Tag Archives: Hans

Chess outcast Hans Niemann says he was a top cyclist. Was he really?

Since early September, the usually genteel world of competitive chess has descended into acrimony and suspicion. There have been accusations, and admissions, of cheating. There have been (probably erroneous) allegations of vibrating anal beads. There have been vast lawsuits filed. Most news outlets in the world have weighed in. And at the centre of it all is Hans Moke Niemann, a 19-year-old US chess prodigy. 

Niemann’s meteoric rise in world chess was capped by an upset victory over five-time reigning world champ Magnus Carlsen, the highest-ranked chess player in history. Carlsen didn’t like what he saw, hinting that he thought there was something improper afoot before going a step further and saying it outright.

In an impassioned defense, Niemann hit back at his critics, confessing to cheating twice in online games aged 12 and 16, calling it “the single biggest mistake of my life,” and saying that “this is the full truth … I’d like to see if everyone else can actually tell their truth.”

Soon after, Chess.com released a blisteringly spicy report indicating that it was likely Niemann had cheated in more than 100 games – including prize money events and live-streamed games, some against the world’s top players.

Six weeks later, the 19-year-old is now pursuing his truth to the tune of US$100 million in damages, with a lawsuit against Carlsen, Chess.com and popular chess streamer Hikaru Nakamura. Niemann says he’s been defamed and blacklisted from the sport. The other parties believe, in the words of Carlsen, that “Niemann has cheated more — and more recently — than he has publicly admitted”.

Hans Niemann in an October 2022 game, the day after a press conference where he said he “won’t back down”. (Photo by TIM VIZER/AFP via Getty Images)

At the core of this whole mess, really, is that concept of ‘truth.’ Niemann has maintained his version of it, particularly in a September 7 interview – “There has been a lot of speculation, and there’s been a lot of things said, and I think I’m the only one who knows the truth,” he said emphatically. Niemann maintains he’s never cheated in ‘over the board’ games (as opposed to online), and independent adjudicators tend to agree, even if there’s a whole lot of smoke around the integrity of his results up to 2020.

But is Hans Niemann a reliable narrator? And more to the point, why are we writing about him (again) at CyclingTips?

The answer: before Niemann was a chess prodigy, he was apparently a top cyclist on the national stage.

Was he as good as he says he was? Well – that depends on your version of the truth. 

Check yourself before Utrecht yourself

When Hans Niemann suddenly became a household name this year, his past results as a chess player were pored over by Grandmasters, fans, and media trying to work out where he came from and whether his rise was believable. 

Niemann’s ascent has been fast and he’s still in his teens, but in chess terms, he’s seen as something of a late bloomer. Where that talent sprouted was in Utrecht, the Netherlands, where Niemann’s family once lived.

His parents – one Danish, one Hawaiian – were ex-pats working in the IT industry, and their son began chess classes at the age of eight. At that stage, it wasn’t just chess that had his attention.

(Photo by Artur Widak/NurPhoto via Getty Images)

According to De Volkskrant newspaper, “he also liked to get on his racing bike to participate in competitions.” According to Niemann, meanwhile, he “was advancing much more rapidly [in cycling]” than in chess. For the duration of his time living and riding in the Netherlands, Niemann sat in the youngest two age categories, holding a license with the Royal Dutch Cycling Union (KNWU) for two years, in 2011 and 2012. 

In the Netherlands, “from the age of 8 it is possible to compete in races and be as competitive as you wish,” a KNWU spokesperson told me, when asked whether the focus in the youth ranks was on competition or development. “Some riders are focussed on results from a young age, others need and/or take more time.” 

Niemann seems to have fallen into the former category. In a 2020 article he wrote for the US Chess Federation, he said that “I have always been a single-minded person. I competed in cycling in the Netherlands and was one of the top cyclists in the nation for my age when I moved back to California, so my competitive spirit has always been what motivates me in everything.”

A youth race at Niemann’s old club, WV Het Stadion. Photo: wvhetstadion.nl

“One of the top cyclists in the nation” is an ambiguous statement, and the wording is a bit woolly – it’s not clear whether he was at that point referring to his results in the Netherlands, or in the US upon his return, and there’s no numerical ranking. Regardless, if it is the Netherlands we’re talking about, we have a problem: in the words of De Volkskrant, “his claim that he is one of the best in his age group in the Netherlands is difficult to verify. There are no results on the internet that indicate this.” 

So what do we know about Hans Niemann’s cycling in the Netherlands? Well, he rode for the WV Het Stadion club, for starters – a club that bills itself as “the nicest* cycling club in Utrecht [* and also the sportiest, most beautiful, most versatile and nicest cycling association in the Domstad]”.

