Finegold said he had played in hundreds of tournament games a year when he was young: "I loved chess and if I lost it did not matter to me. That's the main thing you have to do to get better at chess – if you lose hundreds of games in a row, that's OK." Finegold received the
U.S. Chess Trust's Samford fellowship in 1993. and also tied for first in the 2005 and 2008 National Open Chess Championships (Las Vegas, Nevada). He was ranked as one of the top 40 players in the United States on the August 2013 USCF rating list. Finegold has played in nine
U.S. Chess Championships: 1994 (Key West, Florida), 1999 (Salt Lake City, Utah), 2002 (Seattle, Washington), 2005 (La Jolla, California), 2006 (San Diego, California), 2008 (Tulsa, Oklahoma), 2010 (Saint Louis, Missouri), 2011 (Saint Louis, Missouri), and 2013 (Saint Louis, Missouri). In 2000, Finegold co-authored a chess book with chess master
Bob Ciaffone, titled
Smith–Morra Gambit Finegold Defense. In September 2009, he earned his third and final
grandmaster norm at the SPICE Cup in
Lubbock, Texas. Finegold's
USCF rating has been "as high as 2662, at which point he was neck and neck with GM
Larry Christiansen for the distinction of being the highest rated American born chess player in the country."
Broadcasting career Finegold has been a live commentator at the U.S. Chess Championship, U.S. Junior Chess Championship,
Sinquefield Cup, and
Chess World Cup. He also frequently gave lively and often humorous instructional lectures at the
Saint Louis Chess Club (formerly the Chess Club and Scholastic Center of Saint Louis). He was the grandmaster-in-residence of the Saint Louis Chess Club until August 14, 2012, where he filmed a number of chess
YouTube videos. In 2017, Finegold and his wife Karen co-founded the
Chess Club and Scholastic Center of Atlanta. Finegold's lectures are available on the YouTube channels of the Saint Louis Chess Club as well as the channel of the Chess Club and Scholastic Center of Atlanta and on
Twitch. As of 2021, Finegold streams chess five to six times a week, particularly on Twitch under the handle "itsBenAndKaren"; his account currently has over 133,000 followers. Highlights and clips from his Twitch streams are regularly uploaded to his YouTube channel with the same name. As of January 2025, his YouTube channel has over 150,000 subscribers. He also has a
Twitter account, with more than 21,900 followers as of March 2023. As of June 2023, Finegold has appeared five times as a guest on the
Perpetual Chess Podcast hosted by
National Master Ben Johnson. == Personal life ==