American Go E-Journal » 2011 » July

Top Players to Represent U.S. in Sport Accord Mind Games; Registration Deadline July 5th

Monday July 4, 2011

(UPDATED!) More than a dozen strong players have already signed up for the five-round Swiss qualifier to represent the U.S. in the Sport Accord Mind Games (SAMG) in December 2011. The registration deadline is 8P (EST) Tuesday, July 5. The field includes five former North American Ing Masters (NAIM) champions: Feng Yun 9P, Huiren Yang 1P, Jie Li 7d, Joey Hung 7d and Andy Liu 7d. Five players, including at least one female, will play in SAMG against five other strong teams including China, Korea, Japan, Europe and Chinese Taipei (representing Asia-Pacific). This means the US players will play against top players in the world like the legendary Lee Changho, Lee Sedol, Gu Li, Kong Jie, Cho U and Iyama Yuta. The qualifier will be held on July 10-12, July 13-16, July 17-20, July 21-23, and July 24-26 on KGS. Players may reschedule with mutual consent, otherwise they must play at the official game times: 8 pm ET/5 pm PT on July 11 (Mon), 14 (Thur), 18 (Mon), 21 (Thur) and 25 (Mon). Due to the tight schedule there may be some short notices, so organizers note that players are responsible for checking and replying emails in a timely manner.
– Zhiyuan ‘Edward’ Zhang

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Jimmy Yang 5d Tops Triangle Go Group Friendship Tourney

Monday July 4, 2011

Jimmy Yang 5d (left front) won the June 26 Triangle Go Group’s Friendship/Ratings tournament in Durham/Chapel Hill, NC, topping a field of “18 friendly players,” reports organizer Bob Bacon. Yang was the only participant to go 4-0 for the day. New AGA member Yongman Kang took second place with a 3-1 record, losing only to Yang. Triangle Go Group veteran Peter Armenia won the B section with a 3-1 record. Second in this section was another youngster, Brian Wu, with a 3-1 performance, losing only to Armenia.  The C section was dominated by the older generation, with (not so old) Russell Herman taking first, at 3-1, and Steven Manning coming in second, at 2-2.  “Great games, great friends, great go!” says Bacon.

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Categories: U.S./North America
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Andy Liu and Minshan Shou to Play in Wisonet Cup Final Saturday; Club Also Hosts Rated Games

Monday July 4, 2011

Andy Liu and Minshan Shou will play for the Wisonet Cup on July 10. Liu beat Kevin Huang and Shou defeated Xinyu Tu in the June 19 semifinals in earn their berths in the Cup final.
The first round starts at 9a sharp at the Madison Suites Hotel, 11 Cedar Grove Lane, Somerset, New Jersey and are open for free viewing by spectators. The Wisonet Go Club is also hosting rated games at the same time; registration ($10 per round) starts at 8:30a, with the first game at 9:30a (1.5 hours BT) and the second game at 1p.
Photo: Kevin Huang, Andy Liu, Wisonet Go Club Director Ronghao Chen, Xinyu Tu, Minshan Shou.

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Categories: U.S./North America
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U.S. and Canada Square Off in Gerry Cup this Sunday

Monday July 4, 2011

With one win each in previous matches, whoever wins this Sunday’s Gerry Cup USA-Canada mixed team tournament will take the lead in the North American showdown.

The third Gerry Cup will be held on KGS this Sunday, July 10 beginning at 1p (EST) in the USA vs Canada Team Tournament room.

The U.S. team features Yinli Wang, Xingshuo Liu, Chaelim Kim on the women’s side and Yuan Zhou, Yue Zhang, Kevin Hong, Guochen Xie, Yunzhe Zhang, Jie Liang, Minshan Shou, Michael Chen, Lu Wang, Dae Hyuk Ko, Huiren Yang, Zhanbo Sun on the men’s. Changlong Wu and Carson T are substitutes.

Cathy Li, Sarah Yu, Irene Sha are playing on the Canadian women’s team, while Jing Yang, Juyong Koh, Ziyang Hu, Ryan Li, Bill Lin, Hank Xie, Xiandong Zhang, Tiger Gong, Jefferey Phung, James Sedgwick, Daniel Gourdeau and Hao Chen are on the men’s.

The tournament is organized by Boston Go School and the Toronto Go Center and sponsored by Greater Boston Chinese Culture Association and Newton Chinese School. Previous editions of the tournament were held in 2007 when the U.S. prevailed 7-4 and in 2009 Canada won 10-8.

