God of Scrabble

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I recall Malaysia-based New Zealander Nigel Richards' multiple Scrabble championships in English and French from earlier years and thought that I had written about them, but apparently not on Language Log.  Now he has won again, this time in Spanish, so it's about time that he became known to our readership, if they don't already know him..

"Scrabble star wins Spanish world title – despite not speaking Spanish:  Nigel Richards has also been champion in English and – after memorising dictionary in nine weeks – French", Ashifa Kassam in Madrid, The Guardian (12/10/24)

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More than 150 competitors representing 20 countries descended on a hotel on the outskirts of Granada last month to battle it out at the Spanish World Scrabble Championships.

Now, weeks after the letter tiles were meticulously placed and the points tallied, news of the tournament’s winner, Nigel Richards, has made waves across Spain, with many scratching their heads over the fact he does not speak Spanish.

“This is someone with very particular, incredible abilities; he’s a gifted guy,” Benjamín Olaizola, who came second to Richards in the Spanish-language tournament, told the broadcaster Cadena Ser. “We are talking about a New Zealander who has won multiple championships in English – at least five of them.”

The Spanish title wasn’t the first time Richards’ Scrabble skills had shattered linguistic barriers: in 2015 he made headlines when he won the francophone world championships without being able to speak or understand French. Instead he reportedly memorised the entire French Scrabble dictionary in nine weeks.

“He doesn’t speak French at all – he just learned the words,” his friend Liz Fagerlund told the New Zealand Herald at the time. “He won’t know what they mean, wouldn’t be able to carry out a conversation in French, I wouldn’t think.”

In 2018 he again won the francophone tournament, casting off any suggestion that his French title had been a one-off.

After nearly three decades of playing Scrabble competitively, Richards is widely viewed as the best player of all time, with some chalking up his skills to his photographic memory and ability to quickly calculate mathematical probabilities. Intensely private and swift to turn down interviews, very little is known about his personal life.

“Just mentioning his name makes me tingle; he’s a phenomenon,” Eric Salvador Tchouyo, a world champion Scrabble player from Cameroon, told Radio France Internationale. “I often say he would make a good doctoral thesis topic for students in medicine because it’s incomprehensible that someone could have such memory capacity in a language he doesn’t speak.”

Describing Richards as an “exceptional” person, he noted that whenever Richards turned up at a tournament, the other players knew they were playing for second place at best. “When Nigel Richards sits at a table, everyone loses their nerves, even the biggest champions,” he said. “Playing against Nigel Richards is like playing against a computer.”

That's an interesting thought:  a human being compared favorably to a computer in areas where computers are expected to excel.

 

Selected readings

[Thanks to Don Keyser]



7 Comments »

  1. martin schwartz said,

    December 13, 2024 @ 8:10 pm

    For me, the dictionary-memorizing scrabblers are like idiot savants
    who cheat. I became aware of such people some years ago via
    an aggressive scrabblerette from Thailand (Scrabble is very popular there) whose goal was just to win, and who had no interest in or
    real knowledge of English literature, or even proper usage.
    Big phrygian deal!–phooey and feh.
    MS

  2. martin schwartz said,

    December 13, 2024 @ 8:12 pm

    For me, such dictionary-memorizers are like idiot savants
    who cheat. I became aware of such people some years ago via
    an aggressive scrabblerette from Thailand (the game is very popular there) whose goal was just to win, and who had no interest in or
    real knowledge of English literature, or even proper usage.
    Big phrygian deal!–phooey and feh.
    MS

  3. martin schwartz said,

    December 13, 2024 @ 10:46 pm

    I rewrote my first comments, which had been wrogly adjudged as
    repeating something I had already written; the 2nd version
    avoiding the scr-word. The result was that both remarks
    got printed. I add here that the mnemonic feat of the gamesters
    involved concerns a special minimal canonical vocabulary
    which arbirates the acceptability of the word-choices Thus, the
    last word in my above messages does occur in some d'naries,
    but is not in the aforementioned mini-lexicon, so, despite the high value
    of the letters, could be challenged as board choices.
    MSch

  4. martin schwartz said,

    December 13, 2024 @ 10:49 pm

    I rewrote my first comments, which had been wrogly adjudged as
    repeating something I had already written; the 2nd version
    avoiding the scr-. The result was that both remarks
    got printed. I add here that the mnemonic feat of the gamesters
    involved concerns a special minimal canonical vocabulary
    which arbirates acceptability. Thus, the
    last w-d in my above messages does occur in some d'naries,
    but is not in the aforementioned mini-lexicon, so, despite the high value
    of the letters, could be challenged as board choices.
    MSch

  5. martin schwartz said,

    December 14, 2024 @ 12:23 am

    ho, again!
    MS

  6. rosie said,

    December 14, 2024 @ 1:46 am

    Some Scrabble players just have good memory. If you think they're using their good memory to play the game well is cheating, the game is not for you.

  7. ~flow said,

    December 14, 2024 @ 3:31 am

    I don't feel it's cheating when you memorize the entire dictionary to win at scrabble

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