Motherboard reviews e-mails in which Maxim Dlugy confesses cheating on chess.com
After 19-year-old American grandmaster Hans Niemann defeated Magnus Carlsen in the third round of the Sinquefield Cup 2022, the World Chess Champion decided to withdraw from the event. Rumors that Magnus Carlsen suspected Niemann was cheating started spreading over social medias and the “Carlsen – Niemann” controversy is the top news in mass medias ever since. Magnus broke the silence by giving the interview after the Preliminary stage of the Julius Baer Generation Cup in which he resigned the game against Niemann after only two played moves. He couldn’t particularly speak on the topic, but he mentioned “Niemann’s mentor” GM Maxim Dlugy: “Unfortunately I cannot particularly speak on that but people can draw their own conclusion & they certainly have. I have to say I am very impressed by Niemann’s play & I think his mentor Maxim Dlugy must have been doing a great job“.
Shortly after, it became clear that Carlsen mentioned Maxim Dlugy because the American grandmaster got caught cheating on chess.com. Motherboard, the tech section of Vice, now confirms that Dlugy was cheating in chess.com tournaments, reviewing the confidential emails between GM Maxim Dlugy and Daniel Rensch – Chess.com’s Chief Chess Officer where the American grandmaster confesses cheating. Vice reports that Dlugy’s emails to chess.com from 2017 include an explanation of how he broke the fair-play rules of the platform. Maxim Dlugy explained in his emails that students from his chess academy were watching him play in a Chess.com tournament, telling him moves suggested by the engine. After the confession, Dlugy got his second chance and the opportunity to open a new chess.com account. However, he got caught cheating again in 2020.
The timetable of events related to the Carlsen – Niemann case: