AMERICAN GO E-JOURNAL
World Go News from The American Go Association

 
 
 

Welcome to our special E-Journal tournament edition, with reports on this weekend’s Cotsen Open in Los Angeles and the German Championship, as well as recent tournaments in Chicago, New York City and the European Championship for Students. As a bonus for all our readers, we’re including several games from the Cotsen, including Yilun Yang’s comments on Jang Bi’s 3rd-round game against Juyong Koh and Yang’s pro-pro game against Chao Da Yuan 9P. Look for our regular Monday edition tomorrow. 
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September 21, 2008; Volume 9, #49 SPECIAL EDITION!
Welcome to our special E-Journal tournament edition, with reports on this weekend’s Cotsen Open in Los Angeles and the German Championship, as well as recent tournaments in Chicago, New York City and the European Championship for Students and the latest from the Meijin in Japan. As a bonus for all our readers, we’re including several games from the Cotsen, including Yilun Yang’s comments on Jang Bi’s 3rd-round game against Juyong Koh and Yang’s pro-pro game against Chao Da Yuan 9P. Look for our regular Monday edition tomorrow. 

JANG BI REPEATS AT COTSEN: Jang Bi 9d (at right, with Eric Cotsen) swept the Cotsen Open this weekend, successfully defending his title for the second straight year. The Cotsen attracted a record crowd of 155 players – including an Open section of 20 top players -- to a new and larger venue this year, the Bradley International Center at UCLA. "This was the largest the tournament has ever been," an exhausted but beaming Cotsen told the E-JournalSunday night after the awards ceremony. "Next year we'll break 200!" Bi, the 27 year-old former Korean insei who now lives and teaches go in Seattle, WA, thrilled online crowds of up to 400 with exciting games broadcast live on KGS by the E-Journal. Saturday night MyungWan Kim 8P had a rematch with the Mogo computer program – which defeated him at the Congress in a 9-stone handicap game – and won both games. Sunday morning Yilun Yang 7P played a pro-pro demo game against his former student Chao Da Yuan 9P, who’s now a coach in China. The Cotsen, co-sponsored by Eric Cotsen and the American Go Association, features $5,000 in prizes and one of the largest and strongest fields on the annual AGA tournament calendar. Casie Rizer organized the event and Chris Hayashida was Tournament Director. Also helping out were La Nida Cedeno, Sue Gisser, A.J. LapRise and Christopher Mitchell. The EJ broadcast team included Chris Garlock, Akane Negishi, Richard Dolen and Joe Cepiel. photos by Tony Lau
German champ
DICKHUT WINS GERMAN CHAMPIONSHIP: European Master Franz-Josef Dickhut 6d won the 2008 German Championship last weekend in Hamburg. Bernd Radmacher 5d – the highest-placing German at this year’s European Go Congress -- had a chance to win the championship, entering the last round co-leading with Dickhut, whom he already had defeated, but wound up losing to veteran former German Champion Christoph Gerlach 6D, while Dickhut won his game and the title. Gerlach took second place and defending Champion Zou Jin 6d was third and Radmacher had to settle for fourth. Click here for complete report (in German). 
- reported by Peter Dijkema, European Correspondent for the E-Journal; photo: Dickhut (center), Jin (l) and Gerlach (r).

HUYNH & SMITH TOP CHI TOURNEY (AGAIN): Lee Huynh 1d and Dan Smith 2k topped the September 13 "Sealed With a Kiss" tournament in Chicago, IL. Noting that “This is the second tourney in a row that Huynh and Smith have won,” Barber says “there must be something special in that Schaumburg Starbuck's coffee.” “Thirty-seven folks braved the largest recorded rainfall in Chicago's history to travel from Minnesota, Wisconsin and Iowa to play in this tournament,” reports TD Bob Barber. “Once you got there, a good day to stay inside and play go.” Low Kyu winner Henry Zhou “is the younger brother of the famous Will Zhou; we are all watching him speed up the ranks.” Winner’s Report: 1st Place Dan: Lee HUYNH 1d; 1st Place High Kyu:  Dan SMITH 2k; 2nd Place High Kyu: David ROHDE 5k; 1st Place Mid Kyu: Matt INWOOD 8k; 1st Place Low Kyu:  Henry ZHOU 15k; 2nd Place Low Kyu:  Diana XU 19k. Assistant TD were Mark Rubenstein and Bob Schattke. 

