American Go E-Journal » 2010 » September

2010 COTSEN OPEN: Round 2, Board 2: W: Dae Hyuk Ko 7d – B: Soo Ihl Ha 7d

Sunday September 19, 2010

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2010 COTSEN OPEN: Round 2, Board 3 (the dame dispute game): W: Deuk Je Chang 7d – B: Curtis Tang 7d

Sunday September 19, 2010

EDITOR’S NOTE: The result of this exciting game was the subject of dispute, due to White’s failure to play a dame at the end which

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would cost him 2 points — and the game –under Ing rules. See the note at the end of the game for details.

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2010 COTSEN OPEN: Round 2, Board 4: Jong In Jeong 7d – Seung Hyun Hong 7d

Sunday September 19, 2010

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2010 COTSEN OPEN Photo Album: Saturday, September 18

Saturday September 18, 2010

photos by Chris Garlock

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2010 COTSEN: Round 1, Board 1: Jennie Shen 2P on Rui Wang 7D – Juyong Koh 7D

Saturday September 18, 2010

Jennie Shen 2P provides in-depth commentary on this cliffhanger 1st-round “cold sweat” game between Rui Wang 7d and Juyong Koh 7d. Fasten your seatbelts and enjoy the ride!

2010 Cotsen Open

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Round 1, Board 1
September 18, 2010
Los Angeles, CA
W: Rui Wang 7d
B: Juyong Koh 7d
Commentary: Jennie Shen 2P
Broadcast on KGS; recorded by Chris Garlock

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2010 COTSEN OPEN: Round 1, Board 2: Guthrie Price 7D – Dae Hyuk Ko 7D

Saturday September 18, 2010

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2010 COTSEN OPEN: Round 1, Board 3: Jong In Jeong 6d – Deuk Ju Chang 7d

Saturday September 18, 2010

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2010 COTSEN OPEN: Round 1, Board 4: Yixian Zhou 7d – Curtis Tang 7d

Saturday September 18, 2010

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CATHY LI 1P KNOCKED OUT OF BINGSHEN CUP

Monday September 13, 2010

North American representative Cathy Li 1p was knocked out by Park Jieun (Chieun) 9P in the first round of the Bingsheng Cup, a new international women’s tournament. The Bingsheng Cup is held at Qionglong Mountain in Suzhou, China. Click here for standings, game records and more on the tournament, which wraps up on September 14. Li, of Vancouver, Canada won the right to represent North America in online qualifiers held last month on KGS. The online qualifying matches were dominated by Canadian players, as disputed AGA tournament regulations (AGA’s 10-Game Rule Assailed By Feng Yun 9P 9/6 EJ) and little advance notice for this new event prevented many US women from being eligible to participate.
– Dennis Wheeler

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WORLD GO NEWS ROUND-UP September 7-13: Bingshen Cup final set; Samsung Cup final 16

Monday September 13, 2010

Park vs. Hei in Bingshen Cup finals. In the 1st Binshen Cup (AKA the Qionglong Cup), Park Jieun 9P (r) of Korea and Hei Jiajia 1P representing Oceania (Australia) both won their semifinal matches and will face each other in the title match September 14th. Park defeated China’s Tang Yi 2P by 7.5 points, and Hei defeated China’s Zheng Yan 2P by resignation. One of the more notable first-round matches was between Rui Naiwei 9P and Tang Yi, with Rui losing to Tang by 5.5 points. The Qionglong Cup is a women only international tournament. (game recordsSamsung Cup down to 16 players. The final sixteen players for the 15th Samsung Cup (tournament bracket) were decided on September 10. Korea’s Choi Cheolhan 9P, Park Jiyeon 2P, Lee Changho 9P, and Park Yeonghun 9P all won their respective games, giving Korea a total of 10 players in the main tournament. China’s Gu Li 9P, Zhou Ruiyang 5P, Wang Tao 3P, and Kong Jie 9P all won their respective games, giving China a total of 5 players. Yamashita Keigo 9P clinched his spot in the main tournament on September 9th, and is the only Japanese representative in this year’s final tournament. Keigo incidentally was the only Japanese player in last year’s final tournament as well. Of the eight remaining block-tournament matches, several are worth noting. Park Jiyeon, the only female player to advance to the main tournament, defeated Tuo Jiaxi 3P by resignation. Lee Changho was able to redeem himself against Tan Xiao 5P, after losing to him in the first round, and defeated Xiao by resignation. Xiao lost his second-round match against Han Sanghoon 5P, which then put him back into the losers bracket to face Changho. Despite his loss, Xiao played very well in this game. And finally, Gu Li defeated Korean amateur Min Sangyoun by resignation after 133 moves. (game records and more game records)
JustPlayGo; edited by Jake Edge

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Categories: World
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