The only results of Niemann’s that CyclingTips could unearth were from the 2012 National Championships – five laps of a short circuit for a total of 7 km, where Niemann finished a minute back from the winner in a 12 and a half minute race, 25th out of 35 entrants. 

Soon after, he was gone, leaving behind him in Utrecht a raft of chess tutors who remember him as “very fanatical” in his drive, paired with having a “very angry” streak when he lost. An approach to WV Het Stadion for information about his time with the cycling club went unanswered.

Hans Niemann, October 2022. (Photo by TIM VIZER/AFP via Getty Images)

California dreaming

By the end of 2012, the Niemanns had left the Netherlands and returned to California, where his cycling continued into 2013. In most of his races, he was unaffiliated with a club or team, although through June and July of that year – his last competitive outings – he is listed as riding for WV Het Stadion, his old Dutch club, more than half a year after he’d left the country. 

There are clues of young Niemann’s technological interest in the sport. He was an extremely early adopter of Strava, first logging a ride in February 2012 (he followed just one rider, Joe Dombrowski, and Niemann’s account is long dormant). But there are much more recent clues of Niemann using his cycling background to build his mythology. 

In April 2021, Niemann relayed his life story to Chess Life magazine, a lengthy monologue with a very specific claim – both numerically and geographically – at the start of it. “I continued cycling upon my initial return to the States, finding myself ranked third for my age nationally,” Niemann says. Weirdly passive sentence construction aside, that statement is sharper than what he was saying a year earlier, and easier to disprove.

Hans Niemann was the cover star of Chess Life magazine, in which he spoke about his cycling background.

So, was he the third-best cyclist of his age in the US?  

There’s nothing in the results on USA Cycling’s database that appears to support that statement. At the Northern California Nevada Cycling Association district track championships, he finished fifth of five riders, in all six races. In the Valley of the Sun Road Race, he finished sixth of eight on the general classification. In 24 races he started through the 2013 season, Niemann took no wins. Of his eight podium finishes, only two races had more than three riders. 

USA Cycling’s rankings are calculated on a rolling basis and constantly in a state of flux, but on this evidence it’s difficult to see Niemann as one of the top-ranked riders of his age in his state, let alone the entire country. No national championships appearances, few departures from the bubble of Californian cycling, no signs of a future cycling star’s anointment.

Which, to be clear, really doesn’t matter – forensic analysis of the race results of a child is not what youth competition should be about. “While USA Cycling does offer competitive opportunities for Juniors under the age of 12,” a spokesperson told me, “we believe that at that age it’s mostly about skill development and making sure they have fun on the bike.”

And by July 2013, Hans Niemann seems to have stopped having fun on the bike, or found something in chess that drove him more – “I quit cycling and really focused on chess,” he said of a 10-year-old version of himself that already saw the game as a “career”.

World-leading chess star Magnus Carlsen, of Norway, at a 2022 tournament. He is now facing a US$100 million lawsuit from Hans Niemann, who believes that he has been defamed. (Photo by OLAF KRAAK/ANP/AFP via Getty Images)

The end of the road

That leads us to the end of Hans Niemann’s foray into cycling – his dalliance with the sport that is mostly remarkable for how unremarkable it is. And that’s fine. Kids start riding, and kids stop. Kids win races and kids don’t. Kids come up with brash stories on the playground. Sometimes kids are told they’re special at something, and some of them probably internalise it and let the lines between truth and fiction blur.

But if you look at things a certain way – when a kid grows into the most controversial chess player in the world, staking his reputation and millions of dollars on the absolute truth of his words and actions – an inflated set of cycling results from a decade ago starts looking a bit less mundane, and a bit more instructive.

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Hans Niemann files defamation lawsuit seeking $100 million in damages



CNN
 — 

The cheating scandal that has consumed the chess world has taken its latest twist as American grandmaster Hans Niemann filed a defamation lawsuit against world champion Magnus Carlsen amongst others in a Missouri court on Thursday.

In the lawsuit, Niemann and his attorneys state that they are seeking at least $100 million in damages.

“My lawsuit speaks for itself,” Niemann tweeted along with a copy of the lawsuit.

In the federal lawsuit filed in the Eastern Missouri District Court, 19-year-old Niemann states that the Norwegian Carlsen, online platform Chess.com, their chief chess officer Daniel Rensch and popular streamer Hikaru Nakamura have been “egregiously defaming him and unlawfully colluding to blacklist him from the profession to which he has dedicated his life.”

Niemann is suing the defendants for slander and libel, among other allegations.

Niemann also states that the actions of the defendants have caused “devastating damages,” and that since Carlsen made the initial cheating allegations after the pair met at the Sinquefield Cup in St. Louis on September 4, Niemann has had invitations to prestigious tournaments and matches revoked.

