewhere between tactics and positional mastery, Faraja reminded everyone why Kenyan chess continues producing monsters disguised as schoolchildren.
Shem Ngugi, rated 1561, quietly finished 11th with 7 points after dispatching opponents from Kenya, Uganda, and Madagascar. Not every hero gets a medal. Some simply leave with respect.
The Under-14 Girls section brought heartbreak. No medals for Kenya. But oh, the fight they showed.
Makanga Annabel, rated 1539, led the Kenyan charge in 6th place with 6.5 points after difficult encounters against Egyptian and Botswana opposition. Her draw against Madagascar and victories against Uganda and Kenya earned her rating gains and admiration alike.
Atarah Wright, also on 6.5 points, finished 8th after facing a brutal lineup that included a fearsome 1841-rated Ugandan and fellow Kenyan Shirlyn Gathoni. Chess pairings can be merciless — like giving teenagers algebra during a thunderstorm.
Shirlyn Gathoni herself finished 9th, also on 6.5 points, in one of the tournament’s tightest standings. The margins between glory and obscurity were thinner than a bishop’s diagonal.
The Under-14 Open section, however, nearly exploded into Kenyan celebration.
Waweru Davidson, rated 1883, narrowly missed the podium on tiebreak despite scoring a massive 7.5 points. His tournament included a brilliant draw against a towering 2037-rated Egyptian and enough wins against Kenyan, Ugandan, and South African opposition to gain an eye-watering 53.6 elo points. Fifty-three. That is not a rating gain. That is a rating robbery in broad daylight.
Prince Isaac Munyua, rated 1673, finished 7th after battling Angola’s finest and drawing against Kenya’s own Hitansh in a tense local duel. Meanwhile Rodrick Omar, rated 1489, completed Kenya’s top three with a gritty performance that included a valuable draw against Damian Kibet.
Then the Kenyan queens returned to reclaim their throne.
The Under-16 Girls category became a Kenyan masterpiece led by WFM Elizabeth Cassidy. Rated 1967, Elizabeth delivered gold with 7.5 points and the calm authority of a player who understands that pressure is merely another chess piece. Her only real stumble came against a South African rated 1572, but she recovered magnificently with a draw against a strong Egyptian and wins across the board.
Behind her, Genevieve Maashao and Fantalis Nduta both finished with 6.5 points in a spectacular Kenyan double act. Genevieve gained 41.6 elo after defeating Egyptians, Ugandans, and Kenyans alike, while Fantalis gained a monstrous 55.2 elo after surviving brutal encounters against Uganda, Egypt, South Africa, and Kenya’s elite. If elo points were fuel, Fantalis left the tournament driving a Formula One car.
The Under-16 Open category delivered one of the tournament’s cruelest stories. Kuka Kyle, rated exactly 2000 — a rating that already sounds like a sci-fi movie — finished joint second on 7 points but slipped to 5th on tiebreaks. Chess can be savage that way. One extra half-point somewhere, one tiny endgame nuance, and the story changes forever.
Yet Kuka’s performance remained elite, with strong results against Namibia, Uganda, Libya, and South Africa. Abel Taji followed with a phenomenal campaign and a massive 56.4 rating gain after taking down players from Botswana, Namibia, Malawi, and Kenya. Elvis Muigai, meanwhile, survived a terrifying section that included a 2185-rated Egyptian and fellow Kenyan Abel Taji before still producing critical victories.
In the Under-18 Girls, WCM Bella Nashipae carried Kenya onto the podium with bronze. Rated 1800 and scoring 7 points, Bella displayed nerves of steel by drawing against Uganda’s powerful WIM Sana and Egypt’s WIM Jana, both over 2000 rating. Those are not ordinary draws. Those are chess handshakes with history.
Erica Mumbi and Nyakio Abigael faced harsher tournaments, but even in defeat there were sparks of resilience — wins against South Africa, Zimbabwe, and fellow East Africans that reminded everyone that development is rarely linear in chess. Every grandmaster was once a child crying over a blunder.
Finally came the Under-18 Open section — the division where boys begin turning into masters.
FM Jadon Simiyu, rated 2152, finished 4th overall with 6.5 points after navigating one of the strongest fields in the tournament. He drew against Kenya’s own Daniel Baraka Simiyu, held a 2192-rated South African, survived Uganda’s finest, and battled fiercely against a powerful Egyptian. Jadon played like a player already staring at international master norms in the distance.
Ted Wahome and Samuel Wanjala followed closely behind with gritty performances full of difficult pairings, dramatic draws, and time-pressure disasters — because no African youth championship is complete without at least one player losing on time while completely winning the position. Somewhere, a coach fainted quietly.
By the end of the tournament, Kenya had collected medals, elo points, heartbreaks, and stories. Lots of stories.
And perhaps that is the true beauty of junior chess.
A child sacrifices a queen in round three and learns courage.
Another loses gold on tiebreak and learns resilience.
One gains 55 elo points and suddenly starts believing impossible things about themselves.
Another finishes without a medal but discovers they can stare down a 2000-rated opponent without fear.
These children arrived carrying chess boards.
They left carrying futures.
Because long after the trophies gather dust and the pairings disappear from tournament walls, Africa will remember this generation of Kenyan players — the children who turned pawns into poetry and clocks into drums of war.