‘I think chess is sexy': How a teen's gambit led to love
She gave herself a male name, uploaded a profile picture of her cat and one day randomly chose to challenge a player with the tag name ChessGoon. 'We started playing and I really loved his style but I did not like that he beat me – I had a stronger rating than him.'
After some time, they began messaging, commenting on the games: 'He had a more aggressive style, it's called 'Romantic'; I'm quite a boring player actually, I like to weasel a slight advantage, get to the end game and win from there. He would go for the most insane 'check me in one' tactics. I mean, I'd obviously see it and I'm like, 'I'm not going to fall for that.' '
So you were both fascinated and annoyed by each other? 'Yes, we were quite rude, making chippy little comments. Then one day I wrote: 'Can't believe you just lost to a teenage girl.' (By this time, Paton was 18.) He goes, 'What?! I thought you were a middle-aged old man; you play like one.' ' Intrigued, Paton searched ChessGoon on Instagram: 'Oh my god, he was young and attractive; I hadn't really thought of him as a person.'
Her opponent was Anthony Arena, a 24-year-old data analyst from New York. When I call him, he is keen to talk. 'This is my favourite story to tell,' he says. 'It's changed my life. When we played I won at first, then she was winning and we got into the banter: I thought, 'This guy is funny, I could really be friends with him.' Then one day I got this message: 'You're getting your butt kicked by an 18-year-old girl.' I had no idea! We started video chatting and it became romantic. I had to meet her and I booked a flight to England.'
It was August 2023. Paton left the refuge of her bedroom and went to pick Arena up at London's Heathrow Airport. How was it, I ask her, meeting in real life? 'I don't want to be all romantic and corny,' she says doubtfully. Go ahead, I say. 'Well, I just ran up and hugged him. From that moment we have been best friends; we love each other so much.'
Since then, the two have been back and forth between London and New York, and Arena, now 27, is in the UK for Paton's 21st birthday. We meet at her home in a street of large Edwardian houses overlooking London's Queen's Park. Paton has three siblings and three step-siblings; two of them are snacking in the big sunny kitchen and greet me warmly. 'I love Jas's family,' enthuses Arena, 'they always make me so welcome. I play chess with her dad.'
Loading
Today they're going to a favourite haunt, the Chess and Bridge Store in Baker Street, and I'm tagging along. We stroll through the park shaded by big horse chestnut and plane trees in full summer greenery. It's mid-June and hot; they are both in shorts. Arena has an athletic figure and is a good 20 centimetres taller than Paton.
They link hands all the way – through the park, crossing streets and on the underground. At an escalator, we find ourselves briefly separated in single file. 'Why are you so far from me?' frowns Paton. He smiles and reaches for her hand. On the pavement outside the Chess Store, there are tables set up with boards: 'If you're on your own and sit down at one,' says Paton, 'very soon someone will challenge you to a game. There are loads like this in New York, which I love.'
But today the tables are in full sun and we retreat indoors to sit at a chess board in the relative cool. They are greeted by a staff member and the three exchange chess gossip. Paton says that a member of the English chess team was at her home for dinner the night before; Arena glances at her: 'Am I allowed to say?' he asks. 'I beat him.' She laughs, 'He was probably distracted by me and my mum chewing his ear.'
While the other two continue gossiping, I notice Arena is silently moving pieces around the board. He sees me watching: 'Oh, I'm rehearsing that game; I do this a lot.' He returns to the board: 'Ah yes, here and here,' he mutters, 'sack the bishop … then I think I castled.' Paton says they used to analyse chess games from opposite sides of the Atlantic: 'We'd choose a famous game; he'd take his board to a cafe, I'd take mine to the park and we'd play through the moves.'
'To begin with, everything was so new, we were both in love with chess and falling in love with each other.'
Anthony Arena
'To begin with,' says Arena, 'everything was so new, we were both in love with chess and falling in love with each other.' Paton nods and adds: 'But it wasn't yet expressed; they were intense games, quite flirty, as you can imagine. I think chess is sexy: you have to be really sharp and creative; it has all those tropes you look for in a person. We'd be on FaceTime and I'd look at him, so passionate and concentrated.' Later they would go on virtual dates: 'I'd take her to Wagamama,' says Arena, 'her dinner, my lunch, we'd both have sushi.'
