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Ottawa

How Russia's invasion of Ukraine is sending shock waves through the chess world

Tournaments have been relocated. A top player has been suspended for supporting the war. Others have called for the head of the game's organizing body to step down.

Tournaments relocated, top player suspended as online players pitch in to help

Ottawa's Svitlana Demchenko plays chess in Mykolayiv, Ukraine in the summer of 2021. The Ukrainian-born Demchenko, one of Canada's top players, says the Russian invasion will have serious ramifications on the chess world, even if they're secondary to the human toll. (Mykolayiv Chess Club)

With Vladimir Putin's invasion of Ukraine ragingon, Svitlana Demchenko pauses to think about how she'll handle her next Russian opponent.

"I think it depends on the person not every Russian player has such strong opinions," saidthe 18-year-old Ottawa chess player, who holds the woman international master title and is one of Canada's highest-ranked competitors.

"I do not know how I would feel. I'm a bit conflicted."

Born in the southern Ukrainian city of Mykolaiv,Demchenkohas friends and relativesthere who've been sleeping in bomb shelters at night. Between those worriesand her university studies, chessisn't her biggest priority at the moment.

Nonetheless, the war, now more than a month old,is reverberating far beyond Ukraine's bordersand the world of chess is no exception.

Tournaments have been relocated. One top Russian player has been suspended for supporting Putin, while others are unable to play due to travel restrictions. There have been calls for the Russian head of governing bodyFIDEto resign,even though he's spoken out against the conflict.

'Evil and illegal'

Russia's ties to chess run long and deep, with players such as Garry Kasparov, Boris Spassky, Anatoly Karpov and Mikhail Botvinnik dominating the game's landscape for the better part of a century.

The country has twice as many grandmasters as any other, according to a 2021 post on chess.com, the most popular online chess site. Tens of thousandsplay the game recreationally.

He's just like a petulant child, getting revenge right now.CFC president Vlad Drkulec on Vladimir Putin

So when Putin's forces invaded Ukraine in Marchit sent shock waves through the game's top levels, according to Victor Plotkin, the FIDErepresentative from theChess Federation of Canada(CFC).

The invasion prompted the CFC to both condemn Russia's "evil and illegal" actions and applaud the courage of the Ukrainian people. The federation also declared that, for now, no Canadians would compete in official events on Russian soil.

While dozens of top Russian playershave decried Putin's actions, some have stayed loyal including Sergey Karjakin, one of the world's best.

Before the war, Karjakin had qualified for the 2022 Candidates Tournament, an eight-person round-robin to determine who'lltake on Norwegian chess superstar Magnus Carlsen for the title of world champion in early 2023.

But after his comments, FIDE gaveKarjakin a six-month suspension, almost certainly meaning he won't be able to compete.

"I believe it's right, but it's a very strong decision by FIDE," Plotkin said. "It means that right at the top, Russia does have a problem."

In this 2018 photo, Russian President Vladimir Putin, second from right, shakes hands with then-deputy prime minister Arkady Dvorkovich, second from left, at the Kremlin. Dvorkovich now runs FIDE, the world chess governing body, and there have been calls for him to resign. (Alexander Zemlianichenko/The Associated Press)

War on Ukraine 'just seems insane'

The suspension of Karjakin, who was a win away from becoming world champion in 2016, isn't the only big development.

Several players have called for the head of FIDEArkady Dvorkovichto step down. That's because of Dvorkovich's close ties to the Kremlin he previously served as Russia's deputy prime minister.

Despite that fact many believe,political ties aside, he's done a good job in the role.

The 2022 Chess Olympiad, which draws teams of players from countries around the globe, has been relocated from Moscow to Chennai, India. International sanctions, meanwhile, are cutting into the sport's fundingas many Russian companies were sponsoring top-level tournaments, saidCFC president Vlad Drkulec.

Plotkin and Drkulec sayfor the moment, the war's effects are mostly being felt at thehighestlevels, ones that Canadian grandmasters tend not to reach. (As of FIDE's April 2022 rankings, Canada hadnoplayers in thetop 100.)

I'm just in disbelief that this could even happen. Svitlana Demchenko

Nor is the chess board turning into a venue for political disagreements, said Drkulec, at least not among Canadian players of Russian and Ukrainian heritage.

"In Canada, I don't know anyone that's supportive of what [Putin's] doing there. And it just seems insane, really. He just seems to be wanting to break everything," he said.

"He's just like a petulant child, getting revenge right now."

Online players raise money

Amidst all that uncertainty, the growingworld of online chesshas stepped upto help out the Ukrainian people.

Shortly after the invasion, U.S.grandmaster Hikaru Nakamuraone of the highest-profile online players, with more than 1.4 million followers on online gaming platform Twitch streamed chess-related content for 12 straight hours in a fundraiserthat brought in morethan $100,000 for humanitarian relief efforts.

"I think as a streamer, there should be a social implication that you should be doing something to help," said University of Toronto student Qiyu Zhou, who holds the woman grandmaster title andstreams chess and other e-sports to thousands of followers on her own Twitch channel.

Chess streamer Qiyu Zhou, who holds the title of woman grandmaster, says the online community has done a lot to raise money for Ukraine during the war. (Submitted by Qiyu Zhou)

Zhou took part in Nakamura's fundraiser, and has also hosted her own. Aside from "one or two trolls," her streams have been largely free of any political back-and-forths, she said.

The game'sinternational profile, Zhou added, makes online chess an ideal venue for raising money during the conflict.

"Chess players are definitely more in tune [with the war]than a lot of other streamers, just because we have friends in Ukraine, friends in Russia," Zhou said.

"I'm not faulting anybody for that, but I feel like as a whole, chess players did a really good job with fundraising."

WATCH | Online chess and fundraising:

Chess community well-suited to help in Ukraine, streamer says

2 years ago
Duration 0:35
Chess streamer Qiyu Zhou, who holds the title of woman grandmaster, says the game's international profile makes online chess an ideal venue for raising money during the conflict.

As for Demchenko, shesaidwhile some onlinegames might be "more heated" than before, she'sseen an overwhelming amount of support for Ukrainian chess players and the prevailing sentiment is that almost everyone wants to help.

"The situation is just very scary and worrisome," Demchenko said. "I'm just in disbelief that this could even happen."

Corrections

  • A previous version of this story misspelled the names of Vlad Drkulec, Sergey Karjakin, Hikaru Nakamura and Victor Plotkin.
    Apr 12, 2022 9:36 AM ET