In the world of chess, there is a conflict between former world champion Vladimir Kramnik and Hikaru Nakamura, a grandmaster and Twitch streamer. Kramnik suggests in a blog that Nakamura cheated. The chess platform Chess.com intervenes.
What does Kramnik say? Russian Vladimir Kramnik (48) became world champion in 2000 when he defeated Garry Kasparov, but lost the title to Viswanadthan Anand in 2007.
The Netflix series “The Queen’s Gambit” made chess cool:
Chess.com considers Kramnik’s accusations to be baseless and is sanctioning him
This is the result: The Chess.com platform has apparently complied with the request for an investigation, but Kramnik is unlikely to like the result at all.
Because Chess.com came to the decision at Christmas, December 24th, that Kramnik’s accusations were unfounded and then closed Kramnik’s blog and deprived him of the opportunity to write on the platform. However, he could still contact Chess.com privately, for example via email, to discuss his suspicions:
“Grandmaster Kramnik’s escalating attacks against some of the most respected members of the chess community and some of the most promising young talents can no longer be ignored. As a result, we closed Grandmaster Kramnik’s blog and muted his account.”
Looks like Kramnik has checkmated himself here.
Hikaru Nakamura is the most successful Twitch streamer in chess as “GMHikaru”. On average, around 11,000 people watch him:
Chess: Genie slips stupidly with the mouse, loses to Twitch streamer – last game as world champion ends in a fit of anger