'Shall we play a game?' he suggests. They face each other: 'She likes to set up her knights like this,' he says. 'Now there's a couple of ways I can go … I used to have this opening, it did well against different people then Jas just decimated it.' Paton shrugs: 'It's so obvious and predictable,' she mocks.
They are both highly rated players, used to winning. In the depths of her depression, Paton had found a safe place playing fiercely competitive games online with the unknown American. 'I've watched her grow,' says Arena, 'building herself from rock bottom, coming off her meds, getting to university.' Paton is doing a psychology degree, has a side hustle tutoring young chess players, and has mended relationships lost during her depression. But she still recalls the darkest of times. 'I want to say that chess saved me,' she confesses, 'but really it was my mum. The depression had taken away my voice; I couldn't speak to anyone because I didn't have anything good to say. Seeing the pain in my mum's eyes, it just killed me. I'd been reading about the culture and history of chess so I would tell her about that, then we could talk about something apart from how I was feeling.'
Her mother, Camilla Lewis, runs a TV production company and those conversations produced a light-bulb moment for her. 'Through Jasmine, I discovered the chess community was huge – six million people playing regularly in the UK alone,' Lewis recalls. 'I woke up one night and thought, 'Hang on, there's no chess on television. Why not?' ' Lewis's company, Curve Media, went on to produce a show for the BBC pitting 12 rising chess stars – six women and six men – against each other. There were competitors' backstories, jeopardy and excitable commentary but Chess Masters: The Endgame was not telegenic like Bake Off or MasterChef. The Guardian 's reviewer called it 'so dull it's almost unwatchable'.
Even so, it did well enough for the BBC to consider a second series and, according to Lewis, it is now headed for Australian screens. 'There are two broadcasters bidding for the rights,' she tells me when I call her. 'It's very exciting.'
The NSW Chess Association's Rupert Coy is hopeful the show will raise the game's profile, particularly if it encourages more women to play. 'According to ChatGPT, only eight per cent of Australian chess players are female,' he says. 'There are some very talented players among them – the NSW Blitz Championship in November last year was won by a schoolgirl – but we would like to see more coming through.' Online chess took off during COVID, while the film The Queen's Gambit was expected to entice more women to take up the game. But after an initial flurry of interest, the numbers remain stubbornly low.
Several female players told Good Weekend that young girls take up the game in primary school but drop away in their teen years. NSW top player Kris Quek says the gender gap discourages them: 'There are so few other [chess-playing] girls to be friendly with and friendship is really important, particularly in secondary school.'
Loading
Junior chess champion Athena-Malar Retnaraja agrees: 'Girls give up chess to play a different sport to be with other girls,' she says. 'My older brother plays and we go to the same competitions; I would definitely feel more lonely without him.'
Adelaide writer and academic Katerina Bryant says the chess landscape is so male-dominated that as a player, she frequently felt as if she were the sole representative of her gender. 'And you could feel the hostility in some places. I play mostly online now because of that; even so, there is online abuse of women players despite moderating.' I tell her the story of Jasmine Paton and Anthony Arena falling in love over chess. Isn't there something potentially rather sensual about the intimacy of the game – the frisson of locking eyes with your opponent as you consider the next move? Bryant laughs – her partner is also a chess player. 'Oh, I'm not looking at him, I'm staring at the board and thinking how I can crush him.'
Back in London, the two young lovers agree to call their game a draw and we go next door for a cup of tea. I ask if they think of moving countries to be together. They do, of course, but where? 'It would be hard to leave my chaotic family,' admits Paton, 'and I'm young, still studying.' Arena agrees it's difficult: 'With my family and stuff, I'm the eldest, I'd have things to sort out.' His face clears: 'But I'm here now, Jas will be in New York in July, and we're committed to making it the best summer ever.'

