1/8/2013 – Recently we reported that the incredibly brilliant play by a 25-year-old untitled Bulgarian player at the Zadar Open in Croatia had raised suspicion that he might have been using illicit electronic assistance during his games. A number of readers criticised us – for linking to the mainstream Croatian media reports?! One of them, an expert in the field, actually
analysed all the games in question.
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Before we present the very heartfelt feedback that has poured in, we would
like to make a fairly obvious point: in our report we did not, as some
readers claim, accuse the player in question of cheating, and did not
do so with insufficient (circumstantial) evidence, or after he had been "cleared".
What we did is
report, with screen shots and links, that chess was in the mainstream media
in Croatia because suspicion had been expressed by some of the top grandmasters
in the region that a relative amateur had been using electronic assistance to
play miles better than his nominal playing strength – and crush them as no world class player could have done. A perfunctory examination of the player
had been sensationalised (in the Croatian media) as a "strip search"
and the live broadcast had been interrupted for one game – which the player
lost.
All of the above was in the Croatian press, where chess made unexpected headlines.
This we reported, independently of our own (not yet drawn) conclusions on the
matter. It is adventurous to suggest that a chess news page has a duty to suppress
facts – that chess was generating sensational news stories in the mainstream
media – because we deemed the conclusions to be insufficiently substantiated.
And with regard to the links we provided at the end of our article – we
do this all the time, as a service to often first-time readers who become interested
in a subject.
Having said this, on to the feedback, which includes most of the messages we
received...
Reader feedback
Pablo Pena, Santa Ana, CA
I would be wary of casting judgement too quickly. I was an expert last year
when I took clear first over GM Melikset Khachiyan and IM Jack Peters (beating
them both in our individual games). If you look at the
wall chart it looks lopsided with a 2100 winning clear first and other places
awarded to 2500s, 2400s, etc. I certainly wasn't cheating. Sometimes a player
has been studying hard and gets past a certain plateua. Chess learning isn't
necessarily incremental.
Rama Gitananda, Phoenix, Arizona USA
You quote: "they were wondering why he would take part in a tournament,
which costs a couple of thousands of euro, while the cheating equipment, which
can be integrated into contact lenses, for instance, costs thousands of Euros
more." The in-ear device which was used to cheat in the 2006 World Open
cost less than US $300. Did they even peer into his ear canals? I have read
no indication that they did. Ref.: Rooked
– The supremely old-school game of chess is dealing with a very avant-garde
brand of unsportsmanlike conduct.
Richard Mallett, Eaton Bray, Dunstable, UK
The implication of the article is that Zlatko Klaric said that Ivanov was accused
of cheating in Bulgaria and Serbia (presumably during the period when he had
won only one rating point) and that this meant that he was cheating at Zadar!
Igor Freiberger, Porto Alegre, Brazil
I cannot understand why organizers still do realtime streaming of the games.
In this case, they stoped it in the 8th round and saw the suspect lose in a
pale way. So why was streaming back in the last round? These days, the public
in chess events is quite sparse, while the real impact in on the web. To delay
game broadcast causes no problem in terms of divulgation while it avoids all
the damage cheating can cause.
Dr. John O'Connell, Dublin, Ireland
I am appalled at the decision of ChessBase to publish an article alleging that
a chess player was cheating in the recent Zadar Open in Croatia. Under the principle
of natural justice all people are presumed innocent until proven guilty. Your
news article offers no convincing evidence that this player was cheating. Yet,
your News Item has seriously damaged the good name and integrity of a young
man. Nor have you given this man a forum to defend his performance. There is
no justification to say he must have been cheating based on previous performances
or because is moves are those of a strong chess computer. I sincerely hope that
this individual takes ChessBase.com to the liable court and wins a substantial
reward for the damage that you have done to him.
Luis Baquero, Medellin, Colombia
The hypothesis that there was no cheating might be rejected with a low probability
of error; but why do people sudenly identify cheating with compure cheating?
Have all the traditional forms of cheating disappered? Its not easier to fix
a game or a tournament? Work has to be done first against fixing games; then
against computer cheating.
