In 1995 Simutowe won the nation's under-21 championship and took fifth place at the
African Junior Championship. In 1996 he won the
Zambian Chess Championship as well as the Zambian Junior National Championship. When reflecting upon his results in 1996, Amon stated "I didn't expect to win this tournament... I was just interested in qualifying for the Olympiad." He qualified but the Zambian National team was unable to compete in the Olympiads. In 1997 Simutowe won the African Junior Chess Championship. He earned the IM title at the 1998 African Zonal (zone 4.3) with the required 66% score and later went on to win the first of his two African Junior Championships in 1999 by 12/13 followed by an 11/11 score in 2000 during which he earned the moniker, "The Zambezi Shark" and became famous for repeatedly defeating his competition in Fischer-like fashion, winning tournaments by large margins. He also carried the Zambian flag abroad in the 2000 under-16 championship and beat Iran's
Ehsan Ghaem Maghami who would later become a Grandmaster. He then scored several notable tournament victories, including a tie for second place at the 2000
World Junior Chess Championships in Armenia where he scored 8½/13. He scored 6½/11 in the
British Championship including a beautiful win against IM
Colin Crouch. He represented Zambia at the
2000 Chess Olympiad in Istanbul, Turkey and scored 8/10 on board one. In 2002, he moved to the United States to pursue higher education after being awarded a chess scholarship. While a student at UTD, he helped the chess team win two national collegiate championships. After earning a degree in finance and economics with high honours in December 2006, he embarked on a path to earn his final
Grandmaster norm. After playing a number of tournaments in the U.S., he travelled to the Netherlands to compete in the 2007 Euwe Stimulans tournament, where he earned his third GM norm, and was awarded the International Grandmaster title. In 2009, he won the
South African Open. == References ==