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Categories: U.S./North America
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Shotwell Updates Go! More Than a Game

Monday July 4, 2011

Go writer Peter Shotwell reports that he recently updated Go! More Than a Game with a brand-new chapter covering recent developments in the go world. New material in Go! — first published in 2003 by Tuttle — includes Computer Go Turns into Supercomputer Go, Surreal Numbers and Combinatorial Game Theory, Go Combinatorics: The Maximum Number of Possible Go Positions, Games and their Length, Asian Professional Go, Two Giant Tibetan Go Boards and A Re-dating and Re-interpretation of the Pre-Han Confucian Go Passages. Because of space limitations, the section on beginner’s use of The 36 Strategies has been dropped from the latest edition, “however they will soon appear in the AGA e-library” Shotwell says, adding that he’s now at work on a review for the EJ of the use of go in Henry Kissinger’s new book On China and Scott Boorman’s The Protracted Game.

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Traveling Board: AGF Takes Go to 20,000 Librarians in New Orleans

Monday July 4, 2011

Go and libraries are natural partners, not just because of longtime efforts to stock libraries with go books but because libraries have also often hosted go clubs. Which is why the AGA’s Chris Kirschner, 2008 AGF Teacher of the Year Vincent Eisman and I found ourselves among 20,000 librarians at the American Library Association’s (ALA) annual conference last week in New Orleans.

The American Go Foundation (AGF) sent us out to promote free equipment and books to youth librarians. Libraries across the country are stocking lots of manga (Japanese comics) because they pull kids in.  From my own program, at a public library in Boulder, CO, I knew Hikaru no Go was a gold mine: once kids read it, they want to play go. And with Winston Jen’s generous donation of 1,000 sets of Hikaru, we figured we would be in a good position to reach out, especially since the AGF is giving libraries and schools the entire 23-volume set for free.

We knew the event was going to be big, but we were shocked at how huge the convention center was.  The building itself ran for almost two miles, and the vendor area housed 900 exhibitors. I had arranged to have our booth in the Graphic Novel/Gaming Pavilion, and once the conference opened, we had a steady stream of visitors.

All three of us have done a lot of demos before, but we felt that this was very different. People were not casually interested, or just wandering by and curious: they were focused, excited, and looking specifically for ways to engage kids and teens in their libraries. A great number of them were members of YALSA, the Young Adult Library Services Association. They were very enthusiastic about what we were providing, and seemed like a perfect target for us. There were also a number of library directors and people in other departments who took information and said they would give it to the right person at their branch. Not only did 113 libraries sign up for a free set of Hikaru on the spot, but we also gave out over 700 brochures, about 500 copies of The Way to Go, almost 200 starter CDs and 280 cardboard sets.  We even taught librarians how to play right there in the booth as well, and they all seemed fascinated.

The AGF has been reaching out to libraries for a couple of years now, so I was hoping we might encounter some people who already knew about us. There were several who had, and they raved about how much they appreciated our services.  One school library already had a go program, with equipment from us, but didn’t know we gave away Hikaru now, so their librarian was psyched to order it.  Another one told me that the program was going strong for a while, but then it died out when some of the kids moved on.  She said it successfully resurrected itself this past year when two fifth graders read Hikaru and got into the game. I ran into a librarian from Sacramento, who said she had had many go demos at her library in the past. When I asked who did them, she said it was None Redmond, Japanese professional Michael Redmond’s mother, and a tireless promoter of youth go.  Another librarian said the kids really love go at her branch, and that the equipment we sent gets used all the time.

Even at night, when we were “off-duty,” we found go connections. After strolling down Bourbon Street, where we soaked in the live jazz and the beautiful French Quarter architecture, a waiter at one restaurant overheard us mention the word atari, and asked if we played go. We were pleasantly surprised to find a fellow player at random and he told us there were a couple of go clubs in New Orleans, although we didn’t have time to visit any of them.  A security guard at the convention center also turned out to be a player, and had contacted me in advance through Tiger’s Mouth, our youth website.

Much to our delight, a good number of the librarians had already heard of go, Hikaru, or both.  It seemed that everywhere we went we saw evidence that go continues to break into the national consciousness.  Chris Kirschner remarked on how much ground had been gained in the past 30 years and mused that “we can never underestimate the value of the seeds that we are planting,” and that one never knows what teaching even one person how to play go might lead to.

