AMERICAN GO E JOURNAL: News from the American Go
Association
April 19, 2004
In This Edition:
U.S. GO NEWS: Go Congress Made Easy; Xiong Perfect In
Groesch Memorial; Zhang Tops SF Tourney; More Tesujis From S&S; In Memoriam:
John Goodell; Kerwin Brings Gems To Rochester; Hotlinks Arrive
WORLD GO NEWS: Go Champs In Auckland; Chinese Players
Eliminated In Fujitsu Second Round; O Rissei Wins Fourth Consecutive Judan
Title; Ch'eol-Han Makes The Stone Buddha Flinch Once Again; Nehanicky Wins
Toyota-Pandanet Euro Tour; Other World Go News In Brief
GAME COMMENTARY: To Invade Or Not To Invade, That Is
The Question
MOMENTS IN GO HISTORY: The
Two Fujisawas, Part Two
GO CLASSIFIED
CALENDAR OF EVENTS
ATTACHED FILES: 2004.04.19
O-Cho, go4go.sgf; 2004.04.19 SlateandShell Problem, Keshi.sgf; 2004.04.19,
Furuyama Lesson #11.pdf; 2004.04.19 Shuko Original Move.sgf
U.S. GO NEWS
GO CONGRESS MADE EASY: If the bother
of addressing envelopes and licking stamps has been holding you back from
registering for this year’s U.S. Go Congress in Rochester, today’s your lucky
day! Now you can register on-line for eight fun-filled days of go from July 31
to August 8 at the RIT Inn & Conference Center. Visit http://www.gocongress.org
for more information.
XIONG PERFECT IN GROESCH MEMORIAL: Yupei Xiong, an
AGA 8d and 1d pro in China took top honors in last weekend’s John Groesch
Memorial tournament in College Park, MD, posting a perfect 5-0 record.
Twenty-nine players (including 12 dan players, 4 of whom were 4d or better)
turned out for the annual Spring tournament April 17-18 at the University of
Maryland Go Club, organized by Steve Mount and directed by Chuck
Robbins.
The complete winner’s report: Dan
Section: 1st ($100): XIONG, Yupei, 7d (5 wins); 2nd-3rd (tie) ($25) LIU, Yubo,
3d (4 wins); QUIZON, Juan Pablo 3D (4 wins). Low Kyu Section: 1st: ($30) Carl,
Joseph, 2k (4 wins); High Kyu Section: 1st-2nd (tie) ($10): HANAOKA, Brian, 10k
(4 wins); CHOU, Jeffery, 15k (4 wins). John Groesch Memorial Prize Co-winners
($25): LIU, Yubo, 3d & CHOU, Jeffery, 3d. The John Groesch Memorial Prize is
for the best performance by a player under the age of 20 who is new to
tournament go (defined by less than two years of tournament play). This year,
the $50 prize was shared by two players who scored 4 points; the trophy went to
Jeffery Chou, who has been playing for a shorter time (both are new to the AGA).
John Groesch was a local 8th-grader who played
at the University of Maryland Go Club during 2002. He attended regularly and was
quite serious about the game, his skill increasing rapidly from about 16 kyu to
about 7 kyu. Club members, shocked and saddened to learn of his untimely passing
due to complications from the onset of diabetes in December of 2002, named their
annual Spring tournament in his memory and established the John Groesch Memorial
Prize to honor his inspiring dedication to go. Read more at http://www.wam.umdedu/~smount/Groesch.html
ZHANG
TOPS SF TOURNEY: Jinlong Zhang 1d took first place in the top division of the
San Francisco Go Club Spring tournament, held April 10-11. Fifty-five players
participated, including 31 children, “17 of whom were from a high school go club
run by Gina Shi,” reports Tournament Director Steve Burrall. “Thanks to the Ing
Foundation for helping sponsor this event,” adds Burrall, “and thanks to Maeda
Ryo 6dan of the Kansai Kiin for attending and playing simuls.”
Full results:
Div. 1: 1st: Jinlong Zhang 1d, 2nd: Adam Miller 2d, 3rd: Jimmy Guo 1d; Div. 2:
1st: Philippe Vandermersch 2k, 2nd: Danny Swarzman 4k, 3rd: Eric Branlund 3k;
Div. 3: 1st: Daniel Lam 10k, 2nd: Morgan Burks 11k, 3rd: Raymond Chan 8k; Div.
