In 2014, after subsequently completing all three GM norms at the Foxwoods Open, Saint Louis GM Invitational and Washington International, Sevian became the youngest American ever to have all the GM norm requirements fulfilled at age 13. “If he gets the points he needs before his birthday on December 26, Sevian will become just the seventh player in the world to become a grandmaster before turning 14,” the New York Times reported earlier this year.
Sevian was born in Corning, New York and currently lives in South Bridge, Massachusetts. His father Armen Sevian, a laser physicist who came to the U.S. from Armenia for his Ph.D. studies in 1996, taught his son his first chess moves and coached him throughout the years. An avid chess player himself, Armen credits his first Chess teacher — another chess master Henrich Kasparyan — for instilling a love for the game in him at a young age as well.
Armenia is a small land-locked country located North of Iran in the Caucasus, approximately the size of the state of Maryland. Despite its small size, Armenia has won three out of the five world chess Olympiads since 2006 — as well as the 2011 world championship. Historians say that chess was brought to Armenia from India around the 9th century. In fact as late as the mid-20th century, certain Armenian rural settlements still played the original version of chess known as chatrak , a historical tradition that has apparently lasted over 11 centuries. According to California-based Armenian-American GM and U.S. national female team coach Melikset Khachiyan: “Armenians are generally good at intellectual games.” Khachiyan also pointed out that “Tigran Petrossian’s victory back in the 1960s during Soviet times was a huge psychological boom for our nation.” In 2011, Armenia made chess part of the regular school curriculum, a move that has since been emulated by countries such as Hungary and the Ukraine.
Sevian is currently ranked 1st in the Under-14 in both the United States and in world and ranks 35th among all U.S. active chess players. In a brief phone conversation, the young Samuel stated that although he was happy with his accomplishment, he had even bigger plans for the future. America’s youngest GM is already preparing for a major international tournament scheduled for January in Wijk aan Zee, Netherlands. Among Samuel’s immediate goals is raising his game to a new level, maybe hitting 2600 rating mark in the coming year. It seems that for Sevian, the sky’s the limit.