Chess.com responded to the suit via a statement from their lawyers, Nina Mohebbi and Jamie Wine. The statement notes that Chess.com is “saddened” by Niemann’s decision as the lawsuit “hurts the game of chess and its devoted players.”

“Hans confessed publicly to cheating online in the wake of the Sinquefield Cup, and the resulting fallout is of his own making,” the statement adds. “As stated in its October 2022 report, Chess.com had historically dealt with Hans’ prior cheating privately, and was forced to clarify its position only after he spoke out publicly.”

“There is no merit to Hans’ allegations, and Chess.com looks forward to setting the record straight on behalf of its team and all honest chess players,” the statement says.

CNN has reached out to Carlsen and Nakamura for comment.



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Hans Niemann Files $100 Million Lawsuit Against Magnus Carlsen, Chess.com Over Cheating Allegations

Hans Moke Niemann, the 19-year-old American grandmaster at the center of an alleged cheating scandal that has pulsed drama through the chess world, has made his next move: He sued world champion Magnus Carlsen and others seeking $100 million in damages. 

The federal lawsuit, filed in the Eastern Missouri District Court, says that Carlsen, Chess.com and others, including grandmaster Hikaru Nakamura, are “colluding to blacklist” Niemann from the chess world and have made defamatory statements accusing Niemann of cheating. Niemann is seeking damages of no less than $100 million in the suit, which said that tournament organizers have shunned him since the allegations emerged. 

“This is not a game,” Niemann’s lawyers, Terrence Oved and Darren Oved, said in a statement. “Defendants have destroyed Niemann’s life simply because he had the talent, dedication and audacity to defeat the so-called ‘King of Chess.’ We will hold defendants fully accountable and expose the truth.”

Chess.com chief chess officer Danny Rensch didn’t have an immediate comment. Chess.com has previously said that it did not communicate with Carlsen about its decisions relating to Niemann. A spokesman for Carlsen didn’t immediately respond to a request for comment. Nakamura, while streaming on Twitch, said he didn’t have a comment.

At the heart of Niemann’s suit are the financial relationships between Chess.com, Carlsen and other power players in the industry. The complaint alleged that Chess.com colluded with Carlsen because the company is buying Carlsen’s “Play Magnus” app for nearly $83 million in a merger that will “monopolize the chess world.” The planned acquisition was first announced in August. 

Niemann accused the defendants, which also include Play Magnus and Rensch, of slander, libel, an unlawful boycott and tortious interference with Niemann’s business. 

‘This is not a game,’ Niemann’s lawyers, Terrence Oved and Darren Oved, said in a statement.



Photo:

Oved & Oved LLP

Niemann’s legal action is his most aggressive maneuver since the controversy first erupted in early September at a prestigious tournament in St. Louis when Niemann stunningly upset Carlsen. After the game, Carlsen abruptly withdrew from the tournament—an action that was widely interpreted as a sign of protest. In another event a few weeks later, Carlsen resigned a game against Niemann after making just one move. 

Shortly thereafter, the five-time world champion from Norway confirmed everyone’s suspicions. In a statement, Carlsen said that he believes “Niemann has cheated more—and more recently—than he has publicly admitted.”

As the scandal engulfed the Sinquefield Cup, the tournament in St. Louis, Niemann offered a defense. He admitted to cheating in limited circumstances online when he was 12 and 16 years old, and said they were the biggest mistakes of his life. He said the only instance he cheated when there was money on the line was when he was 12, and that he never cheated during in-person games. 

A report from Chess.com alleging that grandmaster Hans Moke Niemann likely cheated in over 100 online games upended the chess world in October. WSJ explains how a player might bypass security measures to win a game. Illustration: Adele Morgan

However, an investigation by Chess.com, first reported by The Wall Street Journal, contradicted Niemann and indicated the breadth of his fairplay violations was greater then he had let on. The report said Niemann had likely cheated in more than 100 games, including as a 17-year-old and in other events with money on the line, and that Niemann had privately admitted to violating the rules when he was banned from the site in 2020. 

The report didn’t make any conclusions about whether Niemann has cheated in person, as the platform doesn’t police over-the-board events, but it flagged certain events where it said his play merited further investigation. 

Niemann’s lawsuit takes aim at that report, which it said Chess.com “maliciously leaked to The Wall Street Journal to fuel the spectacle of Carlsen’s cheating allegations” before Niemann’s participation in the U.S. Chess Championship. The lawsuit denied that Niemann ever confessed to the cheating allegations and said that its findings about the extent of Niemann’s cheating is false.

After Carlsen withdrew from the Sinquefield Cup, Chess.com removed Niemann from its Chess.com Global Championship, a tournament with $1 million in prize money. 

