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November 12, 2023 · 3 min read · Elias Teubner
#chess #tournament #personal

Kiju-Rapid 2023 — U18 Champion

U18 Champion. November 2023. I walked in knowing what I wanted, and I walked out with it. That's the version of this story that matters.

The Format

Kiju-Rapid is a youth rapid chess tournament — faster than classical chess but slower than blitz. Each game gives you enough time to think but not enough to second-guess yourself. It's the format where instinct and preparation overlap, and the player who balances both comes out on top. I'd spent months sharpening both. The format suited me.

The U18 Category

The U18 field doesn't forgive. You're playing against others who have been taking chess seriously for years — training with coaches, grinding engines, memorizing theory. Nobody shows up with a safety net. A slow start means you're chasing points you might never recover. You need to be ready from round one. I was.

The Games

What I remember most isn't any single brilliant move. It's the feeling of being in control — of having prepared the right openings, of recognizing patterns mid-game, of converting advantages without letting them slip. The things that define a good tournament:

  • Consistency — no terrible games, no blunders that threw away won positions
  • Endgame technique — converting small advantages into wins
  • Time management — not rushing, not overthinking

What It Meant

This wasn't where the competitive mindset started — it was where it got confirmed. Winning the U18 category proved that the hours of studying openings, solving tactics, and analyzing my games were paying off exactly as I expected. I joined USK Uttendorf, raised my level, and kept going.

Looking back from 2026, Kiju-Rapid was the first title. The Sonnenterrassen-Open performance and the Tandem-Schach victory came later — each one built on the last. This is just where the record starts.

— Elias

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