AMERICAN
GO E-JOURNAL |
MEMBER'S EDITION BONUS CONTENT: Hot off the boards, we bring you two games from last week's 6th Ing Cup: the Round 1 game between U.S. rep Mingjiu Jiang and Liu Xing and the Round 2 game between Cho Chikun and Lee Changhao. The latest commentary from Yuan Zhou 8d takes a look at a workshop game between two 5-kyus. Last but not least, Duan Rong 7P reviews the proper sequencing of peeps and ataris in a translation by Ze-Li Dou from the Chinese World of Weiqi weekly. Non-members: join the American Go Association and get all this great content with every EJ! It's all just a click away! |
May 5, 2008; Volume 9, #20
YEARBOOK SURVEY: Tell
us what you think of the new American Go Yearbook and you could win a
prize! Click
here to take our brief survey. Boris Bernadsky is this week's
winner. The 124-page compilation is the biggest Yearbook yet, featuring
the best of last year's world go coverage in the E-Journal, including
major event reports, photos, youth and world go news and a Yearbook CD
that includes every 2007 E-Journal, including all game records.
REPORT FROM
THE 6TH ING CUP: The early rounds of the 6th Ing Cup
took place at the Shanghai headquarters of the Ing Chang Ki Educational
Foundation from April 30th to May 4th. Two dozen players -- including
Mingjiu Jiang of the US and Taranu Catalin from Romania representing
the European Go Federation -- played for go's richest prize purse, with
over $600,000 in prizes. The action took place in the paneled
tournament room on the
18th floor of the Ing building and the Ing Foundation managed the event
with style. There was an opening day marching band, an exhibition of
antique go artifacts, a public display of panels detailing the history
of go and the contribution of Mr. Ing Chang Ki's to the development of
the game and a welcome banquet of 350 with many go dignitaries
including Lin Hai Feng (Rin Kai Ho), Cho Hyun Hyen, Otake Hideo, other
well known go figures and local political leaders. All the games were
broadcast on the internet and also sent by closed circuit to the three
viewing rooms on two floors of the building. The Asian press covered
the event extensively. Sixteen players vied in a preliminary round for
8 places in the round of 16 to face 8 seeded players. Officially the 24
represented China (11), Korea (6), Japan (3), Chinese Taipei (2), US
(1) and Europe (1) but the actual birthplace, parentage, and training
of many of the players was in other countries. There were no upsets in
the first round (click here
for the full report), with U.S. rep Mingjiu Jiang drawing a tough
opponent, Liu Xing, who turned out to be the only Chinese to make the
semifinals. Jiang called the game "difficult" and thought later that
his move at 33 should have been at 192 (see attached game record). The
round of 16 saw the Koreans nearly go through as a group, with four out
of five advancing, while two of the top Chinese went out. Gu Li was
beaten by Cho Chul Han and Chang Ho lost to Cho Chi Kun (representing
Japan) by three points in one of only two countable games in the round.
One notable game was the mirror go game that lasted 42 moves in the
contest between Song Tae-gon and Piao Wenyao. In the quarterfinals on
Sunday May 4th, the Koreans were again dominant with three wins. Only
Liu Xing saved a bit of the home team honor by killing a 40-stone black
dragon of Park Young Hun. Cho Chikun was beaten by 3 pts by Lee Chang
Ho in an exciting contest (see attached game) with huge territories to
leave the Japanese again out of the Ing finals. The Ing Cup semifinals
will be in late fall and the finals early next year.
- reported from Shanghai by Terry
Benson, Special Correspondent to the E-Journal. Photo: Mingjiu Jiang
(at left in foreground) plays Liu Xing; photo by Terry Benson.
HECK TOPS MGA TOURNEY: Gus Heck 3k topped the April 20 Massachusetts Go Association Spring Tournament in Somerville, Massachusetts. Sixteen players participated and Wanda Metcalf was TD. RESULTS: OPEN SECTION(16 players):1st: HECK, Gus 3k; 2nd: NGUYEN, Tu 10k; 3rd: LUTER, Adam 3k.
ZHUANG AND
FANG WIN USYGC IN TACOMA: Vincent
Zhuang 1k, and Fang Chih-Yu 2k, topped their divisions at the final
USYGC qualifier May 3-4 in Tacoma, WA. Hosted by the Tacoma Go Club,
the event was held in conjunction with the Roy Hayashi Memorial
Tournament, the North American Ing Tournament, and the World Mind
Sports Games qualifier. "The campus was spectacular, with its flowering
magnolias, azaleas, rhododendrons, and Japanese Cherry Trees, of Pacific
Lutheran University," reports tournament director Dr. Gordon Castanza.
All winners received trophies, and the top two got $400 scholarships to
the go camp of their choice. Third place winner Tai (Nguyen) Phan 19k,
also won a stunning goban, donated by Dr. and Mrs. Steve Stringfellow,
and second place winner Kevin Burton 18k, won a table board. While the
young players "displayed great volubility in kibitzing their games,"
reports Castanza, "when asked to comment for the E-J, 'Yes!' and
'Great!' were the best they could muster as they quickly turned away
with arms full of booty." Winners Report: Senior division (12 and up):
1st: Vincent Zhuang,1k. Junior Division (under 12): 1st: Fang Chih-Yu
(Daniel) 2k; 2nd: Kevin Burton, 18k; 3rd: Tai (Nguyen) Phan 19k.