4: 1st: Joy Zhang 18k, 2nd: Albert Tao 25k, 3rd: Zack Liu 20k; Div. 5: 1st:
Jennifer Yu 30k, 2nd: Julia Dang 28k, 3rd: Brandon Low 29k
MORE TESUJIS
FROM S&S: Volume 5 of the Go Problems for Kyu Level Players series has just
been published by Slate & Shell. This volume is a valuable collection of
tesuji problems that reveals the kinds of possibilities that stronger players
already know. 44 pages, $5, handy pocket size. Sample pages are posted on the
Slate & Shell web site: http://www.slateandshell.com
IN
MEMORIAM: John Goodell
John Goodell, one of the
leading U.S. players and organizers of go tournaments and events in the 1950s
and 1960s died April 4 in St Paul, MN. He was 94. A documentary filmmaker who
was nominated for an Academy Award for the feature ``Always a New Beginning'' in
1974, Goodell took up go in the ‘50s and “fell in love with the game,''
according to son Gregory Goodell.
``He taught
everybody he met how to play 'Go,''' Goodell told the Minneapolis Star Tribune,
and was so dedicated to spreading the game that he once imported 2 tons of go
stones from Japan. In a 1991 Star Tribune interview, Goodell said, ``I just
became enchanted with the game when I learned that it was simpler to teach than
chess, but a far more profound game. It's almost like meditation. When you play
'Go,' the world goes away.'' Look for further remembrances of Goodell and his
contributions to American go in future editions of the E-Journal.
KERWIN
BRINGS GEMS TO ROCHESTER: "Practice good technique first, understand later.
Fully finish what you intended to do. Consider defending your last move. The 4th
line is golden. Try and make the most efficient and effective moves. Avoid moves
that have no value. " These are just a few of the go teaching gems imparted by
James Kerwin 1P at a workshop held April 10-11 in Rochester, NY.
Kerwin
exploits the PDA, laptop, and SmartGo software technology well in his state of
the art feedback and critique sessions. Kerwin’s teaching method is to compare
and contrast at least three variations of alternate moves using “SmartGo”
software very quickly.
“One of the biggest ways to learn go is to review
your own games," Kerwin told the more than 25 students, alumni and guests of the
University of Rochester (U of R) and Rochester Institute of Technology (RIT)
clubs who attended the two-day go workshop. "Later, you can show your games to
stronger players. For beginners, this is more important than solving go problems
or looking at pro games.”
The workshop's theme was “defense,” and Kerwin
offered three levels of advice on the subject: 1) Dump or don’t dump stones; 2)
Make eyes in place; 3) Run. It's also key not to make too many weak groups.
Kerwin also cautioned against being in too much of a hurry. "Think of yourself
as a brick by brick builder," he urged, "not a racer! "
-reported by David
Boyer; check out his photo of game analysis at the Rochester workshop on the
AGA’s homepage: http://www.usgo.org/index.asp
HOTLINKS
ARRIVE: Alert readers will have noticed that the E-Journal now has internal
hotlinks that enable you to jump quickly from the table of contents to the rest
of the newsletter. We hope this is helpful and welcome comments and suggestions
on ways to continue to improve the E-Journal.
WORLD GO NEWS
GO CHAMPS IN AUCKLAND: The 2004
Auckland Go Championships have been scheduled for May 22-23 in Auckland, New
Zealand at the SAS building in Greenlane. Get details and entry forms from Steve
Taylor at tayste@clear.net.nz or call +64 9 3066836
CHINESE PLAYERS
ELIMINATED IN FUJITSU SECOND ROUND: For the second straight year, all of China's
hopefuls were eliminated in the second round of the 17th Fujitsu Cup, leaving
one Taiwanese, five Koreans, and two Japanese players to compete in the
quarter-finals scheduled for June. Song T'ae-kon 6p and Yi (Lee) Ch'ang-ho 9p
defeated Kong Jie 7p and Wang Lei 8p respectively to end China's hopes. The
other quarter finalists are: Ch'oe Ch'eol-han, Yoda Norimoto 9p, Pak
Yeong-hyeon, Yu Ch'ang-hyeok, Cho U 9p, and Zhou Junxun 9p. Junxun, representing
Taiwan, is having a good year: He very recently won the 5th Chukan Cup, is the
current Taiwan Kiin Cup title holder, and defeated China's number one player (Gu
Li 7p) in round one and last year's Fujitsu champion, Yi Se-tol (Lee Sedol) 9p
in round two of this Fujitsu. The Fujitsu, also known as the World Go
Championship, was started in 1988 and was the first major tournament in which
top players from all over Asia and the West competed. Game records for round two
can be found at http://www.go4go.net.
