• Loading stock data...
Wednesday, September 18, 2024

The Most Heated Rivalry in Chess Is Back After Two Years

  • Magnus Carlsen is set to face Hans Niemann at the Speed Chess Championship semifinals in Paris on Friday.
  • Niemann maintains Carlsen conspired to end his career by accusing him of cheating.
Magnus-Carlsen-Chess
Shutterstock

The last time Magnus Carlsen and Hans Niemann met over a chessboard, it resulted in a scandal that triggered a lawsuit and a broad examination of the integrity of the game. On Friday, they meet again.

The Speed Chess Championship semifinal in Paris will feature Carlsen, the world’s top player, facing the man he accused of cheating two years ago.  At stake will be shares of the tournament’s total $175,000 prize pool and a claim in the game’s fiercest reputational battle.

In September 2022, Niemann defeated Carlsen in the third round of the Sinquefield Cup in St. Louis. The tournament is part of the Grand Chess Tour, an annual series of five tournaments that carries a total prize pool of more than $1 million. It was Carlsen’s first loss with the white pieces in nearly two years in the classical format, in which players have around two hours to think during their moves, and it altered the face of the ancient game. He withdrew from the tournament the following day—the first mid-tournament withdrawal of his career—and eventually accused Niemann of cheating.

Niemann, who has admitted to previous cheating, only added to the suspicion in an interview following his victory with a series of confusing explanations for his moves and what appeared to some to be a cover story for making computer-recommended moves in the game’s middle stages: Niemann said he had the good fortune of analyzing the exact line that he and Carlsen played earlier that same day.

The incident quickly expanded into a broader discussion in the chess community. With computers far better than the best humans and online play increasingly popular for both casual play and paid tournaments, cheating is rampant despite advanced detection systems.

Though he was allowed to finish the tournament, Niemann soon found his career threatened. He was banned by Chess.com, the game’s most popular online platform, and disinvited from its $1 million Global Championship later that year. The site produced a 72-page report, detailing cheating by Niemann beyond what he had admitted to. He soon found other tournament invites hard to come by. The cheating allegations against Niemann reached the point when he was asked on live television whether he had used vibrating anal beads during matches.

Though Carlsen and Chess.com maintain they acted independently of each other, they had an awkward coincidence of their own: A month before the Sinquefield Cup, Chess.com agreed to purchase Carlsen’s company, Play Magnus Group, for more than $80 million. The merger was finalized the following December on the same day the platform announced it had reached 100 million users.

Niemann would launch his counteroffensive the next month: a $100 million lawsuit against Carlsen, Chess.com, its chief chess officer Daniel Rensch, and grandmaster Hikaru Nakamura, who is favored to face the winner of Carlsen and Niemann’s match Friday. He alleged Carlsen and Chess.com colluded to destroy his career.

A judge dismissed Niemann’s claims of defamation and all parties eventually settled, at least in the legal sense. Niemann was allowed to return to Chess.com and play in its events, including the tournament that has him in Paris on Friday.

Niemann, however, has not backed down. In a fiery interview last month following his quarterfinal victory in the Speed Chess Championship, he called Chess.com a “monopoly and mafia,” and doubled down on the claim that the Play Magnus merger motivated his ban from the site. 

As for his semifinal opponent, Niemann claims plenty of motivation to pull an upset.

“The only reason I was defamed and attacked was that someone had a personal vendetta and acted to ruin my career.”

Linkedin
Whatsapp
Copy Link
Link Copied
Link Copied

What to Read

ESPNers React to Adrian Wojnarowski’s Stunning Retirement

“We sure didn’t ask him to leave, I can assure you of that.”
Sen. Jon Tester, D-Mont, arriving to the hearing where Gary Gensler, Chair, U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission would testify before the COMMITTEE ON BANKING, HOUSING, AND URBAN AFFAIRS hearing on “Oversight of the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission.”

Political NIL Deals Open Another Window for College Athlete Paydays

Two University of Montana athletes have signed NIL deals endorsing political candidates.
podcast thumbnail mobile
Front Office Sports Today

MLBPA Suing Sportsbooks; Ben Shelton Talks Laver Cup

0:00

Featured Today

Crypto.com soccer advertising

The Champions League Is Back. So Is Crypto Sponsorship

Crypto investment is making its debut in the biggest European soccer competition.
New York Boulders
September 10, 2024

On the Fringes of Pro Baseball, a Tiny Independent Team’s Attempt to Create Stars

In the Frontier League, every bit helps to make it to the Show.
September 4, 2024

Northwestern’s Tiny Temporary Football Stadium Is Making Big Money

Despite 35,000 fewer fans in seats, Northwestern is bringing in more revenue.
Aug 25, 2024; Denver, Colorado, USA; Detailed view of a Denver Broncos snapping the football in the second half against the Arizona Cardinals at Empower Field at Mile High.
September 3, 2024

How NFL Streaming Will Work With Coverage Across Four Exclusive Platforms

Each week will feature at least one game exclusively on a streaming service.
Carolina Panthers quarterback Bryce Young

Panthers Have Few Good Financial Options With Now Benched Bryce Young

Young, the No. 1 pick in the 2023 NFL draft, was benched Monday.
Las Vegas Aces center A'ja Wilson (22) signs a poster Friday, Sept. 13, 2024, during a game between the Indiana Fever and the Las Vegas Aces on Friday, Sept. 13, 2024, at Gainbridge Fieldhouse in Indianapolis. The Aces defeated the Fever, 78-74.
September 16, 2024

A’ja Wilson: WNBA’s First Million-Dollar Player?

Wilson’s contract times up with a league-wide influx of cash in 2026.
Jordan Chiles, Simone Biles
September 17, 2024

Simone Biles’s Documentary Could Help Jordan Chiles’s Medal Appeal

The footage questions the notion Chiles submitted her challenge too late.
Sponsored

The Women Fueling The Future Of Football

In this episode of FOS Explains, fueled by Gatorade, we discuss how women are changing the landscape of the NFL and the business of football.
September 15, 2024

Tua Will Meet With Doctors

As calls grow for him to retire, reports suggest the Miami star is not leaning that way.
Rafael Nadal and Roger Federer
September 13, 2024

Patrick McEnroe Says Nadal’s Laver Cup Withdrawal Was ‘Right Move’

Nadal has dealt with injuries over the last two years.
A member of the Miami Dolphins training staff attends to quarterback Tua Tagovailoa
September 13, 2024

What Walking Away Would Mean for Tua Tagovailoa’s Contract

The quarterback is facing calls to retire after another concussion Thursday night.
September 12, 2024

Team USA’s Uniform Maker Is Shooting for a Long-Term Win

This week’s uniforms are honoring the Armed Forces.