Chess.com said in the report that while Carlsen’s actions at the Sinquefield Cup prompted it to reassess Niemann’s behavior, Carlsen “didn’t talk with, ask for, or directly influence Chess.com’s decisions at all.” 

The lawsuit further alleged that the parties worked with powerful influencers to amplify the allegations against Niemann. In particular, it names Hikaru Nakamura, a top American grandmaster who has gained extraordinary popularity by streaming chess content. The suit calls Nakamura “Chess.com’s most influential streaming partner” and accused him of “acting in collusion with Carlsen and Chess.com, published hours of video content amplifying and attempting to bolster Carlsen’s false cheating allegations against Niemann.” 

Because of the cheating allegations, the complaint said, one tournament that Niemann was making arrangements to play in ceased communications with him. It also said that another grandmaster canceled an upcoming match against him and that Niemann can’t obtain employment as a chess teacher at a reputable school. 

Write to Andrew Beaton at andrew.beaton@wsj.com and Joshua Robinson at Joshua.Robinson@wsj.com

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Embattled chess star Hans Niemann breaks silence after damning cheating allegations

American chess player Hans Niemann broke his silence Wednesday after he was accused in an investigation of cheating 100 times more than he previously admitted in online matches.

The Chess.com report that implicated Niemann came out before his first match at the U.S. Championship, which is an over-the-board tournament. 

Video from the event showed the 19-year-old being scanned around his backside and even on the snacks he brought for the day. 

Niemann had been accused of using devices to help him cheat in matches, including anal beads. He defeated Christopher Yoo in his first-round match.

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Hans Niemann said Oct. 5 he “won’t back down,” after the chess platform Chess.com reported he has “probably cheated more than 100 times” in online games.
(Tim Vizer/AFP via Getty Images)

He then spoke briefly about the Chess.com report after the match.

“I think that this game is a message to everyone,” he told the Saint Louis Chess Club. “This entire thing started with me saying chess speaks for itself. And I think that this game spoke for itself and showed the chess player that I am and also showed that I’m not going to back down. And I’m going to play my best chess here regardless of the pressure that I’m under. And that’s all I have to say about this game. Chess speaks for itself is all I can say.”

He cut the interview short after about 50 seconds.

A Chess.com report implicated Hans Niemann in a cheating scandal.
(Tim Vizer/AFP via Getty Images)

MAGNUS CARLSEN RIPS HANS NIEMANN IN LATEST CHAPTER OF CHESS FEUD, ACCUSES HIM OF CHEATING

Chess24 noted that Niemann’s “chess speaks for itself” quip was reminiscent of his flare-up with Magnus Carlsen in Miami at the FTX Crypto Cup. After beating Carlsen in one match, Niemann told a reporter outside the playing area, “The chess speaks for itself.”

Carlsen, the No. 1 chess player in the world, flatly accused Niemann of cheating late last month. On Monday, Chess.com released its report.

Chess.com, an online platform with which anyone can play the game and study the rules and strategy, shared a report of its investigation with the Wall Street Journal. The report indicated Niemann “likely received illegal assistance in more than 100 online games” and as recently as 2020.

U.S. international grandmaster Hans Niemann waits his turn to move during a second-round chess game against Jeffery Xiong on the second day of the Saint Louis Chess Club Fall Chess Classic in St. Louis, Missouri, Oct. 6, 2022. 
(Tim Vizer/AFP via Getty Images)

Some of the matches Niemann was accused to have cheated in involved prize money. Niemann reportedly admitted to the allegations and was banned from Chess.com for a period of time.

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Chess.com didn’t say whether Niemann had cheated in over-the-board contests. The website has cheating-detection tools and hasn’t been involved with any type of cheating detection for over-the-board games, according to the Wall Street Journal.

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Hans Niemann: Chess grandmaster ‘not going to back down’ amid cheating allegations



CNN
 — 

Chess grandmaster Hans Niemann said he is “not going to back down” as accusations of widespread cheating intensify.

On Tuesday, an investigation by popular online platform Chess.com claimed Niemann “likely cheated” in more than 100 online matches, a week after world champion Magnus Carlsen explicitly accused the American of cheating in over-the-board games.

The 19-year-old Niemann has only admitted to cheating twice in his chess career at the ages of 12 and 16, and on Wednesday said his “chess speaks for itself” after defeating Christopher Yoo in the first round of the US championship in St. Louis.

“This game is a message to everyone,” Niemann said after his victory. “This entire thing started with me saying chess speaks for itself and I think this game spoke for itself and showed the chess player that I am.

“It also showed that I’m not going to back down and I’m going to play my best chess here regardless of the pressure that I’m under.”

After giving just one answer, Niemann ended his post-game interview by saying “it was such a beautiful game I don’t even need to describe it.”

He next faces Jeffery Xiong in the second round of the US championship, which runs until October 20.

