World
Go News from the American Go Association
July 23, 2007; Volume 8, #54
6 DAYS TO
’07 U.S. GO CONGRESS
GO CAMPERS GET VIEW FROM THE TOP
DINERCHTEIN WINS EURO MASTERS
SEOK-UI HONG WINS EGC WEEKEND TOURNEY
KING THE COMPUTER
WORLD GO NEWS: Lee
Changho Holds Off Yun In Wangwi; Park
Jieun Wins Dali Cup; Cho U
Takes Second Game In Gosei Title Match; Yamashita
vs. Iyama for Tengen Challenger
EUROPEAN GO CONGRESS SPECIAL REPORT: Mueller On Computer Go’s
“Revolutionary” Advances; A
Chat With Alexandr Dinerchtein; Korean
Throwdown & Dinerchtein On Masters Final; Unusual Places, Familiar Faces
GO QUIZ:
The Write Stuff
GO CLASSIFIED
6
DAYS TO ’07 U.S. GO CONGRESS: With the 2007
U.S. Go Congress set to kick off this Saturday in Lancaster, PA,
organizers are finalizing preparations to host nearly 500 go players
from across the country and around the world in North
America’s biggest go event of the year.
“We’re ready to play!” says Congress
Co-Director Peter Nassar, “There’s still room for
more!” Click
here for info or to register. A full schedule
of events is planned, from tournaments -- including the U.S.
Open, Self-Paired, Lightning, Midnight and more – to simuls
and lectures with 18 professional players. Registration begins at 10A
Saturday (continuing until 11P), the Welcome Ceremony will be at 7P and
the first round of the US Open will at 9A Sunday morning. Click
here for the full tentative schedule (very subject to
change!).
GO
CAMPERS GET VIEW FROM THE TOP: Go Camp West
campers, parents and volunteers traveled to Mt Rainier, WA on
Wednesday, July 18. “They drove up to the Sunrise Visitor
Center, elevation 6400 feet,” reports Brian Allen
“and heard an inspirational talk from a Park Ranger who has
made the climb to the summit at 14410 feet. Later, campers hiked and
scrambled up a trail along White River. Last winter's mountain floods
had changed many parts of the trail, but the campers rose to the
challenge and helped each other along the rugged route. The evening
included pizza and go.” Photo
of Mingjiu Jiang teaching by Brian Allen
DINERCHTEIN
WINS EURO MASTERS: Alexandr Dinerchtein 8d of Russia won
the European Masters Tournament Sunday at the European Go Congress in
Villach, Austria,
defeating 17-year-old Ilya Shiksin 7d, also of Russia, in the final.
“I was behind on territory,” Dinerchtein told the
EJ right after the match, “but I had a thick position and I
was able to get some compensation for the thickness.”
Dinerchtein revealed that Shiksin, “who normally has an
attacking style,” has changed his style recently
“and is now playing for territory. If he used his attacking
style, I don’t know what would happen, but I am confident
about handling the territorial style, so his current style is good for
me.” (see PROFESSIONALLY SPEAKING for an interview with
Dincerchtein) By agreement among the eight Masters players --
Dinerchtein, Shiksin, Cristian Pop 7d, Pal Balogh 6d, Ondrez Silt 6d,
Csaba Mero 6d, Andrej Kulkov 6d and Cornel Burzo 6d -- the event was a
4-round modified knockout, with all eight players competing in the
first two rounds Saturday and then a final six on Sunday to determine
the top winners. With three of the four boards broadcast on TV monitors
for viewers in the Congress Center, the Masters playing room was dead
silent Saturday except for the rustle and click of stones. Top
contenders Alexandre Dinerchtein 8d and Ilya Shiksin 7d showed up on
the stroke of 10A Sunday morning for the title match, but the Board 2
and 3 players – Balogh, Mero, Pop and Silt –
straggled in 20 minutes later, clearly the victims of another very late
night at the Moby Dick pub. Although Pop and Silt looked especially
ragged – their heads hanging so low over Board 3 that they
