All posts tagged: chesss

The Gamblers Behind One of Chess’s Weirdest Unsolved Cheating Mysteries Have Been Unmasked

The Gamblers Behind One of Chess’s Weirdest Unsolved Cheating Mysteries Have Been Unmasked

The modern era of cheating in chess began on a Thursday in July 1993, when a man with shoulder-length dreadlocks walked into the World Open tournament in Philadelphia and registered as John von Neumann. Both the hair and the name were phony. The real Von Neumann was a prominent mathematician and computer scientist who died in 1957. The fake Von Neumann had a suspicious buzzing bulge in his pocket, fought a grandmaster to a draw, then fled before anyone could work out who he was. A Boston Globe columnist called it “one of the strangest cheating episodes in chess history.” Chess.com recorded the “Von Neumann incident” as “the earliest known case of a potential computer cheater.” This was decades before chess pros started getting expelled from tournaments for using smartphones, and a lifetime before the recent buzzing anal beads scandal. (Google it, but not at work.) It was years ahead of Garry Kasparov’s defeat by IBM’s Deep Blue, in an era when humans still imagined themselves to be smarter than machines. The identity of the …

What chess’s “intermezzo” moves can teach us about making better life decisions

What chess’s “intermezzo” moves can teach us about making better life decisions

Excerpted from Thinking Sideways: How to Think Like a Chess Player and Win at Life by Jennifer Shahade. Published by Pegasus Books. Copyright © 2026. All rights reserved. Sneaky sideways moves that strong chess players swear by are called “intermezzos,” or “in-between moves.” The American chess genius and unofficial World Champion Paul Morphy executed these many times in the New Orleans cafés where he won game after game in the 1800s. Morphy’s move seemed obvious. Why not just recapture the piece that was just taken? But then, BOOM. Morphy interrupted the sequence with a different aggressive move, throwing his opponent’s position into turmoil. Intermezzos are shocking. When Judit Polgár played one against another top grandmaster, he jumped out of his chair. Intermezzos are reminders that instead of looking far in advance, we should search for little surprises that no one else sees. The futility of planning far in advance is nailed in one of my favorite one-liners, from the late comedian Mitch Hedberg:  “Where do you see yourself in five years?” “Celebrating the five-year anniversary …

What chess’s “intermezzo” moves can teach us about making better life decisions

What chess’s “intermezzo” moves can teach us about making better life decisions

Excerpted from Thinking Sideways: How to Think Like a Chess Player and Win at Life by Jennifer Shahade. Published by Pegasus Books. Copyright © 2026. All rights reserved. Sneaky sideways moves that strong chess players swear by are called “intermezzos,” or “in-between moves.” The American chess genius and unofficial World Champion Paul Morphy executed these many times in the New Orleans cafés where he won game after game in the 1800s. Morphy’s move seemed obvious. Why not just recapture the piece that was just taken? But then, BOOM. Morphy interrupted the sequence with a different aggressive move, throwing his opponent’s position into turmoil. Intermezzos are shocking. When Judit Polgár played one against another top grandmaster, he jumped out of his chair. Intermezzos are reminders that instead of looking far in advance, we should search for little surprises that no one else sees. The futility of planning far in advance is nailed in one of my favorite one-liners, from the late comedian Mitch Hedberg:  “Where do you see yourself in five years?” “Celebrating the five-year anniversary …