Minh Tuan, Hochiminh City, Vietnam
Should we have done the same strip searching with Magnus Carlsen when he was
young and beat so many strong GMs already. I was deeeply suspicious about Magnus's
ability to play chess too, and this suspicion should be proved right or wrong
by thorough strip searching and metal detection in every tournament where Magnus
participates. If Magnus Carlsen is proved innocent, then my next suspect would
be GM Fabiano Caruana. Please advise.
Fernando Semprun, Madrid Spain
It is all rather sad. In Cadiz 1991 I had a performance of 2433 (and was winning
vs a Russian 2560, Machulsky) which would have translated into a performance
of 2533. Then there were no cases or suspicion. And I remember a surprising
performance of Sigurjonsson at some tournament when he was clearly the underdog
(late 70's? ), and of course many others. So these results, on their own, should
not be proof of cheating. But it will kill chess if they become widespread.
So sad and annoying.
Rajko Vujatovic, London
These allegations are clearly nonsense and it is most unfortunate that Ivanov's
name has been dragged into the public domain despite the lack of evidence. There
are several thousand players with Elo rating 2100-2300. Occasionally, it would
be statistically expected that one of these players will have enough lucky breaks
to achieve a performance 400 points above their rating. These 'breaks' could
take the form of poor play by the opponents that are easy to refute with natural
moves; or hard work and good opening preparation that helps to nullify the advantage
of the grandmaster opponent. Playing through Ivanov's games without any silicon
companion, his play struck me as being entirely human, and could be entirely
justified with basic principles and motifs. He made obvious attacking moves
where the position often played itself. In some games, his grandmaster opponents
made incorrect sacrifices where Ivanov's response was natural, regardless of
whether he understood at the time if his position was better. In addition, aspersions
are unfairly cast upon Ivanov because he is a programmer – but this is
not an unusual profession for a chess player!
Nahim Zahur, Singapore
Does ChessBase have any actual evidence that Mr. Ivanov was cheating? If not,
what brilliant editorial judgement led ChessBase to write the article in this
manner and tone? Yes, the article does not actually go so far as to state that
Mr. Ivanov is cheating (that was a clever stroke). But it quotes verbatim three
other articles that have clearly painted Mr. Ivanov as guilty. "One of
the tournament participants", "knowledgeable sources" and the
disgruntled Mr. Klaric all get to have their say in this piece, but not the
accused himself!
Now let's come to what ChessBase themselves added. The 2227 rated player is
erroneously referred to as "the unrated Bulgarian player," no doubt
to throw further incredulity on his results. [The error was corrected to
"untitled" shortly after publication – Ed.] Then, instead
of letting the proper authorities analyze Mr. Ivanov's games in a fair, judicial
process, ChessBase would like to have a public trial of Mr. Ivanov, complete
no doubt with a baying crowd and flagellation as the punishment. Finally, the
article ends with the sly comment "Oh dear, we are going to have to complete
our History of Chess article series..." and then posts a series of articles
on the history of cheating in chess. Shattering any remaining illusions as to
what ChessBase really believes. I suspect that the key to all this is that Mr.
Ivanov is Bulgarian, and ChessBase has held a grudge against Bulgarian players
ever since the Kramnik-Topalov fracas. This is an unsubstantiated allegation
on my part, and quite possibly utterly unfounded and frivolous. Nonetheless,
by the journalistic standards displayed by ChessBase, I do not feel in the least
embarrassed to blare out my opinion from the top of my rooftop.
Euclides, Elmwood Park USA
It doesn't really take much to see he was cheating. Haven't you noticed as black
he played the most varied and theory loaded variations. There were no offbeat
variations at all. Grünfeld, Benoni, King's Indian etc etc. He played the very
heart of all variations. All his games looked like world championship preparation.
And by the way his moves weren't Fritzy. My computer says it looked more like
Hiarcs.
Antonio Gillot, Guatemala
In 1909 Capablanca swept Marshall off the board, with no previous qualifications.
In 1911 he won first in San Sebastián. Fortunately at that time envy
and stupidity hadn't taken over the chess world. Or he was also a cheater?
Julian Wan, Ann Arbor, USA
Unfortunately this new cheating allegation scandal just reinforces what should
be clear – that there is something going on. Physical sports such as track
and field (athletics), American baseball, and most of all cycling has long been
dogged by accusations and true scandals. Sadly in the end, nearly all proved
to be correct. So I fear I have to be skeptical of any adult who makes a late
surge in strength. What is next? Mandated game delay in broadcast – how
about a reasonable delay like 30 minutes. People following on the Internet won't
really miss much. Of course the games will then have to be played with only
a screened set of spectators, and all of the toilets have to be chaperoned.
