John Fairbairn wrote:There was a case just a few years ago in the London Open where, I believe, two Russians in contention for the top prizes and drawn together in the final round allegedly contrived a draw to ensure the money stayed in Russian hands. They were disqualified, though I can't remember how their complicity was proven.
In chess? That would really surprise me (although I've been wrong plenty of times before!). "Grandmaster draws" are a pretty endemic part of chess, although many people find them regrettable. Many, many tournaments end with the leader making a quick draw in the final round, and many of those draws were prearranged (or effectively prearranged, when it is obvious that it benefits both players). Some tournaments now have rules where you can't offer a draw until move 30, or not at all until an arbiter proclaims the position truly dead. I'd think this tournament would have had to have had a very unusually draconian rule for a prearranged draw to be punished by disqualification. I'd be interested to hear the details.