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Strip-Search That Man, 'Scrabble' Player Demands

<p>The Scrabble tile of the letter "G."</p>
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The Scrabble tile of the letter "G."

Tipping the board over and telling mom that "he's cheating!" wasn't an option, so:

Chollapat Itthi-Aree of Thailand demanded that officials at this past weekend's World Scrabble Championships in Warsaw strip and search his opponent, Ed Martin of England. Itthi-Aree thought Martin had hidden a letter "G" somewhere.

The Scrabble authorities, though, "decided against the strip search, saying there wasn't enough evidence of cheating," CBS News reports.

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Martin went on to win their match by one point.

The eventual champion was New Zealand's Nigel Richards, the tournament's first two-time winner (his previous victory was in 2007). First prize was $20,000. Richards scored big — 96 points — with the word "omnified."

Though we were surprised to hear how serious Scrabble tournaments can be, we probably should not have been. As Sports Illustrated wrote back in 1995:

"Scrabble is actually a CUTTHROAT world where GUTS, GUiLe and GAMES MANSHIP are PUSHED TO THE LiMiT."

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And there have been charges and countercharges over missing tiles before, as SI reported:

"Last June [1995], [Louis] Schecter, 43, the 37th-ranked player in the country, was in a match against Charlie Southwell in a tournament in Stamford, Conn. Suddenly, Southwell pointed out, a tile was missing. He called over the tournament director, who demanded that both players empty their pockets. 'I didn't like that,' says Schecter, a bookkeeper from Brooklyn. He refused. He was disqualified, and word spread like a line out of Damon Runyon: Did you hear? Louie palmed an E. ..."

We didn't realize how zealously some play the game.

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