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


Perth Now
an hour ago
- Perth Now
Channel 7 star's heartbreaking fertility update: ‘Here we go again'
Channel 7 presenter Erin Holland has 'broken up the highlights reel with some real talk' on her ongoing fertility battle. The 36-year-old's hopes of starting a family with her Australian cricketer husband Ben Cutting, 38, have been set back in recent years. The couple learned soon after their February 2021 wedding that IVF was their 'only real option to have a baby' but the process has proved challenging on several fronts. In a devastating update on Instagram this week, Holland detailed how they are almost back at square one nearly four years later. 'Here we go again...' she wrote with a photo from hospital. 'Breaking up the highlights reel with some real talk. 'Many losses, many failed transfers down, today was all about exploratory surgery, internal 'renovations' and starting testing from scratch again to try and find some answers to the soul-destroying unknown. 'What's the missing piece of the puzzle? 'Injections, steroids, so many drugs... it's far more emotionally and physically draining than we ever bargained for.' Erin Holland is searching for answers to her IVF struggles. Credit: Instagram Holland's post included a picture of several vials piled up in a bathroom and footage of the couple's husky Skylar interrupting her nap on the couch. 'My emotional support animal needs some work though,' she laughed. More seriously, Holland also sent a message to others in the same situation. 'Infertility feels like your face is pressed up against the glass of a club you so badly want to be a part of, but no one is letting you in,' she wrote. 'To all going through it, life can be tough… but my darling, so are you. Hang in there x.' Holland received support from high-profile friends and fans, from Channel 7 colleagues Lisa Sthalekar and Alex Hartley to Olympic gold medallist Shayna Jack and the likes of Tayla Broad, Chrishell Stause and Nadia Bartel. Holland first opened up on the IVF process in 2022 when the first round resulted in 'nothing viable'. 'As someone who went in just wanting to freeze embryos until the time was 'right', I've grappled with the confusing feelings of the loss of any 'normality' of this process, feeling like the universe was telling me I'm not meant to be a mother,' she said at the time. Ben Cutting and Erin Holland married in 2021. Credit: Instagram Holland shared that she felt a mix of emotions, including the 'guilt of letting Ben down, the 'am I even ready' thoughts, and feeling physically broken'. 'The sense of failure is overwhelming,' she said. 'The toll on the mind and body, the injections, the cost... but I'm so grateful for modern medicine - it will take a village to create this baby, let alone raise it. 'The fact that IVF is even a possibility blows my mind. I know it's only the very beginning of this journey, and I thought about only sharing it when it was over, if ever.' Holland has been a regular on Channel 7's cricket coverage across men's and women's Big Bash and international matches. She and Cutting both travel throughout the year presenting at and playing in cricket tournaments around the globe. Cutting suffered what Holland described as an 'unexpected bump in the road' last year when he went under the knife after months of back and nerve issues. Ben Cutting underwent back surgery in 2024. Credit: Instagram 'The last six months I've dealt with numb legs, weak legs, drop foot, severe nerve pain, days where I couldn't walk, a spinal surgery, and a ruptured plantar fascia,' he said. 'I still rehabbed my arse off and got back on the park and played some good cricket. 'This week capped it off, I went back under the knife, in an effort to play on. I am out, but I will be back.' Cutting most recently played in the World Championship of Legends tournament in the UK.


7NEWS
an hour ago
- 7NEWS
Channel 7 star Erin Holland shares heartbreaking update on IVF and fertility battle
Channel 7 presenter Erin Holland has 'broken up the highlights reel with some real talk' on her ongoing fertility battle. The 36-year-old's hopes of starting a family with her Australian cricketer husband Ben Cutting, 38, have been set back in recent years. The couple learned soon after their February 2021 wedding that IVF was their 'only real option to have a baby' but the process has proved challenging on several fronts. In a devastating update on Instagram this week, Holland detailed how they are almost back at square one nearly four years later. 'Here we go again...' she wrote with a photo from hospital. 'Breaking up the highlights reel with some real talk. 'Many losses, many failed transfers down, today was all about exploratory surgery, internal 'renovations' and starting testing from scratch again to try and find some answers to the soul-destroying unknown. 'What's the missing piece of the puzzle? 'Injections, steroids, so many drugs... it's far more emotionally and physically draining than we ever bargained for.' Holland's post included a picture of several vials piled up in a bathroom and footage of the couple's husky Skylar interrupting her nap on the couch. 'My emotional support animal needs some work though,' she laughed. More seriously, Holland also sent a message to others in the same situation. 'Infertility feels like your face is pressed up against the glass of a club you so badly want to be a part of, but no one is letting you in,' she wrote. 