According to the report by Chess.com, Niemann privately confessed to cheating to the website’s chief chess officer in 2020, which led to him being temporarily banned from the platform.

The report said Chess.com closed Niemann’s account in September given his previous acknowledgments of cheating, suspicions about his recent play and concerns about the steep, inconsistent rise in his rank.

“While we don’t doubt that Hans is a talented player, we note that his results are statistically extraordinary,” the report said.

CNN has previously contacted Niemann regarding the allegations in the report.

Carlsen first made explicit allegations of Niemann’s cheating after two incidents between the pair – the first when Carlsen withdrew from last month’s Sinquefield Cup after a defeat against Niemann, and the second when he quit their match at the Julius Baer Generation Cup after making just one move.

The Norwegian said he believes that his rival “has cheated more – and more recently – than he has publicly admitted” and that “his over the board progress has been unusual.”

“Throughout our game in the Sinquefield Cup I had the impression that he wasn’t tense or even fully concentrating on the game in critical positions, while outplaying me as black in a way I think only a handful of players can do,” Carlsen added.

FIDE, the sport’s global governing body, said it would launch an investigation following Carlsen’s claims.

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Chess.com investigation alleges ‘likely’ cheating by Hans Niemann

In a 72-page report released Tuesday, a major online chess platform found that Hans Niemann “likely cheated” on its site more frequently and at a later age than he has publicly acknowledged.

A 19-year-old American grandmaster, Niemann has been at the center of a storm in the chess world since early last month, when an upset victory over world No. 1 Magnus Carlsen was followed by Carlsen hinting that something nefarious had occurred. Niemann subsequently said he had cheated in matches on Chess.com when he was 12 and 16 years old but insisted he had not since then repeated what he described as “an absolutely ridiculous mistake.” Niemann added he had never cheated “in a tournament with prize money.”

Carlsen, a Norwegian grandmaster, then staged a protest of Niemann by withdrawing from a rematch after playing just one move. Late last month, Carlsen gave voice to his actions and accused Niemann of having “cheated more — and more recently — than he has publicly admitted.” Tuesday’s report from Chess.com, which bills itself as “the No. 1 platform for online chess,” added some backing to Carlsen’s unspecific accusations.

Pointing to its “best-in-class” cheating-detection system, the website claimed Niemann “likely cheated” in more than 100 online games, including some that occurred after he had turned 17 and took place in prize-money events.

In chess, a long history of cheating, chicanery and Cold War shenanigans

At the same time, Chess.com said its investigation failed to turn up an abundance of “concrete statistical evidence” that Niemann cheated in his over-the-board (i.e., in-person) win over Carlsen or in a number of other OTB games. However, the site added that it found “suspicious” certain aspects of that victory, which broke Carlsen’s 53-game OTB winning streak despite Niemann playing from the slightly disadvantageous black position and noted his “statistically extraordinary” rise in the sport.

Niemann has not publicly commented on the Chess.com findings, which were first reported by the Wall Street Journal on Tuesday. He is set to compete in the U.S. Chess Championships beginning Wednesday in St. Louis. Officials with the Saint Louis Chess Club, which is hosting the OTB tournament, did not specifically address Niemann in response to a request for comment but expressed the club’s commitment to preventing cheating more generally.

“We take great pride in being able to host the top chess players from across the world at the Saint Louis Chess Club,” executive director Tony Rich said in a statement Wednesday morning. “As with all events, it’s imperative that we maintain high standards for fair tournament play. We always have — and will continue — to implement extensive anti-cheating measures.

“As we prepare for the upcoming U.S. Chess and U.S. Women’s Chess Championships, we anticipate hosting another successful event, complete with rigorous protocols to ensure the best chess players in the country can continue to compete on an even playing field.”

Jenkins: When chess is hard and cheating is easy, the next move is complicated

Chess.com said it removed Niemann from its platform and disinvited him from a major competition it is staging. The site said it dealt with him confidentially, keeping with its regular policy, and only began to make public statements on his situation after he spoke about their dealings. Niemann served an earlier suspension from the site and admitted to cheating, Chess.com said, after its “cheating-detection software and team uncovered suspicious play” at that time.

“We believe Hans is an incredibly strong player and a talented individual,” Chess.com stated in its report. “That said, given his history on our site, we did not believe we could ensure that he would play fairly in our online events until we could re-evaluate the evidence and our protocols. Nevertheless, and to be clear, it is not our position that Hans should be limited or banned from OTB chess.”

The International Chess Federation (FIDE), the sport’s governing body, announced in late September that it was launching an investigation of Carlsen’s accusations of cheating and Niemann’s comments on the matter. FIDE said its probe would be led by members of its Fair Play Commission and would include “the possibility to call for a consultation with external experts wherever analysis is required.” Chess.com indicated it was prepared to cooperate with FIDE’s investigation should it be asked to do so.