nearly touched the stones – the familiar rhythm of the game
seemed to settle them down. The complete results: 1st: Alexandre
Dinerchtein 8d; 2nd: Ilya Shiksin 7d; 3rd: Cristian Pop 7d/Csaba Mero
6d; 5th: Pal Balogh 6d/Ondrej Silt 6d; 7: Cornel Burzo 6d/Kulkov. Since
there’s currently no sponsor for the Masters,
there were no cash prizes for the winners, but each player got $150
euro playing fee. The Masters results establishes the order in which
European players can participate in Asian tournaments that
don’t require separate qualifying
events, TD Matti Siivola told the EJ. “The Masters also
creates a level playing field for the top Europeans, whose EGC Championship
results can be skewed by the presence of so
many strong Korean and Chinese players,” said Siivola. Photo by Martin Chrz
SEOK-UI
HONG WINS EGC WEEKEND TOURNEY: Seok-ui Hong 7d (KR) won
the 2-day 5-round European Go Congress weekend tournament, topping a
field of 366 players. Five-game winners included Ondra Kruml 2d (CZ),
Yorrick Traxler, a young 2-kyu from Vienna, two young female players,
Lena Gauthier 4k (DE) and Diana Blaszczyk 5k (PL), Remi Henache 5k
(FR), Giardano d'Obici 5k (IT), Roland Lezuo 6k (AT), Kris Boyen, 10k
(BE), Peter Harold-Berry 14k (UK). U.S. results: Joanne
Phipps 1d led the U.S. effort with her 3-2 result, Ned Phipps went 2-3
at 6d, Rick Mott 6k was 1-1, Paul Bensen 4k was 0-1 and Russ Williams
was 0-1. Complete results are posted online
photo by Chris Garlock
KING
THE COMPUTER: Checkers has been solved, according to an
online report in the journal Science on July 20.
An improved version of the Chinook program cannot ever lose, scientists
at the University of Alberta who developed the program reported.
“In essence, that reduces checkers to the level of
tic-tac-toe,” reported Kenneth Chang in the New
York Times. “Checkers — or draughts, as
it is known in Britain — is the most complex game that has
been solved to date, with some 500 billion billion possible board
positions, compared with the 765 possibilities in
tic-tac-toe.” You can play Chinook online
but the best you’ll get, the scientists have proven, is a
draw. See below for a report on Sunday night’s presentation
at the European Go Congress by Martin Mueller on the ongoing
“revolution in go programming.”
WORLD GO NEWS
LEE
CHANGHO HOLDS OFF YUN IN WANGWI:
Claiming the Korean Wangwi
title for the twelfth consecutive year, Lee Changho 9P defeated
tenacious teenager Yun Junsang 6P on Wednesday, July 18th, in the final
game of their best-of-five match, with a final score of 3-2. Earlier
this year, Yun defeated Lee to take the Korean Kuksu title by a score
of 3-1. In the Wangwi title match, Lee won the second and fourth games
by a half point and 1.5 points respectively, but he finally forced a
resignation in game five. The only other title Lee holds at the moment
is the Korean Myeongin, which he has also held twelve times, though he
lost it to Cho Hunhyun 9P in 1997.
PARK
JIEUN WINS DALI CUP: Park Jieun 7P of Korea defeated Kim
Hyeoimin 4P, also of Korea, by a
score of 2-1 to win the first international women's Dali Cup, sponsored
by a Chinese company, DALI Travel. Kim won the first game by 1.5
points, Park took the second by resignation, and the decisive third was
a half point win for Park last Thursday, July 19th. This event was
dominated by the Koreans--by the semi finals only Korean players
remained. One Japanese player (Yashiro Kumiko 5P), two Chinese (Lu Jia
1P and Cao Youyin 2P), and the North American representative Feng Yun
9P made it to the third round, but all lost there. This is Park's
second title; she won the Korean Women's Myeongin title in 1999, before
Rui Naiwei 9P started dominating the Korean women's titles. Both Park
and Kim are in their twenties.
