It was a rainy day in Columbus, Ohio, when Le’Veon Bell first discovered the game of chess.
He was in third grade and the weather forced the class inside for recess. Some kids grabbed the Monopoly board. Others played checkers. Bell and his friend Tyreek picked up a chessboard and started teaching themselves to play.
It began a love affair with the game for Bell, and the Jets’ new running back says the lessons he has learned on the chessboard have helped him on the football field.
“I think the thing I love about chess so much is it’s an opportunity to kind of manipulate people,” Bell told The Post. “You get to really exercise your brain and see how you can outthink people. There’s nothing athletic about it. It’s literally me trying to outsmart somebody else.”
Bell has been named All-Pro twice and been to the Pro Bowl three times in his five-year NFL career. His unconventional running style is as distinctive as his first name. That style is also who he is playing chess — patient, waiting for an opponent to make a mistake. When they do, he pounces.
“It translates to football in a lot of ways,” Bell said. “ That’s why I kind of run the way I run. I know what hole I want to get to, so I’m kind of setting up guys and putting pieces in different spots to get to the hole I want to get to. That’s why chess helps me out in football.”
Bell sets up defenders with the way he runs just as he sets up chess opponents.
“It helps me get to that next step,” Bell said. “I already know my first step, so if I move a pawn, I’m already anticipating this guy is going to take this pawn, but I already know my next move when he takes that pawn because I want him to take that pawn. If I see a hole or something, I may have a guy thinking I don’t see the hole, making him think I see another hole and he over-fits that next hole and I get to that next hole that I want to go to.”
After learning how to play in elementary school, Bell joined the chess club and kept honing his skills. At Michigan State, he often played with fellow running back Larry Caper. When he got to the NFL with the Steelers, he would play teammates, but did not find anyone as good as he was.
That has been the same in his early days with the Jets. Bell said he plays rookie tight end Trevon Wesco and linebacker Tarell Basham the most. Bell said he has not lost to any NFL teammates, and he sounds frustrated when he talks about finding competition.
“I say, ‘Can you play chess or do you just move the pieces?’ There’s a difference between knowing how to move the pieces and knowing what a bishop does, knowing what a rook does, a pawn and knowing how to play,” Bell said. “There’s a lot of control that goes into a board. When I play Wesco, I can beat him in three or four moves because I know how to play.”