ZHOU & FODERA CLEAN UP IN NYGC BIG TOURNEY: Afa Zhou 1k and Michael Fodera 3d took home all the prizes in the New York Go Club’s (NYGC) Big Tournament, a 6-month-long tournament series that concluded on September 14 (Wang Yi Wins NY Tourney, 9/15 EJ). “With an average of 20 players per tournament, we consider the Big Tournament to be a success,” says organizer Boris Bernadsky. The prize pot was $400, with prizes for most overall wins, highest winning percentage and greatest growth in rating. Zhou and Fodera both tied for most overall wins, with 16 games won each, while Zhou had the highest winning percentage, winning 16 games, and losing just three.  Fodera took home the growth prize, entering the tournament as a 3 kyu, and finishing as a 3 dan. “He gives a lot of credit to the book ‘Endgame’ from the Davies series,” reports Bernadsky. The NYGC is now “debating between another series, or just cheap monthly rated tournaments without prizes,” he adds. 

NEMLY WINS EURO STUDENT CHAMP: Igor Nemly 5d [r] of Russia won the European Championship for Students, held at the end of August in a fortress on the Mediterranean island of Sainte Marguerite. Nemly narrowly edged out Jan Hora 6d of Czechia, who took second, while Frenchman Jerome Salignon 4d finished third. Nemly is from Kazan, known as the "City of European Champions" because for more than a decade, all European Champions hailed from there. Alexander Dinerchtein, Andrej Kulkov, Svetlana Shiksina and Ilya Shiksin kept the title there until Catalin Taranu 5P of Rumania took it home to Bucharest this year. Nemly has won several European youth titles before, and in this year’s Student Championship he defeated Hora and Salignon -- who both finished at 5-1 -- before losing to Martin Kuzela 3d of Czechia, who won 4th place with a 4-2 finish. Kuzela just missed the bronze in the last round in a direct challenge with Salignon. Manuela Marz 3d of Germany was the only other top contender with a positive result and the highest finishing female player. In the dan-section 16 students, four of them female, competed for the title, while ten players participated in the kyu section. Only Quentin Turlot 5k of France and Mark Nubbert 4k of Great Britain had positive results. The event was held just outside of Cannes in the South of France and during the tournament many players took advantage of the chance to cool off a bit in between the rounds with a swim in the deep blue sea.  Click here www.dgob.de for full details 
- reported by Peter 
Dijkema, European Correspondent for the E-Journal
photo: Nemly (right), plays Robert Jasiek 5d (Germany) in the 13x13 semi-final at the 2008 European Go Congress; photo by Krister Strand

IYAMA MAKES IT 2-0 IN MEIJIN: Teen Iyama Yuta 8P continued his extraordinary run by taking the second game from Cho U 9P in the Meijin title match by a half point on September 17-18. This is the first time someone so young has played in a best-of-seven-game title match and at this point he has yet to lose a game. Cho must now win four of the next five games to retain his title. The third game is scheduled for September 24-25. Iyama is also only one game away from being the challenger for the Kisei title, as reported in last week’s EJ.

Published by the American Go Association
Managing Editor: Chris Garlock
Assistant Editor: Bill Cobb
Professionals: Yilun Yang 7P; Alexandr Dinerchtein 3P; Fan Hui 2P
Contributors: Paul Barchilon (Youth Editor); Lawrence Ku (U.S. West Coast Reporter); Brian Allen (U.S. West Coast Photographer); Keith Arnold (Go Quiz); Peter Dijkema (Dutch/European Correspondent); Marilena Bara (Romania/European Correspondent); Ian Davis (Ireland Correspondent); Jens Henker (Korea Correspondent)
Columnists: James Kerwin 1P; Kazunari Furuyama; Rob van Zeijst; Roy Laird; Peter Shotwell
Translations: Chris Donner (Japan); Bob McGuigan (Japan); Matt Luce (China)

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Articles appearing in the E-Journal represent the opinions of the authors and do not necessarily reflect the official views of the American Go Association.

 
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