CHO
U TAKES SECOND GAME IN GOSEI TITLE
MATCH: Cho U 9P has made it
2-0
in the defense of his Japanese Gosei title against challenger Yokota
Shigeaki 9P, winning their second game on Thursday, July 19th by 6.5
points. This is the first time the two Japanese 9Ps have ever played
each other in an official tournament. Yokota is a member of the Kansai
Kiin and won their championship
tournament in 2005. Cho took the Gosei title from Yoda Norimoto 9P
last year; it is the only one of the top seven Japanese titles that he
currently holds.
YAMASHITA
VS. IYAMA FOR TENGEN CHALLENGER: The final game to decide the
challenger for Kono Rin 9P's Tengen title will be between
Yamashita Keigo 9P, who held this title in 2004, and the amazing
teenager Iyama Yuta 7P. Yamashita lost the title to Kono in 2005 and
was the challenger in 2006. Iyama, who is just nineteen, won the
Japanese Agon cup in 2005 and though he has done well since, has not
won any more titles. Yamashita, who is ten years older, is the current
Kisei and has won several titles. So far this year, Iyama has a winning
percentage of 81% versus Yamashita's winning percentage of 61%. Iyama
is third on the list of number of games won with 22, while Yamashita is
tied for fifth with 20 wins.
EUROPEAN
GO CONGRESS SPECIAL
REPORT
E-Journal Managing Editor Chris Garlock is filing reports online
from the 51st
European Go Congress in Villach, Austria. Game records are
posted
online
as well as videos
and photos
Check the main website www.usgo.org and the news page
http://www.usgo.org/news/ for all the EJ’s EGC reports (use
the arrows to scroll back day by day).
MUELLER
ON COMPUTER GO’S “REVOLUTIONARY” ADVANCES:
“The last 12 months have been the most exciting ever in
computer go,” computer scientist Martin Mueller told a packed
lecture hall Sunday night at the European Go Congress. Hundreds of go
players stayed after five grueling rounds in the EGC Weekend Tournament
to hear Mueller – a professor at the University of Alberta --
discuss the latest “revolutionary” advances in
computer go. Quickly reviewing fifty years of computer go research,
Mueller explained that “old school” go-playing
programs like Goliath and Hand Talk focused on programming in go
knowledge, whereas the new approaches -- the Monte Carlo method and UCT
– are search-intensive and use random move searches instead
of deterministic algorithms. Programs using this approach –
GnuGo and MoGo are leading examples – “are almost
perfect on 7x7 and are as strong as an amateur 3-dan on 9x9,”
said Mueller. Perhaps no go player has ever been as happy as Mueller
was to lose a game when GnuGo beat him in December 2006. Last year, Guo
Juan 5P played a series against CrazyStone on a 7x7 board in which the
program always won or got a jigo when playing white against the pro;
this year MoGo scored 9 wins and 5 losses against Guo Juan on a 9x9
board. “Monte Carlo programs play many strange
move,” conceded Mueller, “but they’re
very good at winning. All without a single line of
programming.” Such programs run as many as 100,000
simulations – or 1 million moves per second -- for each move
in a 9x9 game. “Why does it work so well?” Mueller
asked. “There’s no theoretical explanation,
although we have excellent empirical results.” In other
words, a broadly grinning Mueller said, “We don’t
really know.” Although Mueller said that many researchers now
think it’s “just a matter of time before
there’s a professional-level
go-playing program,” he think it may be farther off.
“My own feeling is that we need one or
two more good ideas, but where they’ll come from I
don’t know.” photo
by Garlock
PROFESSIONALLY
SPEAKING: A Chat With Alexandr Dinerchtein
While awaiting the delayed start of Round 6 on Monday morning, I had
the opportunity to chat briefly with Alexandr Dinerchtein 8d.
