A 19-year-old chess prodigy who defeated the top player in the world on Sunday promised to play “totally nude” to demonstrate that he did not cheat in the event that startled chess aficionados across the globe.
born in San Francisco Grandmaster Magnus Carlsen, a 31-year-old Norwegian who is regarded as the best player in the world by the International Chess Federation, was defeated over the weekend by Hans Niemann, a relative newbie to the game (FIDE).
They competed at St. Louis, Missouri’s $500,000 Sinquefield Cup, but the up-and-coming chess champion only won because Carlsen withdrew before the fourth round.
When Carlsen dropped out of the tournament without explanation, he posted a cryptic Tweet saying: ‘I’ve withdrawn from the tournament. I’ve always enjoyed playing in the @STLChessClub, and hope to be back in the future.’
Carlsen had played 53 classical matches without a loss, with his walk-out triggering a confrontation between fans as some of the biggest names in chess weighed in on the controversy.
Hans Niemann, a 19-year-old child prodigy who beat world chess champ Magnus Carlsen on Sunday, admitted previously cheating in online games when he was 12 and 16
Magnus Carlsen, 31, walked out of the $500,000 Sinquefield Cup after he was beaten in the third round, prompting online speculation that he suspected foul play
Along with the Tweet, he posted a video of football manager Jose Mourinho saying: ‘If I speak I am in big trouble’.
‘It must be embarrassing for the world champion to lose to an idiot like me,’ Niemann said in an interview shortly afterward, according to Vice. ‘I feel bad for him.’
Fans barely had time to react to the news before another chess titan, former prodigy Hikaru Nakamura, came out and accused Niemann of receiving computer assistance — the kind of help which is banned from international chess tournaments.
Cheating in chess is rare, but can be achieved by hiding computers in shoes or jackets that signal outcomes predicting the game and giving the player an advantage over their adversary.
‘Magnus would never do this in a million years,’ said Nakamura. ‘He just doesn’t do that. He’s the ultimate competitor, he’s a world champion.
‘He wouldn’t do this unless he really strongly believes Hans is cheating with a very strong conviction. I think he just thinks Hans is just cheating, straight out.’
After he was accused, it came to light that Niemann had been caught cheating by the world’s most popular chess website, Chess.com.
Following the revelations, Niemann admitted cheating in the past when he was 12 and 16 — but insisted he has now ‘come clean’.
‘If they want me to strip fully naked, I will do it,’ said Niemann in an interview late on Tuesday.
‘I don’t care. Because I know I am clean. You want me to play in a closed box with zero electronic transmission, I don’t care. I’m here to win and that is my goal regardless.’
Niemann has accused Nakamura and others of trying to ruin his career.
Since the tournament, he has reached out to media outlets and defended himself on Twitter, hoping to clear his name.
‘It’s not a miracle, it’s actually me being extremely tedious and going through every single possible transposition or line that he could play in the Catalan [a move in chess],’ explained Hans post-match in an interview with Chess24, when questioned on his technique.
But the dust still hasn’t settled, with some fans claiming his victory defied reason, while others defended his ability and said his skills speak for themselves.
‘If you look at the pattern of my games, I’m clearly missing many, many chances and it’s extremely human chess.’
He said his cheating happened when he was still a child, before he became professional.
‘I’m admitting this, and I’m saying my truth, because I do not want any misrepresentation,’ he went on. ‘I am proud of myself that I learned from that mistake, and now I have given everything to chess. I have sacrificed everything for chess, and I do everything I can to improve.’
A player such as Carlsen walking out after he was beaten in the third round is an event unprecedented in the history of chess tournaments.
Watch him play: Niemann often played chess full-time, coaches, and streams games on Twitch before entering international tournaments
‘I’ve met with someone very high up in Chesscom at the Sinquefield Cup, had amazing words, but because of this game against Magnus, because of what he said, they have decided to completely remove me from the website,’ he said.
Niemann became a chess grandmaster in 2020. Thirteen people have become grandmasters under the age of 14, including India’s Gukesh Dommaraju (12 years, 7 months, 17 days), Uzbekistan’s Javokhir Sindarov (12 years, 10 months, 5 days), and India’s Praggnanandhaa Rameshbabu (12 years, 10 months, 13 days).