We all felt that this particular group of people were in a great position to help spread go on a much larger scale.  Once they have Hikaru in their libraries, they will find kids asking to form a go club.  The AGF will be right there for them, offering free starter sets with enough equipment for 24 kids to play, and ongoing support through our mentor committee.  Slowly but surely, we are building the future of go.
– Paul Barchilon, Vice President of the AGF and Youth Editor for the E-Journal.  Photos: Top: The AGF booth at the convention.
– Photos:
top left: Vincent Eisman convinces passersby that go is for them while Chris Kirschner demonstrates go in back; Bottom right: Kirschner teaches a librarian; photos by Paul Barchilon

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Lee Sedol Adds Chunlan Cup to His Trophy Case

Sunday July 3, 2011

Korea’s Lee Sedol 9P (l) has added the Chunlan Cup to his already stuffed trophy case. Lee had never won the Chunlan before and the 8th annual edition – a best-of-three international tournament — began June 27 with Lee defeating China’s Xie He 7P by resignation after a hard fight. Xie, playing black, evened the score on June 29 in a second-round game that’s already been the subject of much discussion because the players created a new pattern in the top right, starting with Lee’s move 18. Lee held white again in the deciding match on June 30. Despite losing Game Two, he tried the new move again and his perseverance paid off as he won the game and the tournament. Lee now adds his first win in the Chunlan Cup to his already impressive record.

For those interested in the new joseki, see An Younggil’s Game 3 commentary.

– Jingning, based on her original reports on the 8th Chunlan Cup at Go Game Guru.

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Categories: World
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Adan Wins UK Go Challenge

Sunday July 3, 2011

Adan Mordcovich from London was the new champion of the UK Go Challenge, held June 26 in Aston. He also won the Under-18 Boys section forcing Aston’s Mazhar Warraich to take second in the section and overall. Hamzah Reta, also from Aston, was third overall and Under-16 Boys Champion. Aston also won the schools trophy and their Ibraheem Mustafa won Under-12 Boys. Thomas Meehan from Solihull won the Under-14 Boys. Milton School players cleaned up in the younger age groups and won the Junior School Cup. Roella Smith was Top Girl winning Under-12 and her sister Kelda won Under-8. Their brother Edmund, aged 6, won the Boys Under-8 and Mark Slatter won the Boys Under-10. There were prizes too to many others for good results or solving puzzles. A special award of UK Go Challenge Meijin Organiser was given to Mr Mike Lynn for supporting the event from its start up to his forthcoming retirement. Click here for results.
– Tony Atkins

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Categories: Europe
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GO SPOTTING: David Mitchell’s Novel, The Thousand Autumns of Jacob de Zoet

Sunday July 3, 2011

If you need another reason to read David Mitchell’s spellbinding new novel The Thousand Autumns of Jacob de Zoet, the game of go plays a key and major role in the story. Indeed, one entire section of the book is entitled “The Master of Go” and not only does go strategy drive part of the novel’s structure, but the game itself — in fact, a specific game, the board and pieces — play a dramatic role at the climax of the riveting novel. Thousand Autumns is more than just a terrific read, though. Mitchell has “meticulously reconstructed the lost world of Edo-era Japan, and in doing so he’s created his most conventional but most emotionally engaging novel yet,” wrote Michiko Kakutani in The New York Times. Set in atmospheric coastal Japan, this epic story centers on an earnest young Dutch clerk, Jacob de Zoet, who arrives in the summer of 1799 to make his fortune and return to Holland to wed his fiancée. But Jacob’s plans are shaken when he meets the daughter of a Samurai. Thousand Autumns is now out in paperback, as well as available as an e-book.

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Instant Go Set Now Available

Saturday July 2, 2011

For anyone wanting to play go, but without a goban handy, the Instant Go Set could fill in that gap. David Ormerod has announced the free PDF of a go board and stones that can be printed and then cut out for a quick game.   Ormerod says: “When people learn go, it’s important for them to start playing quickly, so they remember what they’ve learned. Of course, you can play go online or against your computer, but not everyone wants to do that. Some people just want to play go with their friends and family. We created the Instant Go Set to give away with our free go course with this in mind. Now we want to make it available to everyone. Anyone who wants to learn go, teach go or just wants a free go set is welcome to download it.”

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