- reported by Dennis Hardman
O RISSEI WINS FOURTH CONSECUTIVE JUDAN
TITLE: In the fourth game of the 42nd Judan title match, defending title holder,
O Rissei 9p, fought off one of the strongest young Japanese professionals, Cho U
9p, to win by resignation, securing the overall title three games to one. O, who
is nearly twice Cho U's age of 24, played Black and won the fourth game after
only 127 moves, earning a paycheck of 14 million yen (about $130,000). O has
been around the Japanese professional scene for quite some time. He is a
three-time winner of the prestigious Kisei and has won numerous other Japanese
titles over the years. Game records can be found at http://www.go4go.net.
- reported by Dennis Hardman
CH'EOL-HAN MAKES THE STONE BUDDHA FLINCH
ONCE AGAIN: Although Yi (Lee) Ch'ang-ho 9p is arguably one of the best go
professionals in the world today (and possibly of all time), he has had quite a
bad time with 18-year old Choe Ch'eol-han 6d in recent months. First it was the
47th Kuksu, where Choe stripped Yi of the title he held for three years. Now
Choe has won the 15th Kiseong title, again taking it from "stone Buddha" Yi, by
winning Game Four of the best-of-five match by 2.5 points and winning the title
overall by three games to one. Yi has held the Kiseong title since 1993 when he
took it from his teacher Cho Hun-hyeon 9d. Choe now holds three major Korean
titles (Chunwon, Kuksu and Kiseong) and is a quarter finalist in the Fujitsu.
He's making some money too! The prize money for the Kiseong is 18 million Korean
Won (about $15,000). Game records can be found at http://www.go4go.net.
Other interesting information about these players can be found at http://www.gogameworld.com.
- reported by Dennis Hardman
NEHANICKY WINS TOYOTA-PANDANET EURO
TOUR: On April 10th through 12th, the 2004 Paris International Go Tournament was
held, with Hui Fan 8d taking first, Jean-François Seailles 6d taking second, and
Motoki Noguchi 6d taking third. The Paris International Go Tournament is the
final stop for the 2003/2004 Toyota-Pandanet European Go Tour that began in
Budapest, Hungary in May of 2003 and involved tournaments in 12 major European
cities. Players win points in each of the tour stops and, after the final
tournament, an overall tour winner is announced. This year, the overall winner
is Radek Nehanicky, an amateur 6d player from the Czech Republic who, according
to senseis.xmp.net, has a very special style in which "... his position often
seems really strange after beginning, but he is a great fighter (and fights a
lot, when he is behind), and his endgame is superb." Nehanicky had been a
contender and winner in previous overall tour results. He placed 10th in
2001/2002 and won in 2002/2003. The tour, which started in 2000, is sponsored by
Toyota Motor Corporation and Toyota Motor Europe Marketing & Engineering,
along with IGS-Pandanet. For more information about both the Paris tournament
and the European Tour, go to HTTP://www.european-go.org.
- reported by Dennis Hardman
OTHER WORLD GO NEWS IN
BRIEF
(compiled from various sources)
- Denmark: Sondags
Grand Prix - Torben Pedersen 3d won. Second place shared by Frank Hansen 4d and
Per Schaechter 2d.
- Sweden: Nordic Go Championship 2004 -
Vesa Laatikainen 5d wins with Michael Yao 4d second and Thomas Heshe 5d
third.
- China: 16th Mingren - Yu Bin 9d (Qisheng title
holder) and Wang Lei 8d among others advance to the first
round.
- Korea: 38th Wangwi - Yi Se-tol (Lee Sedol) 9d
continues to lead league.
- Korea: 4th Pro Senior - Jang
Sooyoung 9d won first of best-of-three match against Kim Ilwhan
9d.
- Japan: 29th Shinjin O (New Stars) - Hujii Shuhya 5d
advances to second round.
- Japan: 52nd NHK Cup - Hasegawa
Sunao 9d defeats Honorary Gosei Otake Hideo to advance to first
round.
- UK: Stacey Grand Prix - Trophy to the player
winning most "above the bar" games in UK tournaments each year. First place goes
to Young Kim (26), second goes to Francis Roads (25), third is Alistair Wall
(19), and fourth Li Shen (17).
- UK: Thames Valley Team Tournament -
Swindon's Christian Scarff 2d, Paul Barnard 1d, and Matthew Griffiths 11 kyu won
the Broken Go Stone Trophy. Go to http://www.britgo.org for
details.
