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Hans Niemann posts powerful message after reaching Freestyle Chess Las Vegas final: 'Don't need an apology...'

Hans Niemann posts powerful message after reaching Freestyle Chess Las Vegas final: 'Don't need an apology...'

First Post19-07-2025
Hans Niemann made an emphatic statement by reaching the final of Freestyle Chess Las Vegas, an event that's part of a tour co-founded by Magnus Carlsen, the person who had accused him of cheating three years ago. read more
Hans Niemann reached the final of the Freestyle Chess Grand Slam Tour event in Las Vegas with a victory over Fabiano Caruana in the semi-finals. Image credit: Freestyle Chess
Controversial American Grandmaster Hans Moke Niemann was at the centre of what many would consider the biggest scandal in chess history when he was accused of cheating by Norwegian superstar Magnus Carlsen in the 2022 Sinquefield Cup.
The incident led to a hundred million-dollar federal lawsuit that was eventually closed with a settlement between the two the following year. However, the two have shared frosty relations ever since, with both Carlsen and Niemann verbally targeting one another through a series of digs and inflammatory statements.
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Niemann makes triumphant statement by reaching Freestyle Chess Las Vegas final
For Niemann to reach the final of Freestyle Chess Las Vegas, therefore, is nothing short of poetic. The Freestyle Chess Grand Slam Tour, after all, was co-founded by Carlsen and German entrepreneur Jan Henric Buettner, in which the former had won back-to-back events in Paris and Karlsruhe and currently sits on top of the overall standings.
What makes his journey to the summit clash following his victory over Italian-American GM Fabiano Caruana even sweeter is the fact that Carlsen failed to even reach the quarter-finals in the same event, finishing fifth in the group stage.
After his 2.5-1.5 victory over compatriot Caruana – the runner-up in the Weissenhaus leg of the Grand Slam Tour – Niemann emphatically stated that he did not need an apology for the cheating accusations; rather, he would less his chess pieces do the talking on the board.
'I don't need an apology, my comeback will be on the chess board, nothing else!' the 22-year-old wrote on X on Saturday.
Niemann added that his stellar run in the ongoing tournament isn't something new – he has been capable of producing such performances for a 'very long time'.
He had finished runner-up in 'Group Black' earlier in the Las Vegas Grand Slam, missing out on the top spot with back-to-back losses against Hikaru Nakamura and Caruana. Niemann, however, bounced back in the knockouts, defeating Uzbekistani GM Javokhir Sindarov 4-2 before his semi-final win against Caruana.
'I've been capable of this for a very long time. I don't think there is anything that can stop me now,' Niemann was quoted by Take Take Take as saying.
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Niemann faces veteran GM Levon Aronian in an all-American final that gets underway on Saturday. Aronian, who had represented his native country Armenia before switching allegiance to the United States in 2021, had ended Indian GM Arjun Erigaisi's stellar run in the ongoing tournament with a 2-0 victory in the semi-finals.
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