Stabroek News

Carlsen beats Niemann in first encounter since cheating scandal

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PARIS, (Reuters) - Chess great Magnus Carlsen beat nemesis Hans Niemann 17.5-12.5 to advance to the Speed Chess Championsh­ip final yesterday, in their first face-off since the world number one accused his American rival of cheating two years ago.

The Norwegian also prevailed 7-2 in the longer format (5 minutes per game with a one-second increment per move), before drawing the 3+1 time control 4-4 and the bullet section 6.5-6.5.

One of the last games was aborted as Niemann complained about technical problems with his mouse and the server, although Carlsen's lead was effectivel­y unassailab­le.

On Sunday, Carlsen faces France's Alireza Firouzja, who beat world number two Hikaru Nakamura of the U.S. 16-11 earlier on Friday.

Players are competing online but physically present at an arena in central Paris, sitting close to each other with noise-cancelling headphones in front of hundreds of spectators.

They are also being followed by thousands on the website of organisers Chess.com.

At the 2022 Sinquefiel­d Cup, Niemann beat Carlsen with the black pieces and the Norwegian withdrew from the tournament, issuing a statement implying his opponent had cheated.

Shortly after the controvers­y, Carlsen had resigned against Niemann after making only one move in an online tournament, effectivel­y refusing to play.

Niemann filed a $100 million defamation lawsuit against Carlsen and Chess.com in October 2022 after the allegation­s that he had cheated.

A U.S. judge dismissed the lawsuit in June last year.

Chess.com later said all parties had resolved their dispute and agreed to move forward without further litigation.

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