Dinerchtein, whose commentaries are a regular feature in the EJ, also
competes on the European go scene, publishes the GOAMA
go newsletter and teaches as well. Fresh from his European Masters win
on Sunday and halfway through the 10-round EGC Championship,
Dinerchtein seemed a little more relaxed than usual. Intent and
focused, he’s always the first to arrive in the Supergroup
playing room, where he reviews games quietly at his board.
He’s a brand new father of a 3-month-old baby daughter, which
meant that this year, for the first time in several years, his wife
– who plays go and is a doctor – was not able to
attend the EGC. “Hopefully next year we can all be
here,” said Dinerchtein. He explained that there are two go
federations in Russia and that in the last few years tournament
attendance has dropped from about 70 or so to half that, largely due to
more people playing on the internet and the long distances they have to
travel. The lack of big prizes – “At least $500 for
first place” – has also meant fewer strong players
showing up, he told the EJ. His go4go and GOAMA projects are going well
and he was a generous participant in a go editors meeting the EJ
organized last week that included representatives from the Netherlands,
the UK, Poland and Turkey. In addition to the monthly game commentaries
he already makes available to the EJ,
Dinerchtein committed to doing live game commentaries for future EJ
broadcasts. “I’ve never been to the U.S.
Go Congress but one of these years I’d like to go,”
Dinerchtein, a regular EGC attendee, said. - report/photo by Chris Garlock
KOREAN
THROWDOWN & DINERCHTEIN ON MASTERS FINAL: Those
of you who took a look at Friday’s incredibly complicated
Round 5 throwdown between
Hong Seul-Ki 7d and Cho Seok-bin 7d will no doubt be as relieved as we
were when young Korean professionals Yoon Young-Sun 5P (l) and Kang
Seung-hee 2P came by the EGC Bulletin/EJ office Sunday to explain the
game, which is attached with their very helpful commentary and
extensive variations. In a special bonus, Alexandr Dinerchtein has
provided a blow-by-blow analysis of Sunday’s European
Master’s final round between Dinerchtein and Ilya Shiksin.
Dinerchtein edits the terrific GOAMA
go newsletter NOTE: Click
here to download dozens of top-board games! photo by Richard Pyrker
UNUSUAL
PLACES, FAMILIAR FACES: In the midst of all the game
recording, broadcasting and reporting over the last week, it was great
to see some familiar faces here at the European Go Congress. Rick
Mott 4k (l) of Princeton, NJ showed up unexpectedly
Sunday to play the last two rounds of the weekend
tournament.”I was in the Czech Republic on a business
trip,” Mott told the EJ, “and it turned out that I
didn’t have to work the entire weekend so I drove the six and
a half hours down Saturday from Brno through the beautiful Austrian
countryside.” Mott went 1-1 and then headed back to Brno
Sunday night to finish preparing for a trade show next week in Florida,
which will mean he’ll probably miss the U.S. Go Congress this
year. “This was my first taste of a European Go
Congress,” Mott said, “I really enjoyed it and will
try to make it back again to another Congress.” We caught up
with Russ Williams 4k and his pal Paul
Bensen 4k of Hollywood, FL on Sunday after the last
round of the weekend tournament. Originally from Austin, Texas,
Williams has been living in Wroclaw, Poland for the last year
and a half, teaching English and playing go. It wasn’t go
that took him to Poland, but another international language, Esperanto,
through which he met his Polish girlfriend a few years ago in Finland.