- reported by Paul Barchilion, Youth Editor.
Photos: (above right) Fang Chih-Yu (left)
vs. Vincent Zhuang (right), B+R; (left) Tai Phan (left) plays Kevin
Burton in the 3rd Round, photos by Gordon Castanza
IT'S
DESOUZA & WU IN FL YOUTH TOURNEY: Alex Desouza
6k and Derek Wu 15k won their
divisions at the April 26 United States Youth Go
Championship (USYGC) qualifier in Fort Myers, FL. "The Tournament was a
real honor and a blast to put together," reports TD Joshua Frye, a math
teacher at Lexington Middle School in Fort Myers. "It was great to see
all my students' progress in less then a year," adds Frye, "The
students enjoyed themselves tremendously and their interest in go has
been rejuvenated from this tournament. We had five intense rounds of go
play, with pizza and refreshments for all, followed by foosball and air
hockey." Senior division winner Alex Desouza 6k told the E-Journal that
"When the results were announced, and I realized that I had won, I felt
really proud of myself. I think that all the time and effort I put in
practicing paid off." Said Junior Division winner Derek Wu 15k, "This
was fun...When's the next match?" Senior Division runner-up Jordan
Winters 6k, told the EJ he had fun, despite losing to his rival,
DeSouza. "It was cool, we had fun go activities in between rounds, like
a blitz game on a huge 9x9 Mr. Frye made last year. We had two teams
and we had to run to the board and play, then run to hit the clock, I
loved watching everyone freak out to hit the timer."
- reported by Paul Barchilion, Youth Editor. Photo: (right) Alex
Desouza (left) battles Jordan Winters (right), photo by Joshua Frye
CLOCK TICKING DOWN ON KERWIN WORKSHOP: "Jim Kerwin will be leading another great workshop at Hollyhock this summer," reports longtime fan and student Phil Straus. "Do you want to be there? Please decide very soon," as accommodations at Hollyhock are filling up. "The location, the facilities and the length of the workshop make it a perfect opportunity to study go and have fun. Also, this year, it's a great combination with the US Go Congress starting August 2nd, if you can make both." Click here for details.
PROS, WINE TOURS & MORE AT U.S. GO CONGRESS: Seven professional go players have now been confirmed for this year's U.S. Go Congress; new pros include Cho Hye-Yeon 7P, Lee JiHyun 3P, Byeong Jun Kim 2P and Guo Juan 5P, who join Maeda Ryo 6P, Kim ByeongJun 2P and Jennie Shen 2P. Congress organizers have lined up a number of non-go activities, including an Oregon Wine Country tour, a visit to the Columbia Gorge -- which served as the inspirtion for folksinger Woody Guthrie - which includes a stop at Mt. Hood. Also on tap: a trip to the Oregon Coast, where the mountains reach down into the Pacific Ocean, hiking in Forest Park, the largest contiguous park - 16 miles -- within city limits in the continental US and a Wednesday night blues performance by Terry Robb (left), one of the Northwest's premier acoustic blues guitarists. "Each morning we'll have a local resource person available to respond to your requests about shopping, galleries, strolling gardens, places to go and things to do," promise Congress Co-Director Peter Freedman.
WORLD MIND TEAM GUIDELINES OUT: Final qualification guidelines have now been published for the World Mind Sports Games (WMSG) Team. Click here for an FAQ and general participation guidelines. Click here for more up-to-date information and the application form. To compete for the team, players should follow the instructions in both documents.
KGS TOURNEY PAIRINGS POSTED: Pairings in the KGS Suk B Choi Amateur Invitational have been posted online. The Invitational features 16 of the strongest amateur players on KGS who will compete in the knockout event; match dates will be posted when the players decide their schedule.
TALKING STONES RETURNS: Longtime go writer Peter Shotwell (right) returns to the E-Journal today with a new version of his Talking Stones column, which has appeared off and on in AGA publications over the years. The new monthly column will be "more oriented to what's happening now," Shotwell tells the E-Journal, saying that future columns may include "looking at various websites and other interesting things that are going on," as well as interviews with various go people "like the computer go wizards, pros, Koreans, John Fairbairn, Bill Spight and so on." Click here to read today's column.
AGA MEMBERSHIP DIPS SLIGHTLY: Membership in the American Go Association declined last month, the first drop in eight months and just the third in the past year. "We've had a record-breaking year of growth," said AGA President Michael Lash, "including the last seven straight months of increases. I'm confident that the AGA's strong track record of member service and excellent programs will continue to attract new members in the months ahead." Total membership was 2,392 at the end of April, down from a record high of 2,420 the previous month. The slight 1% decline was across the board, with full memberships down 15 to 2,035, sponsors down 2 to 36, sustainers down 1 to 61, Limited memberships down 10 to 190, Youth memberships down 11 to 778 and Chapter memberships down 3 to 126.
