Say It Ain’t So-duku, Joe: Scandal Rocks the Puzzle World

Scandal has rocked the Sudoku community. Eugene Varshavsky of Lawrenceville, N.J. has been stripped of his third place position in the national Sudoku after cheating allegations were raised due to his sharply uneven performance. As a Sudoku addict, I am crushed. Not since the Black Sox Scandal and Shoeless Joe Jackson has such alleged depravity brought the great so low.

Officials of The Philadelphia Inquirer National Sudoku Championship stripped Varshavsky of his third-place position (and $3000) after retesting him. Varshavsky made the final three out of 646 contestants and surprised everyone by completing three puzzles in just 14 minutes. During the competition, he was notably wearing a hood over his head.

Tammy MacLeod of Los Angeles won the first prize of $10,000. Former world champion Thomas Snyder won the $4,000 second prize, but not without some drama. Notably, Synder thought that he had won and finished early — leaving Varshavsky with the simple task of completing one puzzle in 20 minutes to take second place. He suddenly could not fill in more than three digits in eight minutes.

What was particularly notable is that Varshavsky had raised similar suspicions during the 2006 Chess championship, here. They were so suspicious of Varshavsky that they searched the bathroom stall that he used and then searched him after each round of chess.

After the competition, Soduku players raised alarms on the blogosphere and Varshavsky was called in for a re-testing. He was given the same puzzle that he blazed through earlier and completed only nine of the 81 digits in 15 minutes.

In another test, he could only fill in two digits in eight minutes.

Chris Narrikkattu of New York City of given the third place award.

As with the 2006 chess competition, the organizers could not prove cheating so Vashavsky has not faced any fraud charges. However, it is possible for such charges to be based on circumstantial evidence. Yet, it appears that Vashavsky is free to compete again. I hear the American crossword championship is coming up in February.

For the full story, click here and here.

32 thoughts on “Say It Ain’t So-duku, Joe: Scandal Rocks the Puzzle World”

  1. Nal,

    h.e.m.,

    You went to all that trouble to create an avatar, and that’s what you come up with?

    *************************
    I went from A to H and this was the first one that I could get to take, Oh yeah. You think I was happy not being able to lock in AY? It was already taken and apparently the screen names are locked in with email addresses. So HEM to you is fine, then again I thought it was funny, thoughtful and creative.

  2. h.e.m.,

    You went to all that trouble to create an avatar, and that’s what you come up with? 🙄

  3. I did announce it this morning nal.

    Bryon you are clever.

    nal, you skills are wasted editing. Ever thought about playing the ponies?

    You won’t be able to make as much money as was exchanged in the Black Sox’s commotion.

    I figure the man was getting his inspiration from the Lebanese witch.

  4. I did solve it on my own, without a hood. It took about 20 min. So I’m guessing it was an easy one. I can understand why they can be addictive.

    BTW, where is AY today? Must be on vacation.

  5. Well, I will be far less pretentious that nal pal. He likely used a “wiki” and not a hood nor the site Byron linked.

    I never heard of this silly game until today and within the 5 seconds it took to access wiki, I had the solution to the exact grid that Prof T. displayed in his original post and he may have initially gotten that partial grid from this wiki webpage:

    http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sudoku
    ____________________________

    Checkers anybody?

  6. Prof:

    no he did not use a hood:

    http://www.sudoku-solutions.com/sudokusolver.php

    sorry Nal, I am a dog lover. Cats are okay but I feel no compunction against dropping a dime on one.

    I think he should be limited to the correction corner for at least 24 hours.

    If you did solve the puzzle on your own you may have one kidney and a gall bladder.

  7. 534 678 912
    672 195 348
    198 342 567

    859 761 423
    426 853 791
    713 924 856

    961 537 284
    287 419 635
    345 286 179

  8. Since his gig providing “tech support” to George W. Bush for his 2004 presidential debates, Mr. Varshavsky has been looking for a long term position….
    (I’m mostly kidding, of course. mostly.)
    “Wait … wait … let me finish!” ;^)

  9. Jan,

    I’ve been informed by my four-legged bosses that you are an evil person. And they’ll take one in blue.

  10. 1 c0mpl3t3d 5umday’s in 32 minut3s s0 I fi9ure sum6ody rat3d it with one two many 5tar5.

  11. I can appreciate that JT refers to himself as a Soduku addict. I have never been able to figure out those darned things. By contrast, I am a crossword puzzle addict. I can usually complete the Sunday NYTimes puzzle in 45-90 minutes, but find myself totally stumped, frustrated and have given up on Soduku puzzles within 7 minutes. Perhaps it’s a right brain/left brain thing.

  12. They should have known he was a Sith mathlord when he was seen with a hood over his head with flashes of light coming out.

    Time to press a lightsaber into his digits.

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