What a sad state of chess!
William Shea, Honolulu, Hawaii
I don't see how you can even publish this article. There is zero evidence. A
master level player has one tournament where he plays a few hundred points above
his rating. Statistically, this is quite possible, I would think. He has two
losses in the tournament, including round two, before any changes in broadcasting.
Am I wrong to think this borders on irresponsible journalism even to publish
such a non-story? A reader cant help doubting the players credibility after
your story, until you go back and think – what evidence was there again?
No computer, no headphones. No transmitting device. Just suspicions? Come on.
Guy Haworth, Reading, UK
It is clear that game-scores alone cannot tell to what extents the winner played
well and the loser played poorly. Benchmarking the 'quality of the moves' is
required, though this 'quality' will be an opponent-neutral or 'absolute' quality
whereas the winner may have decided to choose moves which most discomfit their
opponent. The benchmark is most likely to be one or more chess-engines, their
evaluations being taken from one or more search-depths.
Measuring %-coincidence with an chess-engine is the crudest way to do this.
No account is taken of the feasibility of moves not chosen by the engine. Further,
'measurement of coincidence' usually involves using only one engine at one search-depth
- though better options are possible. Measuring Average Error (a method used
by Guid/Bratko et al) is better than coincidence-measurement but still ignores
the availability of alternative credible moves. Comparing player-choices with
those of stochastic agents (found by Ken Regan and I with a 'best fit' technique,
and by G di Fatta and I with a 'most likely', Bayesian Inference technique)
brings in consideration of the 'best m' moves available.
However a 'Performance Rating' is inferred, the confidence interval around
it can only be halved if the amount of data available is four times greater.
For more information on publications, please see:
May I also note that, in the recent London 2012 Olympics, outstanding winning
performances were recorded by young, 'first time', swimmers hitherto unrated.
Nate Plapp, Lemon Grove
What is ugly is continued suspicion and defamation after being searched and
nothing is found. What is the point of a search, if it does not vindicate when
nothing is found? The quality of a game, the score at a tournament, sure suspicion
is understandable, though I feel a misattribution of one's loss, unless there
is some odd behavior involved, but when found innocent, that should be it –
in fact there should be a public apology for the thought-to-be-needed search.
"Implants?" Someone has a screw loose. Clearly, an artifact of a
person convinced of the guilt of the 25-year-old and willing to invent any delusion
to hold to that position. Good performances can be by chance. It is just statistics.
Why it is so important to spoil someone's one success? If one is willing to
make an accusation they must also be willing to apologize to that person when
nothing is found and drop the conspiracy nonsense. They must have lax defamation
laws in Croatia.
Imsn Khandaker, Watford
Since he was not caught cheating, it is a little surprising that the story gets
such prominence. Perhaps it should be a general rule that all tournaments have
a delay in the live broadcast of moves.
Kees v.d. Doel, Vancouver, Canada
Every single move, without exception, in the third and fifth games by White
is identical to those of Houdini 2. How obvious can you be?
Lilov
analysis of the Ivanov games
The following Youtube video was produced by Valeri Lilov, a very strong Bulgarian
FM and chess trainer, rated 2433. Lilov has recorded a
number of training DVDs for us (as well as other chess companies). However:
we in no way commissioned his investigation, and in fact only heard of it through
a message by a Mexican reader who sent us the link.
The video is over an hour long, but quite gripping. It would be interesting
to know what other strong GMs think after they have watched it. They are the
real experts, they are the people who can voice a qualified and well-founded
opinion. Do they agree with Lilov that the evidence is compelling and that the
way in which some of the greatest player of the region were crushed defies belief?
Or do they think, as some of our amateur readers seem to believe, that such
flashes of chess strength and genius do sometimes occur and that it is entirely
possible for an untitled 2200 player to on occasion reach such heights.
If you want to follow Lilov's analysis attentively you should maximize the
YouTube broadcast:
Click on the tool icon and select HD (if you have HD resolution) and "Full
screen" on the bottom right.
After this you will be able to follow everything quite clearly – and
can pause the video when things get too fast.