- reported by Dennis Hardman
GAME
COMMENTARY: To Invade Or Not To Invade, That Is The Question
The stones
are still warm in today’s game, Game Two in the 42nd Judan title (Japan), played
on March 26, 2004. Cho U, 9p takes White against O Rissei, 9p on Black in a game
that features a daring White invasion in the midst of massive Black thickness.
The commentary is by Alexandre Dinerchtein, 1p from his subscription service at
http://www.go4go.net
The
bonus problem today, appropriately, is from “Keshi and Uchikomi: Reduction and
Invasion in Go,” by Iwamoto Kaoru, an AGA book published by Slate & Shell,
http://www.slateandshell.com
This
week we’re also pleased to offer a special lesson for kyu players from “Kaz”
Furuyama, this one on Star Point Basic Joseki.
To view the attached .sgf
file(s), simply save the file(s) to your computer and then open using an .sgf
reader such as Many Faces of Go or SmartGo. Readers who need .sgf readers can
get them for most platforms at Jan van der Steen's http://gobase.org/sgfeditors.html
MOMENTS IN GO HISTORY: The Two Fujisawas, Part
Two
By William Cobb
The younger Fujisawa,
Shuko or Hideyuki (the pronunciation of his given name that he prefers) is more
famous than his relative Hosai. Born in 1925, Shuko (as he is almost universally
known, especially in the West) has had a splendid, though at times
controversial, career. He has won many titles, most famously the first six Kisei
(1977-82), the most prestigious of the Japanese titles. Shuko was named
permanent Honorary Kisei for this feat. He also won the Meijin the first time it
was awarded on the basis of competition, in 1962, beating out Sakata Eio and Go
Seigen.
Shuko won the Oza in 1991 at the age
of 66 and successfully defended it the next year against Kobayashi Koichi.
Kobayashi was at the peak of his career at the time, and nearly thirty years
younger than Shuko. No other pro has had such success that late in life. There
have been numerous other titles and awards, and there probably would have been
many more if not for his love of alcohol. He was notorious for sobering up for
the Kisei title match each year, pointing out that he only had to win four games
a year to remain at the top of the go world.
In
1999, a year after his retirement, Shuko had a falling out with the Nihon Kiin
over the price the Kiin charges for dan diplomas, which is a major source of
income for the Kiin. Shuko began issuing diplomas himself for a smaller fee and
was summarily dismissed from the Nihon Kiin as a result. This made him persona
non grata for several years, but in early 2004, he was reinstated in the Kiin. A
happy consequence of his reinstatement is that the Nihon Kiin has allowed his
famous Dictionary of Basic Tesuji to be reprinted. Now in his late seventies,
Shuko continues to be active. His picture and an analysis of one of his amazing
moves can be found in the current issue of Go World. We’ve attached a record of
that game for your amusement; the remarkable move is Black 13. 2004.04.19 SHUKO
ORIGINAL MOVE.SGF
Sources: The Go Player’s
Almanac 2001, Sensei’s Library, http://gobase.org, Go
World #100. For a sketch of Hosai, see Part One of this essay in the April 5th
E-Journal.
GO CLASSIFIED: BOOKS, EQUIPMENT,
ETC
WANTED: Copies of Go Monthly Review. 1960 1-12; 1961 1-4; 1965 1;
1968 1, 4, 5, 8, 12; 1969 1; 1971 1. Willing to pay a reasonable price. Contact
T Mark Hall at tmark@gogod.demon.co.uk or at the US Congress at Rochester.
(4/19)
AVAILABLE: Elegant kaya table gobans(thickness varies from 33mm to
69mm) and exquisite 7 inch japanese kaya goban with legs. Also I have
kaya bowls. jade stones, marble stones, agate stones and double convex
yunzi - best stone in China. More items will be added on regular basis. I
teamed up with www.go4go.net and
apermanent webpage has been set up
at http://equipment.go4go.net
Please contact Rui Wang at ruiwang@isi.edu
if you have any questions.
(4/9)
WANTED: Go Reviews, older complete years, 60's & 70's. Send
info on condition and price to flynp1@comcast.net (3/29)
AVAILABLE: A few
very nice Japanese kaya table gobans (thickness varies from 33mm to 69mm) and
one 7 inch japanese kaya goban with legs. Also I have kaya bowls. jade stones,
marble stones, agate stones and double convex yunzi best stone in China. photos
are available at http://cat.isi.edu/~ruiwang/gobanpic/
click fullsize for 2048x1536 photos and regularsize for 640x480 photos. Please
contact ruiwang@isi.edu (3/22)
WANTED: The Treasure Chest Enigma Noriyuki
Nakayama; new or used in very good condition. Contact Shavit at info@go-mind.com
(3/22)
FOR SALE: the book "Enclosure Josekis" by Masaki Takemiya and
published by the Ishi Press. Now out of print, it was purchased years ago by the
Canadian Go Association and then forgotten so it is in new, unopened condition.
