Wednesday, May 1, 2013

First In Chess, Now Sudoku; 'Eugene Varshavsky' Focus Of Cheating Allegations

Any chess or sudoku players out there know a Eugene Varshavsky, who may or may not be from Lawrenceville, N.J.?
We ask because, , somebody by that name is being investigated for possible cheating at Saturday's Philadelphia Inquirer National Sudoku Championship. "Varshavsky" came in third, winning $3,000. The winner, Tammy McLeod, took home $10,000.
Too coincidentally, back in 2006 a "Eugene Varshavsky" drew officials' suspicions at the World Open chess championship in Philadelphia, as The New York Times .
In both cases, there's a fear that the person might have had some sort of electronic device through which he was getting help:
At the chess tournament, "Varshavsky" defeated a far higher-rated opponent with moves that matched those that a computer program would have suggested. Before he could be searched, he disappeared into a bathroom stall for about 10 minutes.
At this past weekend's sudoku tournament, "Varshavsky" "blazed through the second round in world-class time," the Inquirer says, but then couldn't figure out the "easy first steps in the championship puzzle." He's described in the Inquirer, by the way, only as "playing in a hooded sweatshirt."
Among those who will be leading the investigation is Weekend Edition puzzle master Will Shortz. He and other tournament officials will be looking at videos, photos and "Varshavsky"'s completed puzzles.
We've added the quotation marks around the name because it's not entirely clear the person is who he says he is — or even that it was the same person in both cases.
By the way, we contacted the only Eugene Varshavsky with a Philadelphia-area phone listing. The man who answered said he is a Eugene Varshavsky, but not the sudoku-chess mystery man. "I don't know who this guy is," he added.
So, with these clues — anybody out there able to help figure out who this is?
Update at 3:25 p.m. ET: Will Shortz just spoke by phone with All Things Considered host Robert Siegel.
Will, also well-known as crossword editor for The New York Times says that if someone did want to cheat at a sudoku tournament, they might need a small camera, a cellphone and an accomplice who's at a computer. But all that would only help during the preliminary round, which might explain why "Varshavsky" barely touched the championship puzzle: