The world of competitive chess has quite a scandal on its hands as a male competitor posed as a female to enter a women’s tournament in Kenya this week.
Stanley Omondi, who is a Kenyan competitive chess player, dressed as a female and wore a hijab in order to compete in the women’s tournament. He made his way deep into the tournament but arose suspicions when he beat Gloria Jumba and Ampaira Shakira – a former national champion and a top player from Uganda.
“We didn’t have any suspicion at first, because wearing a hijab is normal,” Chess Kenya president Bernard Wanjala told BBC Sport. “But along the way, we noticed he won against very strong players… and it will be unlikely to have a new person who has never played a tournament [being very strong].”
“One of the red flags we also noticed [was] the shoes, he was wearing more masculine shoes, than feminine,” Wanjala said to BBC Sport. “We also noticed he was not talking, even when he came to collect his tag, he couldn’t speak, ordinarily, when you are playing, you speak to your opponent… because playing a chess game is not war its friendship.”
Officials eventually questioned Omondi about it, and he came clean, revealing that he had “financial needs” and was “ready to accept all consequences.”
[BBC]
About Kevin Harrish
Recent Posts
Articles
Patriots Fatigue Blinds You: Drake Maye Is a Super Bowl Threat
Eagles getting tired of Jalen Hurts
The Philadelphia Eagles are growing impatient
Bryce Young shatters Cam Newton record
Bryce Young is ascending
The pressure is on New York Giants ownership to pick the right coach
President, CEO, and co-owner John Mara can't afford another bad hire.
Edgar Wright’s ‘The Running Man’ is both better and worse than the original
The 2025 reboot is a vast improvement in terms of filmmaking, but the 1987 version is more fun.
Josh Allen punished for ‘violent gesture’ before Dolphins game
As Buffalo Bills starting quarterback Josh Allen prepares for Sunday afternoon’s showdown against the Miami Dolphins, he was...