
Team Information
Location: El Paso, Texas
Established: 1914
Enrollment: 25,151
Mascots: Pay Dirt Pete, the Miner
This is the fourth Winter Classic for this UTEP miner team. This is an entirely new team and a small one to boot, with only three members. However, it’s a team that absolutely loaded with grad students, three of ’em, which is the maximum the law allows.
UTEP was in the very first Winter Classic in 2021, using the name Team Itzamna after the Mayan god of knowledge. It was a very tough road in 2021 with all but two of the original team members dropping out during the pre-competition. The two remaining students put in an incredible amount of work and finished second overall, very impressive. The 2022 team also did very well, just barely finished fourth, missing third place by less than 4.5 points out of the a total of 700 maximum. The 2023 team ended up in a respectable sixth place against a tough field.
After taking 2024 off for a building year, the team this year, dubbed Team Gladiator, is their most academically advanced team yet. Will these wiser and older students put the Gladiators over the top in 2025?
2025 UTEP Gladiator Roster
Luis Tarango
Pablo Sotelo Torres: "Hello, my name is Pablo Sotelo Torres, and I’m currently pursuing a master’s degree in Computer Engineering after receiving a recent bachelor’s degree in Electrical Engineering in May 2024. I’m from Mexico and I’m a border commuter student, so I’ve been crossing the border to study at the University of Texas at El Paso since 2019. I’m interested in writing a thesis for my master’s on high-performance computing, so that’s why I joined the competition to get hands-on experience and learn more about the topic."
Ivan Luna Torres
Faculty Advisor/Coach: Dr. Rodrigo Romero
2023 UTEP Highlights
"Christian Cabrera is a senior student at the University of Texas at El Paso, majoring Electrical Engineering with a minor in math. He is academically focused on the Fields and Devices and Power and Energy. When he is not working in academic activities he is learning about technology, computer architecture, and general psychology."
"My name is Abel Chaka and I was born and raised in Ethiopia, now living in Texas and studying computer science. I enjoy building relationships and have found success in my pursuits through good communication and sociability. Which has enabled me further develop my skills from learning other peoples experience."
"My name is Jorge Garcia and I am a senior electrical engineering student at UTEP. I have been using the skills learned from college to build and start my passion of coding and robotics. I have a passion for learning new skills and techniques and I embrace the challenges that come with it."
"Hello, my name is Jose Gonzalez and I am passionate about learning new stuff, especially when it comes to computers. Currently studying electrical engineering, I always loved to use and see what computers can do since I was little. I learned a lot while going to school and off school, one hobby I have been doing is 3D printing which has been a lot of fun for me to experience new ways to innovate and consider new technology for future advances."
"My name is Jonathan Hernandez. I am a senior Electrical Engineering student at UTEP who has been studying engineering since high school. I embrace and adapt quickly to new responsibilities, and am enthusiastic to gain new knowledge, skills, and techniques."
2022 Competition Highlights
2022 Team Roster:
- Alberto De La Rosa
- Antonio Teijeiro
- Joshua Flores
- Rudy Flores Jr.
Faculty Advisor/Coach:
- Dr. Rodrigo Romero
Team UTEP: It’s rib night for UTEP and I’m highly supportive of that choice – big fan of ribs. They have some good news to accompany their meaty feast: at the time of filming, they were one of the four teams that maxed out the ORNL ML challenge and it has moved them into third place overall. It’s fun to see their smiles when they hear the news. The Winter Classic is a big deal to this team and it shows.
During the meal, we lapse into a technical discussion of the various competition tasks and the team really impresses me with their thoughtful analysis and solutions to technical problems.
One of the students express some doubt as to whether they know enough to enter into HPC as an intern. They’ve just spent nearly 10 weeks successfully working on real-world HPC tasks on four different supercomputers – on their own time! Qualified? Absolutely. These students have learned a LOT during this competition and would be great hires for any HPC organization.
Team UTEP Update: UTEP was the last team we interviewed in the competition. We caught up with them on the Saturday they turned in their AWS OpenFOAM results. This was the last computational task in the competition you could tell that the team was basking in the afterglow of turning in their final results. The team feels that they put everything into the competition and didn’t leave anything in the locker room (no, they don’t have a student cluster competition locker room). Very solid team, highly impressive.
University of Texas El Paso – Team Itzmana: This is the second appearance for UTEP Team Itzmansa, named after the Mayan god of wisdom. Last year, Team Itzamna was the very definition of ‘plucky.’ Attrition took the team down to two members approaching the final competition week when it’s all on the line. But the duo didn’t quit and ended up doing quite well. In our 2022 competition, Team Itzamna posted a third best LINPACK number and a sixth place HPCG – not bad at all – and that put them in sixth place overall. But they’ve flipped the script by posting the best HPC Pop Quiz score, adding 100 points to their score, and rocketing two slots into fourth place. Definitely a team to contend with…