Cheating by a chess player, particularly in an online game, probably would involve connecting to a chess computer, or engine, capable of playing at a higher level than any human has been able to attain.

“Most chess engines use neural nets which have been trained on millions of top level chess games to capture the deepest of chess strategic understanding,” Chess.com noted. “They also have nearly infallible tactical calculation, as they can look more than 40+ moves deep into the position and calculate potential outcomes.”

Niemann has been alleged to have used such an engine in OTB matches, although his means of possibly doing so remain in the realm of speculation.

Carlsen said that during his loss last month, he “had the impression that [Niemann] wasn’t tense or even fully concentrating on the game in critical positions, while outplaying me as black in a way I think only a handful of players can do.”

Arousing suspicion from others was Niemann’s adroit counter after Carlsen made a relatively unusual opening. Niemann said afterward that “by some miracle” he had looked into the possibility of that sequence earlier in the day, adding, “It’s so ridiculous that I checked it.”

In its report, Chess.com pointed to other postgame comments by Niemann, in which he proposed a move that could have been made and then requested to see an engine’s evaluation of the move.

“This analysis and dependence on the engine,” the report stated, “seem to be at odds with the level of preparation that Hans claimed was at play in the game and the level of analysis needed to defeat the World Chess Champion.”

Chess.com claimed its cheating-detection system — which uses comparisons to both engine-recommended moves and a given player’s competitive profile, as well as input from “a panel of trained analysts” — had led to confessions of wrongdoing from four players in the FIDE top 100. In addition, the system was said to have resulted in the closure of online accounts of “dozens” of grandmasters, plus those of hundreds of other notable players.

The site reiterated that it was “unaware of any concrete evidence proving that Hans is cheating over the board or has ever cheated over the board.” Chess.com added that while some of Niemann’s recent online play appeared suspicious, it was not aware of evidence that he had cheated after August 2020. Chess.com also downplayed the possibility of widespread cheating on its platform, saying it estimated fewer than 0.14 percent of its users engage in such behavior.

“Our events are by and large free from cheating,” Chess.com said in the report. “We firmly believe that cheating in chess is rare, preventable, and much less pervasive than is currently being portrayed in the media.”



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Hans Niemann: American chess star accused of cheating by rival Magnus Carlsen has likely done so in more than 100 games, report claims

An American chess star who has been accused of cheating by world champion Magnus Carlsen has likely done so in more than 100 games, a report has claimed.

Hans Niemann, 19, has previously admitted cheating twice in games when he was aged 12 and 16, but an investigation by chess.com has allegedly found more occasions, according to The Wall Street Journal.

Mr Carlsen, the number one player in the world, branded his rival a cheat last month after he withdrew from a tournament after losing to him, then resigned from an online match against him after one move.

The newspaper states that the report by chess.com, a platform where many of the world’s top chess players compete in online matches, alleges “that Niemann likely received illegal assistance in more than 100 online games, as recently as 2020. Those matches included contests in which prize money was on the line.”

The platform reportedly used a string of tools to detect the alleged cheating, including an analytics programme that compares human moves to those recommended by chess engines, “which are capable of beating even the greatest human players every time.”

The report states that some of the alleged cheating took place as recently as 2020, when Mr Niemann was 17 years old.

The Journal says that Mr Niemann “privately confessed to the allegations” and that he was “subsequently banned from the site for a period of time.”

The report noted that Mr Niemann’s improvement had been “statistically extraordinary” but did not make any conclusion as to any irregularities in his in-person games.

But it said that some of Mr Niemann’s strongest events “merit further investigation based on the data.” An investigation into Mr Carlsen’s claims is also being carried out by the sport’s governing body, FIDE.

“Outside his online play, Hans is the fastest rising top player in Classical (over-the-board) chess in modern history,” the report states.

“Looking purely at rating, Hans should be classified as a member of this group of top young players. While we don’t doubt that Hans is a talented player, we note that his results are statistically extraordinary.”

Mr Carlsen won the Julius Baer Generation Cup despite resigning against Mr Niemann, after which he said that he understood that his “actions have frustrated many in the chess community.”

“I’m frustrated. I want to play chess. I want to continue to play chess at the highest level in the best events,” he stated.

“I believe that cheating in chess is a big deal and an existential threat to the game. I also believe that chess organizers and all those who care about the sanctity of the game we love should seriously consider increasing security measures and methods of cheat detection for over-the-board chess.”

Mr Carlsen stated that he had considered pulling out of the event when Niemann was invited to take part and was blunt in his allegations against his opponent.

“I believe that Niemann has cheated more — and more recently — than he has publicly admitted.”