Contact Frank Monks at pmonks@look.ca (3/22)
GO CLASSIFIED: GO
PLAYERS WANTED
CARLSBAD, CA: mschlee@yahoo.com (3/22)
CHICAGO, IL
(south suburbs): Jeff, tompygo@comcast.net (3/22)
ASHEVILLE, NC:
ichliebedeinunderhosen@yahoo.com
(3/22)
NEW JERSEY SHORE: Contact
Iangershman@hotmail.com (3/29)
Harrison NY: Mauricio Aguirre;
maguirrel@hotmail.com (3/29)
STATE COLLEGE/CENTRE COUNTY, PA: (Penn State
University, UP Campus). A small unofficial club has started with only five or so
members, looking for more people to expand the club. Contact djs443@psu.edu for
more information. (3/29)
Got go stuff to sell, swap or want to buy? Do it
here and reach nearly 7,000 Go players worldwide every week at Go Classified!
Listing are free and run 4 weeks; send to us at journal@usgo.org
CALENDAR OF EVENTS
April 24: Middlebury,
VT
Spring Tournament
Peter Schumer 802-388-3934
schumer@middlebury.edu
April 24: Fort Wayne, IN
1st Indiana Go
Tournament
Jim Kiraly 260-710-3644 jim@fwgc.net
Apirl 25: Menlo Park,
CA
First California High School Goe Tournament
Mingjiu Jiang 650-969-2857
mingjiu7p@hotmail.com
http://www.gomasters.com/
May
2: Seattle, WA
Monthly Ratings Tournament
Jon Boley 206-545-1424
jon@seattlegocenter.org
http://www.seattlegocenter.org/
May
8: Grand Rapids, MI
Grand Rapids Go Club Tournament
David Hast
616-791-8929 djhast@yahoo.com
May 8 & 9: Rochester, NY
Empty Sky
Spring Tournament 2004
Gregory L. Lefler 585-424-2269
glacticjoke@hotmail.com
May 15: Arllington, VA
May Madness
Allan
Abramson 703-684-7676 mediate8@worldnet.att.net
June 3-6: Round Top,
NY
Guo Juan Workshop at The Woodlands
Jean-Claude Chetrit 718-638-2266
zorglub@brooklyngoclub.org
http://brooklyngoclub.org/cgi-bin/disp_topic.iphtml?topic_id=188
June
24-27: Hackensack, NJ
2004 New Jersey Yang 7p Go Workshop
John Stephenson
201-612-0852 jcs@wingsgoclub.org
http://www.wingsgoclub.org/Yangworkshop.asp
June,
July, August: KGS or Yahoo
2004 3rd RSC Team Youth Go Cup
Christopher Vu
wasonlyyesterday@yahoo.com
www.geocities.com/seaottergoclub/RSC.html
REGISTRATION
DEADLINE: May 31
This is a digest of events for the next month only; for
a complete
listing see the Tournament Calendar on the AGA website:
http://www.usgo.org/usa/tournaments.asp
For
the European Go Calendar see
http://www.european-go.org/TOURNAMENTS/TListbyDate.htm
GET
LISTED & BOOST TURN OUT! Got an upcoming event? Reach over 6,000 readers
every week! List your Go event/news In the E Journal: email details to us at
MAILTO:journal@usgo.org
Ratings are on the web! Check the website; http://www.usgo.org for
the full list.
GET YOUR TOURNAMENT RATED! Send your tournament data to
MAILTO:ratings@usgo.org
AGA CONTACT LIST: For a full list of AGA
officers, contacts & their email addresses, go to:
http://www.usgo.org/org/index.asp#contactinfo
Published
by the American Go Association
Text material published in the AMERICAN GO
E JOURNAL may be reproduced by any recipient: please credit the AGEJ as the
source. PLEASE NOTE that commented game record files MAY NOT BE published,
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Articles appearing in the E-Journal represent the
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American Go Association.
To make name or address corrections, notify us
at the email address below. Story suggestions, event announcements, Letters to
the Editor and other material are welcome, subject to editing for clarity and
space, and should be directed to:
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