The Guardian (USA)

The Guardian view on chess cheating claims: innocent until proven guilty

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Chess generally hits the headlines only for reasons external to the game itself: Bobby Fischer’s eccentrici­ty; Viktor Korchnoi’s allegation­s that the Soviet Union was using hypnotism to undermine him in his 1978 world title match with Anatoly Karpov; the Toiletgate furore that marred the 2006 world championsh­ip. Now, the reigning world champion Magnus Carlsen’s airing of suspicions over the play of the 19-yearold US grandmaste­r Hans Niemann has put chess into the spotlight again.

Carlsen has been world champion since 2013. Niemann is a tyro who has made astonishin­gly rapid progress recently. Carlsen has publicly questioned that trajectory, saying on Twitter last week that “his over the board progress has been unusual”. These days, most elite players become grandmaste­rs in their early teens – Carlsen was 13. Niemann, a charismati­c character who says his life has been devoted to proving critics who said he wasn’t good enough wrong, was a late-developing 17, and his rise to super-GM level has been meteoric.

The controvers­y erupted when Niemann beat Carlsen last month in the Sinquefiel­d Cup. Niemann said he had somehow guessed what opening Carlsen would play. It was Carlsen’s first defeat in 53 classical (long-form) games, and he reacted by withdrawin­g from the tournament, making gnomic references to something being not quite right. “If I speak I am in big trouble,” he tweeted. Some of his supporters filled in the blanks, with claims that Niemann had computer help. Elon Musk unhelpfull­y suggested that he was using unusual methods; Niemann countered by offering to strip naked.

Carlsen and Niemann met again last month in an online game, and the world champion sensationa­lly resigned after making just one move. Carlsen said he was unwilling to “play against people that have cheated repeatedly in the past”, and that he believed the younger man had cheated “more than he has admitted”. Niemann has acknowledg­ed cheating online as a teenager, but insists he has never done so in an overthe-board game and angrily denies the new claims. “Once a cheat, always a cheat,” chorus his detractors, but Niemann should surely not be condemned for youthful misdemeano­urs in games where little was at stake. There is no evidence that he cheated when he beat Carlsen.

The world champion is right to say that cheating poses an existentia­l challenge to chess – there have been many examples at less exalted levels of the sport. But he is wrong to muddy the waters around Niemann without substantiv­e evidence. Britain’s former world title contender Nigel Short says that the young American is at risk of suffering “death by innuendo”. Experts reckon Carlsen played unusually poorly in his defeat to Niemann. Maybe it was just a bad day at the office. Or perhaps it was the result of paranoia: once a player believes their opponent is cheating, that inevitably affects their own play. Carlsen needs to produce concrete evidence – ideally as part of the inquiry announced on Thursday by the Internatio­nal Chess Federation – or let Niemann get on with his career. Only by playing over a long period will the latter’s true playing strength emerge – while any repeated cheating in the rarefied conditions of elite tournament­s would soon be exposed.

 ?? Photograph: Crystal Fuller/Saint Louis Chess Club ?? Magnus Carlsen, left, playing Hans Niemann in the Sinquefiel­d Cup last month.
Photograph: Crystal Fuller/Saint Louis Chess Club Magnus Carlsen, left, playing Hans Niemann in the Sinquefiel­d Cup last month.

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