In addition to seeing them on the boards at the Congress main and
weekend events, we bumped into the Phippses
– Ned (r), Joanne
and Nikola, from California -- one night
last week at the Bacchus restaurant, where the sidewalk terrace was
filled most every night with go players. And in a very special and
welcome treat, Andreas Hauenstein and his
wife Connie – who many readers
will remember from their time in New Jersey and who now live and work
in Switzerland – not only spirited me away from my editorial
sweatshop after the last round Saturday night and shared a delicious
home-cooked dinner (complete with a fireworks show across the valley)
at the bed-and-breakfast they’re staying at up in the
gorgeous nearby mountains, but promised to take me mountain climbing on
the day off this week. Also familiar to U.S. Go Congress attendees will
be Francis Roads of the UK and Horst
Sudhoff from Germany. -
report/photos by Garlock
UPDATES & CORRECTIONS:
The Hans Pietsch Memorial School (Pietsch Legacy Nurturing
New Generation 7/20 EJ) originated with efforts by the
German Go Federation after Pietsch, a 4-dan German professional on a
promotional go tour for the Nihon Ki-in in Guatemala, was murdered in
2003. The Federation, with the Pietsch family, created a youth
tournament and foundation to continue Pietsch’s work with
young players, and these efforts were spun off as a separate school.
Kobayashi Chizu 5P, who was also involved in these efforts, is on a
one-year visit to teach go in Central Europe, sponsored by the Japanese
Minister of Culture, in cooperation with the Nihon Kiin.
GO
QUIZ: The Write Stuff
Only five of you braved last week’s tough question about how
many published authors will be at this year’s US Go Congress,
which starts this Saturday in Lancaster. Three got it right, but only
quiz stalwart and leader Phil Waldron provided the correct 11 names -
Yang Yilun - (12 books between Slate and Shell, Yutopian, Fourth Line
Press and Wings Go Club), William Cobb (10 - Slate and Shell and
Sterling Publishing), Nagahara (4 between Ishi and Kiseido), Yang
Huiren (4 - Yutopian, Kiseido), Jiang (2 - Slate and Shell), Guo Juan
(2 - Slate and Shell and Kiseido), Yuan Zhou (2 - Slate and Shell),
Phil Straus (2 - coauthor with Mr. Yang - Fourth Line Press), Nakayama
( 1 - private and Slate and Shell) Feng Yun (1-Slate and Shell)
That’s an impressive 10, but who’s number 11?
It’s Anders Kierulf, whose phd thesis “ Smart Game
Board: a Workbench for Game-Playing Programs, with Go and Othello Case
Studies” was published in a very nice 110 page softback.
Sadly, the mighty Salamony came up one short in her guess this week,
and further short in her list. The careful Grant Kerr got the right
total, but missed Kierulf (Grant, I’m unaware of a book in
English by Nakano Yasuhiro, but feel free to prove me wrong and I will
gladly turn your correct total into a wrong one and ruin your perfect
record!) Congrats to Austin Robinson, this
week's winner.
THANK YOU: My thanks
to all 170 of you who have participated in the quiz this year.
It’s been fun coming up with the quiz questions and
I’ve really enjoyed your responses; please keep them coming.
The quiz will take a Congress break and will return in 3 weeks, though
my editor is pressuring me for special quiz questions during the
Congress, so if I am inspired, look for some questions amidst the
Congress coverage!
- Keith Arnold, hka, Quiz Editor
GO
CLASSIFIED
PLAYERS WANTED: Terre Haute, IN: I've been playing go online for the
past few months and have been looking for go players in my area. Anyone
interested in playing, please contact zekzac@aol.com (7/23)
PLAYERS WANTED: Northern Illinois, Lake County. Player from Antioch, IL
would like to find players in the Lake County area interested in
starting a go club, or anyone who would just like to play! If
interested, contact Dave at epiman89@sbcglobal.net (7/9)
PLAYERS WANTED: Mid-Ohio Valley: I'm based out of the Parkersburg, WV
area and would like to find some local players. Contact Ryan at
xmiyux@gmail.com (7/2)
PLAYERS WANTED: Independence, MO: A new go club is opening in
Independence, Missouri. Located on Highway 24, the club will open at 6P
on Tuesday, July 3 and will be open every Tuesday thereafter.
Details/more info: theresanevilmonkeyinmycloset333@yahoo.com (6/25)
Published by the American Go Association
Managing Editor: Chris Garlock
Assistant Editor: Bill Cobb
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