There is one point we would like to make: Lilov is a strong player with deep
understanding of human and computer strategy, but he is not a technician or
spyware specialist. The "glasses" he speaks of, costing less than
$50, and other inexpensive devices he shows on the web site, mostly record images
and video onto an micro SD card. There actually are stealth glasses that transmit
video in real time (we will not give links here!), but they cost $150.
However: such glasses are not required when games are being broadcast live on
the Internet. A helper gets the moves in real time by logging in to the official
web site, or going to Playchess or one of the other chess servers. And finally
Lilov seems to believe that in order to receive external assistance a player
needs to have audio contact. Unfortunately that is not the case: there are a
variety of ways to communicate the minute amount of information required for
a chess move in form of a Morse code – as was shown in a well-known German
cheating scandal back in 1999.
As we said in our previous article: we are going to have to publish the final
section of our History of Chess article series (see below), which is long overdue...
Previous article on the Zadar Open scandal
Cheating suspicion at the Zadar Open in Croatia 04.01.2013 – In this event, with 16 GMs and
a host of other strong players, one participant stood out especially:
the 25-year-old untitled Bulgarian Borislav Ivanov scored 6.0/9 points,
with a rating performance of 2697. In the January FIDE list Ivanov has
gained 115 points over his previous 2277 rating, gained in over 400
games over three years. A certain suspicion once again raises
its ugly head.
ChessBase series on cheating
A history of cheating in chess (1) 29.09.2011 – Hardly a month goes by without
some report of cheating in international chess tournaments. The problem
has become acute, but it is not new. In 2001 Frederic Friedel contributed
a paper to the book "Advances in Computer Chess 9". It traces the many
forms of illicit manipulations in chess and, a decade later, appears disconcertingly
topical and up-to-date. We
reproduce the paper in five parts.
A history of cheating in chess (2) 04.10.2011 – Coaching players during the game
is probably the most widespread form of cheating (rivaled only perhaps
by bribery and the throwing of games). Although this practice began long
before the advent of chess playing machines, computers have added a new
and dramatic dimension to this method of cheating in chess. You will never
guess: who were the pioneers
of cheating with computers?
A history of cheating in chess (3) 18.12.2011 – In January 1999 the main topic
of conversation amongst top players like Kasparov, Anand and others: who
was the mysterious German chess amateur, rated below 2000, who had won
a strong Open ahead of GMs and IMs, with wonderfully courageous attacking
chess and a 2630 performance? How had he done it? Turns out it was with
unconventional methods, as
subsequent investigation uncovered.
A history of cheating in chess (4) 28.02.2012 – Las Palmas 1996: Garry Kasparov
is agonizing over his 20th move against Vishy Anand. He calculates and
calculates but cannot make a very tempting pawn push work. Immediately
after the game he discovers, from his helpers, that it would have won
the ultimately drawn position. The point that became clear to him: a single
bit of information, given at the top level in chess, can
decide a game.
New in Chess debate
Anti-cheating: the fifteen minute broadcast delay
13.05.2011 – For five years we have been
trying to get FIDE to implement a 15-minute delay in the Internet broadcast
of important games – to make organised cheating harder. A chess journalist
has now pointed out a fatal flaw in the plan: it would force chess journalists
to walk many yards to find out the current status of the games. Damn
– and we thought it was such a good idea! What
is your opinion?
Anti-cheating: the fifteen minute debate continues
29.06.2011 – Our recent
reply to stern criticism leveled against us in the Dutch magazine
New in Chess resulted, unsurprisingly, in a large number of letters
from our readers, many quite effusive. But we decided not to publish
any until at least one turned up supporting the views of our NiC critic.
Six weeks went by until it at last came, authored by the critic himself.
Now we can publish
your letters.
Reports on the French cheating scandal
Feller's interview, and a solution to the cheating scandal 23.08.2011 – The French Championship is in
its eighth round, with four GMs in the joint lead. The event is marred
by continued suspicion and anti-cheating measures, brought on by accusations
that one of the participants had in the past engaged in organised cheating.
Sébastien Feller has given an interview on the subject, and we have a
proposal on how to clear
up the matter quickly.
Cheating scandal: Opinions, concerns and revelations 06.04.2011 – In a series of interviews, Robert
Fontaine from Europe Echecs, culled the opinions of the players, to get
a clearer idea on how players both French and foreign viewed the cheating
scandal. A lengthy interview with Jean-Claude Moingt, the president of
the French federation, revealed not only the next steps to be taken, but
also that confessions were not only made to the players. An
eye-opener.