Mr Niemann has insisted that he has never cheated in a live-streaming game. “I would never, could even fathom doing it, in a real game,” he said.

The chess.com report states that of the more than 100 suspect games, 25 were live-streamed and that there were several prize-money events.

The Independent has reached out to Mr Niemann for comment.

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Magnus Carlsen quits match without explanation amid apparent feud with fellow grandmaster Hans Niemann



CNN
 — 

Shortly after making his first move, world champion Magnus Carlsen resigned from an online chess match against fellow grandmaster Hans Niemann on Monday.

The pair were playing in the Julius Baer Generation Cup when Carlsen turned off his screen and left the match without explanation – the latest twist in an apparent feud between the two players.

“We’re going to try and get an update on this,” commentator Tania Sachdev said in a live broadcast of the match on chess24. “Magnus Carlsen just resigned – got up and left, switched off his camera and that’s all we know right now.”

CNN contacted Carlsen’s representatives for comment but did not receive a response.

Earlier this month, the Norwegian withdrew from the Sinquefield Cup in Saint Louis following his surprise defeat against American star Niemann – the first time he has withdrawn from a tournament in his career, according to chess24.

Carlsen confirmed his withdrawal on Twitter, posting: “I’ve withdrawn from the tournament. I’ve always enjoyed playing in the @STLChessClub, and hope to be back in the future.” Carlsen’s tweet also included a well-known video of football manager Jose Mourinho saying: “If I speak, I am in big trouble.”

Another grandmaster, Hikaru Nakamura, said Carlsen is “suspicious” of Niemann’s conduct, and days after the Sinquefield Cup match, Niemann publicly responded to allegations that he had cheated earlier in his chess career.

The 19-year-old admitted to cheating at the ages of 12 and 16 but said in an interview with the St. Louis Chess Club he had never cheated in over-the-board games.

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“I’m saying my truth because I do not want any misrepresentation,” said Niemann. “I am proud of myself that I have learned from that mistake, and now I have given everything to chess. I have sacrificed everything for chess.”

The tension between Niemann and Carlsen has rocked the chess community. Niemann said he had been removed from popular website Chess.com following Carlsen’s tweet and that “the entire social media and chess world is completely attacking me and undermining me.”

“To see my absolute hero (Carlsen) try to target, try to ruin my reputation, ruin my chess career and to do it in such a frivolous way is really, really disappointing,” he added.

Neither Niemann nor Chess.com responded to CNN’s request for comment.

In a statement on September 8, Chess.com’s Chief Chess Officer Danny Rensch said the site had “shared detailed evidence with [Niemann] concerning our decision, including information that contradicts his statements regarding the amount and seriousness of his cheating.”

Rensch continued: “We have invited Hans to provide an explanation and response with the hope of finding a resolution where Hans can again participate on Chess.com.”

Carlsen and Niemann played two further games against other opponents following the former’s sudden resignation on Monday. Carlsen is two points behind leader Arjun Erigaisi in the tournament standings after eight rounds, while Niemann is four points back.

“It looks like he (Carlsen) is clearly insinuating something, but until you catch someone, you cannot do anything,” Anish Giri, who is also competing at the Julius Baer Generation Cup, told chess24.

“It just looks very odd now. Clearly, it all makes sense if, supposedly, Hans is cheating and he doesn’t want to play him, but if he isn’t (cheating), then it is really very wrong.

“So I don’t know, we have to see. Again, everybody is expecting some kind of big rabbit from the hat with Magnus, but he just doesn’t want to play Hans, it seems.”

Levon Aronian, who is also competing in the tournament, said Niemann “has been not the cleanest person when it comes to online chess,” but added that “this is a problem that requires a solution.”



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Magnus Carlsen resigns from chess match against Hans Niemann

World chess champion Magnus Carlsen stunningly withdrew Monday after making just one move in a match against a 19-year-old American, Hans Niemann. The episode added a new chapter to a storyline that has gripped the chess world and beyond, one that involves suggestions that Niemann cheated in a recent victory against the Norwegian grandmaster.

The two were playing an online match Monday in the Julius Baer Generation Cup, using the Chess24 platform via Microsoft Teams, when Carlsen’s webcam suddenly switched off while he was on the clock for his second move.

“What happened? That’s it?” exclaimed Peter Leko, a grandmaster who was providing analysis on the feed.

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“We’re going to try to get an update on this,” said fellow analyst and international master Tania Sachdev. “Magnus Carlsen just resigned. Got up and left. Switched off his camera, and that’s all we know right now.”

“Wow — speechless, yeah?” Leko said.

Carlsen, 31, was leading the tournament in the early going at the time. The Julius Baer Generation Cup is the seventh event on the nine-tournament Champions Chess Tour, which runs from February until November. Carlsen is in first place in the series, while Niemann ranks 16th.

