
Credit: ABC 7 Chicago
Before continuing, it is important to state clearly that there is no evidence to support the online rumors that Liam Starnes was diagnosed with multiple sclerosis or another uncommon neurological condition. The sourcing can be traced back to untrustworthy online content that is quickly created and indexed, frequently lacking a legitimate journalist or fact at any point in the chain. No such disclosure has been made by Starnes himself. When discussing her son on Facebook, his mother gave a completely different account of her son’s autism diagnosis at the age of two. She claimed that the journey had been a “whirl of a ride,” and she had never once been let down. That’s the actual tale. Additionally, it is significantly more fascinating than the invented one in its own right.
Born in 2004, Liam Starnes entered the world during Ken Jennings’ renowned 74-game Jeopardy! winning streak—a detail that seems almost too tidy, the kind of biographical detail that a novelist would omit for being too predictable. Growing up in the suburban town of Barrington, Illinois, northwest of Chicago, he developed into the type of student quiz bowl coaches secretly hope will show up. He was leading Barrington High School’s scholastic bowl team to the High School National Championship of the National Association of Quiz Tournaments by 2021. He was seventeen years old.
Liam Starnes — Jeopardy! Champion & Quiz Bowl Captain
| Full Name | Liam Starnes |
| Born | 2004, Barrington, Illinois |
| Diagnosis | Autism — diagnosed at age 2 |
| Education | Undergraduate, University of Chicago (at time of appearance) |
| Occupation | Payment Program Manager — Ohio BWC, Columbus, Ohio |
| Jeopardy! Run | 6-game winning streak — April 18 to April 28, 2025 |
| Total Winnings | $126,584 (regular season) |
| Notable Achievement | Captained Barrington HS to the 2021 NAQT National Quiz Bowl Championship |
| Reference | www.tvinsider.com |
The University of Chicago, which is not renowned for turning out students who coast, came next. There, Starnes was studying when Jeopardy called! — and he subsequently stated on the Reddit forum for the show that his initial reaction was that it was a scam. There is a certain self-aware charm to that response. After realizing it was true, he had to make a decision that anyone would overthink: study diligently and put more pressure on himself, or treat it like a game and take a leisurely flight to Los Angeles. He looked for a compromise. He later acknowledged that if he could go back in time, he most likely would have studied more.
It didn’t help that his first taping was three days away. He spent the flight west harboring a silent fear that he had peaked at the wrong time after performing poorly at a major college quiz bowl tournament. The Los Angeles rehearsal games followed. He said he was “absolutely destroyed.” His already carefully controlled expectations fell even lower. In his own words, one victory felt almost unachievable. It’s worth stopping there: a young man who had won a national championship, attending one of the most demanding universities in the country, standing in a TV studio and sincerely thinking he might not win a single game.
He took home six victories. From April 18 to April 25, 2025, he won back-to-back games, including two in which he was so far ahead by Final Jeopardy that the result was never truly in doubt. His total winnings came to $126,584. Along the way, the internet noticed that he looked a lot like Sheldon Cooper from The Big Bang Theory, a fictional Caltech physicist portrayed by Jim Parsons, who is renowned for his photographic memory, social accuracy, and total incapacity to read a room.
Starnes, who has autism and carries his knowledge with an equally unguarded intensity, accepted the analogy. One generous interpretation of it is that viewers were looking for the closest cultural reference they could find while witnessing an exceptional performance by a person with a neurodivergent mind. It happened, whether or not that is fair. And compared to most twenty-year-olds, Starnes handled it with more poise.
On April 28, his seventh game concluded on Final Jeopardy. He looked like a champion with a few games remaining after dominating the first half and taking the lead. The last question was then asked. He gave the wrong response. In one of those Final Jeopardy swings that occasionally make the show brutal to watch, his opponent, Erin Morin, answered correctly and wagered everything, doubling her score and winning. With the same candor that he had applied to everything else, Starnes accepted it and went on to publicly describe the entire experience, including the self-doubt, the difficult rehearsal, and the fortunate break of not being selected for the morning rounds, which allowed him time to calm down.
It’s difficult to ignore how the noise surrounding Liam Starnes—the rumors about his illness, the comparisons to Sheldon, the inevitable internet conjecture about someone who doesn’t quite fit the typical mold of a daytime game show contestant—says at least as much about the audience as it does about him. He is a young man with autism who excels in a field that rewards memory, pattern recognition, and pressure tolerance. At age two, he received a diagnosis. It was never once presented as a restriction by his mother. That lesson appears to have been taken seriously by him. The rest, roughly speaking, came next.
