Chess grandmaster Daniel Naroditsky dies at age 29

WTF!?!?!?!?

He posted this video 3 days ago.

You will hear the voice of your coach no matter what activity you do so make sure it’s a calm voice of helpful aid. Danya was and is my inner Chess voice. He was a fantastic teacher, commentator and from all accounts an all around wonderful guy. I will feel his loss.

Would like to know how he died though. My guess is a strange difficult rare disease or some rando was drunk driving and hit him.

Coincidentally a 20-something FOAF was killed this last weekend. He was driving home from work in the wee hours on the freeway and apparently fell asleep. Single vehicle rollover, no seatbelt, game over.

Not a chess celebrity, but still somebody taken too young. The other point is that Naroditsky, like any of us, could have accidentally caused his own demise.

Be careful out there.

The belief is that he committed suicide. I ardently hope that is misinformation but, really, would any other cause make it a less tragic loss?

I haven’t seen any more info, but yes, to die at that age nowadays seems to probably imply suicide or accident. Accident we can’t do much about, but it behooves us to be alert to signs in our friends that they may be having depression issues. We lost a good musician friend to suicide some years ago, and in retrospect there were straws in the wind that we might (should?) have picked up on and maybe we could have gotten him some help….

I’ve been reading that he was publicly accused of cheating by another GM and it wrecked him.

I learned of his death last night and couldn’t believe it. I really had thought it was some kind of clickbait thread title when I saw it on Reddit. I believe I started following him in 2020, and he was my favorite of this YouTube generation of chess commentators. What a loss.

Nah, Vladimir Kramnik is a Putin loving tool and everyone knows it. It may have hurt Daniel only because the dude really loves Chess and teaching. I speak for the entire Chess Community here, Daniel is a sponsor and promoter to the hobby, a class act, and nearly untouchable in quick time formats.

The same cannot be said of some other notable players.

I’m not up on the political side of chess; is there some sort of evidence beyond “everybody knows it”?

I’ve read Kramnik’s 2023 statement on the invasion of Ukraine, which mostly sounds like a cranky man bemoaning political correctness. I certainly would prefer more directness, and if Kramnik equally disapproves of other military actions it would be better that he denounced them, rather than just saying all war is bad.

FIDE is the organization that governs Chess. As you can imagine they go out of their way to keep politics out of their game. Kramnik was banned from playing in FIDE completely for his antics both on and off the table. For FIDE to ban someone is almost unheard of.

He earned it and is absolutely vocally butthurt about it. His accusation was pathetic and seen as such by anyone who loves the game.

Given what we know about cheaters, they’re often the first out there accusing others of it.

If ever I was asked to investigate a person for cheating, I’d probably want to investigate the accuser at the same time.

Kramnik was never banned by FIDE. He was banned by the online platform chess-dot-com for his antics.

The accusations from Kramnik got wild (not just about Naroditsky; those actually came late in Kramnik’s derailment). His Dunning-Kruger-laden statistics had as much inferential merit as “A guy on the subway said…”, but he was relentless, and he brought with him a small and active Russian following that escalated the intensity of the vitriol. Naroditsky’s spoke a lot about how disruptive to his life, career, and health it all was.

Sort of like Russia saying “It’s not possible that a woman could legitimately beat a Russian boxer, so those two boxers must be trans”?

So the Test results are in, looks like methamphetamine, amphetamine, 7-hydroxymitragynine and mitragynine were in his system. The last two likely from an over the counter herbal depressant called Kratom.

I followed this guy regularly and nothing ever seemed off. I am glad it doesn’t look like suicide and Kramnik isn’t related as much as he would enjoy. But really, a Chess grandmaster still at the top of his game taking Meth?

You think it’s odd that he was doing drugs at all or that specific drug? Because meth is “low class?”

Yeah, not getting that. Lots of people do speed in an attempt to get a mental edge. And combining that with downers to sleep is also not unusual.

Chess players are cold analytical thinkers. Like perhaps no other pursuit, it appeals to the rational evaluation of positions and options. Methamphetamine is universally agreed upon to provide no good options.

It would be like finding out a famous Hollywood Dog Trainer also hosts a Dog Fighting Ring.

It’s clear the guy had mental issues, but this isn’t how you kill yourself.

For that matter, more people (looking at all ages) die of suicide every year than are murdered. More people (looking at all ages) die by accident each year than commit suicide. More people (looking at all ages) die by natural causes (i.e., things that aren’t murder, suicide, or accident) than die by accident each years. In general, regardless of our age, we should be more worried about suicide, accidents, or natural causes than about murder. Further, more people are killed by someone they know than are killed by someone they don’t know.

They found meth in his system which is different from him deliberately taking meth.

It looks like an accidental overdose from doing too many stimulants, some clearly adulterated. Accidental OD from exposure to adulterated stimulants is a not uncommon problem among people looking to stay focused and awake, like students or chess players.

I also have no idea where this idea that chess players are cold and analytical comes from. They clearly aren’t, if their behavior at and away from the board is any guide. Many may be introverted but most top players clearly display emotional reactions to board situations