Carlsen and Niemann were competing this month in the Sinquefield Cup, a St. Louis-based, in-person event on the Grand Chess Tour, when Niemann defeated the five-time world champion. Adding to the massive level of upset was that Carlsen was on a 53-match unbeaten streak in over-the-board tournaments and held a significant rating advantage over Niemann.

The next day, Carlsen withdrew from the Sinquefield Cup, saying in a tweet that he always enjoyed competing there and hoped to be back in the future.

What sent the chess world into a tizzy, however, was that Carlsen appended to his tweet a video clip of famed soccer manager José Mourinho saying in 2021: “I prefer really not to speak. If I speak, I am in big trouble.”

The tweet gave the impression that Carlsen was hinting at some nefarious behavior on the part of Niemann, who has enjoyed a meteoric rise in the sport. Speculation that Niemann was cheating only increased after Hikaru Nakamura, a 34-year-old American grandmaster who has a massive following for his Twitch streams, offered his take shortly after Carlsen’s withdrawal.

“This is probably something I should not say, but I will say this anyway, which is: There was a period of over six months where Hans did not play any prize-money tournaments on Chess.com,” Nakamura said. “That is the one thing that I’m going to say, and that is the only thing that I’m going to say on this topic.”

Nakamura added on his Twitch stream: “I think that Magnus believes that Hans probably is cheating. … He’s withdrawing to make the point without publicly making the point.”

Niemann, who was subjected to a thorough scan for devices that could help him cheat when he arrived for another match at the St. Louis tournament, subsequently admitted to having cheated several years before on Chess.com.

In a Sept. 5 interview with grandmaster Alejandro Ramirez that was shared online by the Saint Louis Chess Club, which hosted the Sinquefield Cup, Niemann said his cheating on Chess.com occurred when he was 12 — “I was just a child” — and 16. Of the latter episode, he said he wanted to gain higher ratings so he could “play stronger players” and was eager at the time to “do anything to grow my stream.”

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Describing his unethical behavior as “an absolutely ridiculous mistake,” Niemann asserted that since then, he has “never in my life” cheated.

“I am proud of myself,” he said, “that I learned from that mistake and now have given everything to chess. … I was confronted, I confessed, and this is the single biggest mistake of my life and I’m completely ashamed.”

“I am not going to let Chess.com, I’m not going to let Magnus Carlsen, I’m not going to let Hikaru Nakamura — the three arguably biggest entities in chess — simply slander my reputation,” Niemann added, “because the question is: Why are they going to remove me from Chess.com right after I beat Magnus? What’s with the timing?”

Chess.com, which bills itself as “the #1 platform for online chess,” released a statement a few days later in which it explained its de-platforming of Niemann.

“We have shared detailed evidence with him concerning our decision, including information that contradicts his statements regarding the amount and seriousness of his cheating on Chess.com,” the website stated. “We have invited Hans to provide an explanation and response with the hope of finding a resolution where Hans can again participate on Chess.com. We want nothing more than to see the best chess players in the world succeed in the greatest events. We will always try to protect the integrity of the game that we all love.”

The “tumultuous” situation in the chess community, as Chess.com put it, ratcheted up further when Niemann offered to “strip fully naked” if it would help prove he wasn’t using any contraptions to help him cheat.

Then came Monday’s much-anticipated Carlsen-Niemann rematch. It was over quickly, but Carlsen’s speedy, statement-making resignation ensured this controversy is far from done.



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NASA releases audio recording of a black hole – and it sounds like a Hans Zimmer score | Science & Tech News

Scientists have released the eerie, Hans Zimmer-like audio captured from a black hole at the centre of the Perseus galaxy cluster.

The actual sound waves were discovered in data recorded by NASA’s Chandra X-ray observatory and have been translated from astronomical data into human-hearable sound.

Astronomers first discovered that ripples in the hot gas surrounding the Perseus black hole could be translated into sound.

NASA said it was a “popular misconception that there is no sound in space” based on the fact that, as most of space is a vacuum, there is no medium for sound waves to propagate through.

Galaxy clusters have “copious amounts of gas that envelop the hundreds or even thousands of galaxies… providing a medium for the sound waves to travel”, the agency explained.

The so-called sonification differed from previous efforts which simply translated astronomical data into an auditory form – featuring different instruments – but using the actual soundwaves observed.

NASA explained that the soundwaves were resynthesised into human hearing range by “scaling them upward by 57 and 58 octaves above their true pitch” but were not replayed using violins or other instruments.

The resultant audio sounds spookily like a Hans Zimmer score, the composer who has written the soundtracks to science-fiction hits including Blade Runner 2049 and Interstellar.

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