French Chess Federation suspends players accused of
cheating 21.03.2011 – On Saturday the Disciplinary Committee
of the French Chess Federation suspended GMs Sébastien Feller, Arnaud
Hauchard and IM Cyril Marzolo, finding them “guilty of a violation of
sporting ethics” for allegedly cheating during the Chess Olympiad 2010
in Khanty-Mansiysk. The three received suspensions, after evidence was
presented, including a detailed
description of how it was done.
FFE accuses its own players of cheating 22.01.2011 – Shocking news: the French Chess
Federation (FFE) has announced that it has initiated disciplinary action
against three players – one of them one of France's most promising talents
– on suspicion of "organized cheating, serious breach of sport ethics,
undermining the image of the national Olympic team in Khanty-Mansyik".
We are following the investigation. Press
release.
Feller replies: 'I completely deny the cheating accusations'
24.01.2011 – Two days ago the French Chess
Federation announced
the investigation of three French players on suspicion of "organized
cheating" at the Chess Olympiad in Khanty-Mansyik. Now one of the three,
19-year-old French GM Sebastien Feller, has replied emphatically, implying
that the entire action was a result of his support of the current FIDE
president (the FFE supported his rival Karpov). Open
letter.
Battesti: 'It's insulting to our president and his federation'
24.01.2011 – Instead of adopting an ostrich
position the President of the French Chess Federation and his VP have
initiated an investigation of French Olympiad members suspected of cheating.
They have appointed Leo Battesti, a Sorbonne-educated lawyer, as the spokesperson
for the Federation. Battesti has reacted to the
criticism of one of the accused player with an interview
in Europe Echecs.
French GMs: ''We express our full support of the
FFE 27.01.2011 – Four grandmasters Maxime
Vachier-Lagrave, Laurent Fressinet, Vladislav Tkachiev and Romain Edouard
have expressed their dismay at the charges brought against three of their
colleagues who are accused of cheating. "If the allegations are found
to be true, we will condemn them firmly," they write, in this public
statement in Europe Echecs.
FFE: cheating not the first time, Biel statement 01.02.2011– The French Chess Federation
disclosed they had evidence that the "organized cheating" accusation,
which has rocked the chess world recently, is in fact not the first
time. They have now mandated the Federal Bureau to take the case
to trial in a court of law. Meanwhile the Organisers in Biel have issued
a statement on the same players earlier last year in their Master Group.
Open
letters.
FFE Cheating: Judge rules incriminating SMS inadmissible
11.03.2011– After unearthing a series of SMS messages
between players accused of cheating at the Olympiad using a phone lent
by the French Chess Federation vice president, the FFE sought to have
those messages transcribed and included as evidence in the upcoming Disciplinary
Committee. A judge ruled that secrecy could only be waived if the FFE
sued in court, as the FFE explains in a public
statement.
French Chess Federation suspends players accused of
cheating 21.03.2011 – On Saturday the Disciplinary Committee
of the French Chess Federation suspended GMs Sebastien Feller, Arnaud
Hauchard and IM Cyril Marzolo, finding them “guilty of a violation of
sporting ethics” for allegedly cheating during the Chess Olympiad 2010
in Khanty-Mansiysk. The three received suspensions, after evidence was
presented, including a detailed
description of how it was done.
Cheating in chess: the problem won't go away 30.03.2011 – As you know the recent suspicion
of organized cheating during a Chess Olympiad has led to three French
players being suspended. One is currently playing in the European Individual
Championship, where his colleagues have published an open letter demanding
additional security. For years we have been proposing a remedy for this
very serious problem. It
needs to be implemented now.
Sebastien Feller wins Paris Championship 13.07.2010 – The Paris Championship is the
oldest French Open – Abraham Baratz won the first edition in 1925. The
leading players in this year's event included GM Tigran Gharamian (2650),
GM Alberto David (2622) and GM Sébastien Feller (2611). The Open Tournament
took place from July 3rd to 11th, 2010. It was a nine-round Swiss, FIDE
rules, 40 moves/1h 30 + 30 sec then 30 mn + 30 sec. Pictorial
report.
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