The 2008 USAM North Report
The Chess Club Team A
finishes in 5th Place
What an
adventure! Our two teams suffered. One member had a heart attack (I am
serious), another member had the flu, and one member quite chess. All occurred before
we left on the 500 plus mile trip from Kansas City to Milwaukee, Wisconsin for
the United States Amateur Team Championship North that took place February 16th-17th,
2008. Twenty teams participated in the open section. Both chess club teams
limped into action ready to fight even though we were missing key players.
The Chess Club
sponsored both teams by paying for entry fees, hotels, and team shirts. Our two
teams had the following members:

From left to
right: Spencer Conklin, Fred Smith, Tony Dutiel, Jonht Bechthold, Ken Fee,
Frank Smith, Byron Williamson, and Conrado Salazar.
Click here for the team,
board, and individual standings.

The
Chess Club Team A versus the Nimzowitch's
Knights in Round Two – A little dark on board one ! I
am in the shade!
Our A team had chances. In the
last round we were playing for the U1900 title. Tony’s Dutiel’s last round game
is even the topic of Ivan
Wijetunge’s Blog.

Frank
Smith in the background and Tony Dutiel who went 4-1, getting ready to crush
another opponent!
Positives about the trip:
1.
We played walkie-talkie chess between both cars on the road.
2.
We had some great food in Milwaukee including Barbeque.
3.
We played higher rated players and borrowed a few points.
4.
Team A was one game away from the
U1900 Championship.
5.
Tony and Frank had fun playing
bughouse between rounds.
Negatives about the trip:
1.
It was cold and wet. One day cold, the next day wet. Cars were
snowed in and Byron (our web guru) fell on the ice a few times. Once he fell in
an ice puddle, and his jeans were soaked. The chess gods helped, however; Team
B had a bye the next round, and Byron was able to return to the hotel to
change.
2.
Parking was terrible at the hotel. Since the hotel was next to the
airport, people used the lot for short and long-term airport parking.
3.
The playing hall had a few lighting problems. I felt like I was playing
in the shade.
4.
My
room was 80 plus degrees with no climate control. The hotel simply tried to
help by opening one of my windows. That is the last time I stay at a 4 Star
Hotel again! J The excuse was that my room was
located above the hotel laundry. This is how they treat Priceline Customers.
5.
My last round opponent smelled like defecation. The smell was so
bad that the board two players moved to another table. The TDs would do
nothing, but if a cell phone went off, you were docked 45 minutes from your
clock. I played with my shirt over my nose.

Guess
which way we were traveling! Trucks could not get up the icy hills.
After the tournament, we traveled
14 hours in two cars to get home. The wind-chill factor was almost 20 below. I
let Byron pump the gas! I-80 in Iowa was almost shut down. We counted around
50-60 cars, trucks, and U-hauls in the ditch. We traveled around 10 MPH for
hours slipping from one side to another.
The Des Moines Register described the situation in the following words!
“Travel is not advised on Interstate Highway 80 in eastern
Iowa, according to the Iowa Department of Transportation. Towing services also
are blocked from exit 182 to exit 254.
Travel also is not recommended in several other areas, including Interstate
Highway 380 from I-80 to exit 43; U.S. Highway 6 from I-80 to I-380; U.S.
Register sportswriter Randy Peterson reported Monday night that it took him 3 hours to travel 31 miles on Interstate 80 westbound, between Iowa City and Ladora, tonight.
Iowa State Patrol Sgt. Bob Cox was watching a truck driver
struggling to drive up a hill not far from a Coralville exit of Interstate
Highway 80 in eastern Iowa shortly after 11 a.m. today.
"The tires are spinning and smoking and I think if we can get a wrecker to
him we will just tow him into the median," said Cox. "He's blocking a
lot of traffic."
By one estimate there were some 150 vehicles in the ditches along Interstate
Highway 80 between Davenport and Des Moines on Sunday night. "It's worse
now," Cox said on Monday morning. "I've probably seen 100 off the
road in just a 40-mile stretch today. It's these hills over here by Iowa City.
"Traffic is completely blocked on the left-hand side of the westbound
lanes. Semis can't get up these hills and we're having trouble getting sand
trucks to them," Cox said. Drivers were traveling about 5 mph in spots.
"It's hard-packed ice. It's thick, two or three inches of it. It's almost
like driving on a frozen gravel road. I've only seen it like this two or three
times in my 28 years out here." “

Actual
pictures from the newspaper of February 18th on I-80 in Iowa.
Lesson: Byron and I should have
checked the road conditions. We could have traveled using the St. Louis route.
Byron, what were we thinking?

Every
few miles, there were numerous cars off the road. The picture does not do
justice to what we saw!
After arriving at home on Monday
night and sleeping four hours, my wife notified me that we needed to go to the
hospital. The next morning, February 19 ,2008 at 9:32AM, my son,
Kalen Eugene Fee was born. He weighed 7lbs. and 7 ounces.

The Boss and Kalen
Games coming soon!
Ken Fee