Norwegian World Chess Champion Magnus Carlsen has made it clear that he withdrew after which resigned in tournaments after taking part in Grandmaster Hans Niemann as a result of he believes the American has cheated greater than what he has admitted to.
My assertion relating to the previous few weeks. pic.twitter.com/KY34DbcjLo
— Magnus Carlsen (@MagnusCarlsen) September 26, 2022
“I believe that Niemann has cheated more – and more recently – than he has publicly admitted,” Carlsen stated in a press release on Twitter.
“His over the board progress has been unusual, and 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. This game contributed to changing my perspective,” Carlsen tweeted.
Carlsen’s silence had led to hypothesis that the world champion had withdrawn as a result of he had felt that Niemann was dishonest.
Regarding on-line chess, Niemann has admitted to having cheated twice on Chess.com, when he was 12 and when he was 16 years previous, and that he regrets that. In a press release posted on September 9, IM Danny Rensch wrote on behalf of Chess.com: “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.”
Grandmaster Hikaru Nakamura stated ‘it is very clear now what the reality is in the situation’.
“Magnus thinks Hans cheated in the game they played in the Sinquefield Cup despite what was said by the organisers… This is the mike drop moment… I would also say it is extremely clear in this letter that Magnus put out that basically Magnus has something, who knows what he has… The ball is very clearly in Hans’ court now. What will Hans do here is the big question. If Hans does not say anything… If Hans is truly innocent in all this Hans should basically come out and say show what you have,” Nakamura stated on his YouTube channel. “This is a very very strong statement from Magnus.”
Nakamura who can be a preferred chess streamer had stated on the time Carlsen had withdrawn from the Sinquefield Cup that the one motive the world champion would achieve this is as a result of he felt Niemann was dishonest.
“Magnus would never do this in a million years. He just doesn’t do that. 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,” Nakamura had stated.
Indian Grandmaster and coach of rising star R Praggnanandhaa, RB Ramesh, stated he had immense respect for Carlsen for taking a principled stand.
1. Immense respect for the world champion for taking a principled stand on an necessary subject, forcing the world to concentrate to it at an enormous private value. Ideally, the chess world and FIDE ought to have devised a great sensible answer to the dishonest downside years in the past.
— Ramesh RB (@Rameshchess) September 27, 2022
“Immense respect for the world champion for taking a principled stand on an important issue, forcing the world to pay attention to it at a huge personal cost. Ideally the chess world and FIDE should have devised a good practical solution to the cheating problem years ago. Hopefully, a full enquiry will be conducted by FIDE & steps taken to avoid a similar scenario in future. A reasonably strong player does not need external help throughout the game, indication at a few (even 1) critical moments (s) is sufficient to tilt the game in his favour,” Ramesh tweeted.
Ramesh advised just a few steps to curb dishonest like, jamming alerts into the taking part in corridor, delaying stay relay, spectators mustn’t carry devices into the venue.
“Of course, it is very easy to cast apprehensions on a player’s integrity by throwing unsubstantiated allegations. It has happened in the past. Innocent players were accused unfairly. So the accuser should be very responsible before making the accusation,” Ramesh tweeted.