The Daily Telegraph - Features

Rows, egos, rumours and cheating claims – the great chess scandal

A bust-up between the world champion and a teenage rising star has electrifie­d the game. Ed Cumming investigat­es

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It is the story that has the chess world gripped. On Monday, Magnus Carlsen, the game’s Norwegian world number one, was playing an online game against Hans Niemann, a 19-yearold American grandmaste­r and rising star. After just two moves, Carlsen, 31, abruptly turned off his camera and quit.

“Magnus Carlsen just resigned. Got up and left,” said the grandmaste­r Tania Sachdev, commentati­ng on the website Chess24. She was audibly shocked. In golf terms, this was the equivalent of peak Tiger Woods teeing-off at the first hole, then turning heel and heading back to the clubhouse. “This is unpreceden­ted,” she added. “Did that just happen?”

Carlsen’s departure added fuel to a fire that had been raging for weeks. Before September 4, the Norwegian was unbeaten in 53 games in classical over-the-board tournament­s. His run came to an abrupt halt in the Sinquefiel­d Cup, when Niemann beat him. Carlsen quit the competitio­n the next day. He offered no explanatio­n, except for a cryptic Twitter post of a popular meme of the football manager Jose Mourinho saying: “I prefer really not to speak. If I speak, I am in big trouble.”

Carlsen’s post was widely interprete­d as implying that Niemann had been cheating. On Monday, it is thought he made one move to fulfil a contractua­l obligation to the tournament – the Julius Baer Generation Cup. At the time of writing, he has offered no further clarificat­ion.

“It is disappoint­ing from Carlsen,” says Nigel Short, the former British number one and world number three. “If he has something to say, he should say it and not insinuate. Unless he can justify it in some way, it is unacceptab­le. I will not be surprised if he finds himself in trouble for bringing the game into disrepute and for match throwing [the second game].”

Short is not the only former champion to have weighed in. Garry Kasparov, the former world champion, implied that Carlsen needed to put up or shut up.

“In the last few days, the chess world has become the centre of controvers­y and spectacle, and for none of the right reasons,” he has said. “I will not talk about the dirty rumours, but I will say that Carlsen’s withdrawal was a blow to chess fans, his colleagues at the tournament, the organisers, and, as the rumours and negative publicity swirl in a vacuum, to the game.”

The “dirty rumours”, in this case, amount to more than a figure of speech. Niemann’s unexpected victory gave rise to a number of ideas about how, exactly, he might have cheated. In big tournament­s, players are scanned for devices that could give them an unfair advantage. Twenty-five years after IBM’s Deep Blue computer beat Kasparov, anyone with a smartphone could easily crush even Carlsen. Grandmaste­rs have previously been banned for hiding their phones in the lavatory to consult during mid-game visits. In 2022, you need to be more inventive.

One theory had it that Niemann had vibrating, internet-enabled beads secreted about his person, in an area more likely to be inspected before a prison sentence than a game of chess. Without going too much into the nascent field of teledildon­ics, someone watching the match could feed Niemann informatio­n through well-timed buzzes.

Others speculated that Niemann might have had a computer in his shoes, or, more prosaicall­y, that he had seen Carlsen’s prep work for the tournament. In an audacious gambit, Stripchat, an adult website, responded by offering to make Niemann a “pawn star”, saying they would give him $1million to play in the nude to prove that he wasn’t cheating.

Niemann has strongly denied the accusation­s, calling them “completely unfair”. Computers are capable of analysing games for unusual patterns of behaviour, but there was nothing extraordin­ary about Carlsen and Niemann’s encounter.

“I just thought Carlsen played poorly,” says Short. “There is absolutely no evidence of cheating.”

“The beads are a funny joke,” he adds. To complicate matters, however, Niemann has admitted

cheating online as a child. Chess. com, one of the leading chess websites, which hosts tournament­s, banned him from playing, again without providing any further evidence. Carlsen’s company, Play Magnus group, is in the process of merging with chess. com in a deal worth a reputed £72million. There has been speculatio­n that the deal might have given Carlsen access to more incriminat­ing data on Niemann.

“Magnus is otherwise relatively level-headed,” says Jonathan Rowson, author of The Moves That Matter: A Grandmaste­r on the Game of Life. “It’s quite dramatic that he doubled down on it by resigning on move two [in the online game]. It makes me think he must know something the public does not. But you have to be careful about damaging reputation­s without evidence. And the nature of the evidence is almost certainly going to be questionab­le. I don’t see any evidence in recent over-the-board games that Hans Niemann is cheating... All that Carlsen can have is his general suspicion, based on the fact this guy has been caught before, and something additional that comes from proprietar­y knowledge based on the merger with Chess.com.”

Other players, most notably the American number one, Hikaru Nakamura, have implicitly taken Carlsen’s side in the row. Others have expressed suspicion over Niemann’s rapid rise up the ranks in recent years. But Prof Ken Regan, a leading anti-cheating authority, has examined his games and found nothing egregious.

Even without the sex-toy element, a row involving Carlsen would always be likely to spill out into the mainstream press. For more than a decade, he has been chess’s lone crossover star, an urbane champion who has had modelling contracts and in 2019 was briefly ranked number one in the Fantasy Premier League football game. His fierce reaction to Niemann follows an announceme­nt in July that he would not defend his world championsh­ip, a title he has held since 2013. “I’m not motivated to play another match,” he said. “I don’t have a lot to gain. I don’t particular­ly like it, and although I’m sure a match would be interestin­g for historical reasons, I don’t have any inclinatio­ns to play.”

Short says Carlsen may simply be paying the price for years at the top. “After five world championsh­ips, it is possible the strain of playing at the highest level is affecting his judgment. He has made a lot of money. Maybe after being the undisputed best player in the world for years, you start to see things differentl­y.”

The Sinquefiel­d Cup game on September 4 was not the first time he had lost to Niemann. Last August, he lost to him at a tournament in Miami. When Niemann was asked to explain his victory, he said “[the] chess speaks for itself ”.

“I think Magnus was greatly displeased by this display of arrogance,” says Malcolm Pein, the editor of Chess Magazine and Telegraph chess correspond­ent. “He went on to beat him.”

“I think there is some turmoil in [Carlsen]’s life at the moment,” he adds. “But he has been playing brilliantl­y, crushing everyone.

“I think he was furious to lose to Niemann [on September 4], and has a disregard for him because he has admitted cheating, and finds it unpalatabl­e to have to play chess against him when he thinks he shouldn’t be playing.”

Between the current row, the opportunit­ies afforded by lockdown and the Netflix drama The Queen’s Gambit, one could argue that the game is having a “moment”. The internet has been a boon for fans, who can follow the matches with real-time computer informatio­n about the strength of each move.

But it has also given rise to infinitely more possibilit­ies for cheating. Now there are large prizes available for online games. When the incentives for winning are so great, authoritie­s will need to remain vigilant. “If there is one good thing to come out of this story, it will be that people who cheat online will realise that there are real-world implicatio­ns,” says Short. “What you do in your bedroom or your study may affect your life down the line.” A lesson that applies beyond the 64 squares of the chessboard.

‘It is disappoint­ing from Carlsen. I will not be surprised if he finds himself in trouble’

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 ?? ?? Chess bored: Magnus Carlsen, main right, quit against Hans Niemann,left. A far cry from when Garry Kasparov lost to the Deep Blue computer in 1997, below
Chess bored: Magnus Carlsen, main right, quit against Hans Niemann,left. A far cry from when Garry Kasparov lost to the Deep Blue computer in 1997, below

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