'To all going through it, life can be tough… but my darling, so are you. Hang in there x.' Holland received support from high-profile friends and fans, from Channel 7 colleagues Lisa Sthalekar and Alex Hartley to Olympic gold medallist Shayna Jack and the likes of Tayla Broad, Chrishell Stause and Nadia Bartel. Holland first opened up on the IVF process in 2022 when the first round resulted in 'nothing viable'. 'As someone who went in just wanting to freeze embryos until the time was 'right', I've grappled with the confusing feelings of the loss of any 'normality' of this process, feeling like the universe was telling me I'm not meant to be a mother,' she said at the time. Holland shared that she felt a mix of emotions, including the 'guilt of letting Ben down, the 'am I even ready' thoughts, and feeling physically broken'. 'The sense of failure is overwhelming,' she said. 'The toll on the mind and body, the injections, the cost... but I'm so grateful for modern medicine - it will take a village to create this baby, let alone raise it. 'The fact that IVF is even a possibility blows my mind. I know it's only the very beginning of this journey, and I thought about only sharing it when it was over, if ever.' Holland has been a regular on Channel 7's cricket coverage across men's and women's Big Bash and international matches. She and Cutting both travel throughout the year presenting at and playing in cricket tournaments around the globe. Cutting suffered what Holland described as an 'unexpected bump in the road' last year when he went under the knife after months of back and nerve issues. 'The last six months I've dealt with numb legs, weak legs, drop foot, severe nerve pain, days where I couldn't walk, a spinal surgery, and a ruptured plantar fascia,' he said. 'I still rehabbed my arse off and got back on the park and played some good cricket. 'This week capped it off, I went back under the knife, in an effort to play on. I am out, but I will be back.' Cutting most recently played in the World Championship of Legends tournament in the UK.

Sky News AU
2 hours ago
- Sky News AU
Brandon Blackstock was in ‘loving' relationship with ex-wife Kelly Clarkson's former assistant at time of his death: obituary
Brandon Blackstock found a 'beautiful and loving' romantic partner in his ex-wife Kelly Clarkson's former assistant prior to his death, according to the late business manager's obituary. 'Brandon, along with his beautiful and loving partner in life and business, Brittney Marie Jones, started building a life, building companies, and working tirelessly to create Headwaters Livestock Auction and what will live on as his legacy, The Valley View Rodeo in Bozeman, Montana,' the tribute, which was published Tuesday, reads. Blackstock died last Thursday after a private battle with melanoma. He was 48 years old. According to Jones' LinkedIn, she served as the original 'American Idol' winner's assistant from 2016 to 2020 — which, coincidentally, is the same year Clarkson filed for divorce from Blackstock. Their divorce was finalized in 2022 after years of contentious legal proceedings. As a result of their settlement, Clarkson kept their Montana Ranch. However, she lived in New York City with their two children, daughter River, 11, and son Remington, 9. Blackstock continued to live in Montana where he went on to establish his Valley View Rodeo with Jones in December 2024, according to the US Sun. The complete nature of the pair's relationship remains unclear at this time. Though, Jones appears to have been previously married to drummer Greg Goose LaPoint. An Instagram post from LaPoint dated in Sept. 11, 2021, showed the couple celebrating one year of marriage with a carousel of photos. They appear to have since called it quits. Page Six has been unable to independently confirm the details of LaPoint's breakup from Jones. However, we can report LaPoint has since moved on with a woman named Arika Vanessa, whom he's reportedly been dating since February. Still, Jones' father posted a Facebook tribute to Blackstock following his death last week, calling him his daughter's 'soulmate.' 'Yesterday we lost a good man Brandon Blackstock my daughter's soulmate and I considered him my son,' he wrote. 'My sincere condolences to Brittney Jones and family. We're sure going to miss your funny humor. R.I.P hoss!' Page Six has reached out to reps for Clarkson, Blackstock and Jones, but did not immediately receive any responses. While Blackstock may have moved on after his split from the 'Stronger' hitmaker, Clarkson, 43, was still there to care for him in the months leading up to his tragic passing. As we previously reported, the songstress took a hiatus from her eponymous talk show in February and March to tend to Blackstock and, most recently, canceled a number of her Las Vegas residency shows for the second time just before his death. The singer has not yet publicly commented on the loss, but a source claimed Clarkson was 'devastated' for their children. 'When she found out that he was sick, she remained protective of him for their sake,' a source told People, noting how Clarkson has 'always tried to keep things classy.' 'It became clear earlier this year that Brandon was not doing well,' they continued. 'She's been devastated for the kids.' Originally published as Brandon Blackstock was in 'loving' relationship with ex-wife Kelly Clarkson's former assistant at time of his death: obituary