AGA DIRECTOR NOMINATIONS OPEN: Nominations are now open for four Directors of the American Go Association whose terms expire this September: Western Region (currently held by Gordon Castanza), Central Region (Roy Schmidt), Eastern Region (Chuck Robbins) and Member-at-large (Roy Laird). Terms for all four director positions are two years; nominations close on June 15, and must be made in writing by a full member of the AGA. To be eligible, candidates must be at least 21, a full AGA member in good standing for at least one year, resident in the USA for at least six of the last twelve months and must declare in writing a willingness to run and perform the duties of office. For complete details on eligibility requirements, or to make a nomination, contact elections@usgo.org or mail Arnold Eudell, 9513 Baroness Ct., Laurel, Maryland 20723.
WESTERN
REPS OUT IN ING FIRST ROUND: The Western representatives
were knocked out in the first round of the 6th international Ing
Cup, as were the Taiwanese reps. North America rep Mingjiu
Jiang 7P and Europe's Taranu
Catalin 5P both lost to Chinese
representatives, Liu
Xing (left)
7P and Piao
Wenyao (right) 5P respectively. Liu is
in his twenties and won the Chinese Agon Cup in
2006. He then defeated Cho
U 9P in the match between the Chinese and Japanese Agon
Cup winners. Liu also won the Chinese CCTV
Cup in 2005. Piao, also just breaking into his twenties, won
the CCTV Cup last year. The two Taiwanese reps also went out in the
first round. Zhou
Junxun 9P, who won the international LG
Cup last year, was eliminated by Park
Yonghun 9P, the young star from Korea who won the
international Fujitsu earlier this year. Cho U 9P, a native of Taiwan
though a member of the Nihon Kiin, was also playing as a Taiwanese rep.
He was beaten in a one-point game (using Ing
scoring -- this is equivalent to a half-point game under
Japanese scoring) by Cho
Chikun 9P, a native Korean who is also a member of the Nihon
Kiin and is playing as a Japanese representative. Cho Chikun
is the only Japanese rep who won in the first round, although O
Meien 9P, another Taiwanese who plays for the Nihon Kiin, is
seeded into the second round. Click
here for full results and game records.
IYAMA
YUTA HOLDING LEAD IN MEIJIN LEAGUE: Iyama
Yuta (left) 7P, the Japanese teen who
turns twenty at the end of this month, is maintaining his lead in the League
to determine the challenger for Meijin
title holder Cho
U 9P. In the round-robin match between nine players his score
is now 4-1 and he is the only player who has lost only one game. His
three remaining games are against Kobayashi
Satoru 9P (4-2), Yoda
Norimoto 9P (2-3), and Cho
Chikun 9P (2-2): a formidable set of opponents. Iyama's only
loss was to Yamada
Kimio 9P (3-2) by one and a half points, playing Black. He
has defeated Takao
Shinji 9P (3-2), Sakai
Hideyuki 7P (2-2), Ko
Iso 7P (2-3), and Chin
Kaei 9P (0-5).
WORLD AMATEUR
PLAYER PROFILES: Players from 70 countries and
territories will compete in the 29th annual World Amateur Go
Championship May 29-31 in Tokyo, Japan. The American Go E-Journal will
once again provide full coverage of the 8-round tournament, posting
daily updates on the web and in the EJ, including news, features,
photos and game records live from the playing venue at the Nihon Ki-in.
We've been profiling WAGC players and this week we're pleased to
introduce the players from U.S., Austria, Cuba, Costa Rica, Malaysia
and The Philippines.
- Chris Garlock
UNITED STATES: Mozheng Guan 8d is a 21-year-old student from Holmdel, NJ. He's been playing since he was 14 and his titles include the Redmond Cup in 2002, 2003 and 2004, the 2003 Maryland Open, the 2007 NorCal Open, US Pair Go IN 2003 and has been a US representative at the World Youth Go Championships in 2002, 2003 and 2004. Hobbies include JustRecorded.com, swimming and movies. His favorite thing about go is that "Go gives the players a lot of freedom. Because the rules of the game are so simple, there's a lot of room to be creative and try different things."
AUSTRIA: Franz Hüttler 4d lives in Vienna. The 42-year-old chemist has been playing 25 years and was Austrian Champion in 1993, 1994, 1996 and 1999. His favorite thing about go is that it's a brain-sport.
CUBA: Antonio Fernandez (right) 3d is a 40-year-old professor from Havana. He's been the Cuba Champion every year since 2000. He's married with two sons. Hobbies include chess and he loves "everything" about go.
COSTA RICA: David Quesada (left) 5k is a 21-year-old physics student in San Jose. Hobbies include anime and music. His favorite thing about go is "the deepness of simplicity."
MALAYSIA: Mohd Zaid Waqiyuddin 5d is a 25-year-old engineer who lives in Kuala Lumpur. He won the 2008 Malaysia Weiqi Tournament. Hobbies include traveling, watching great movies and chatting and at the WAGC he says "I hope to meet many more go friends from many countries." His favorite thing about go is that it hasn't yet been "solved by computer. And the community is really passionate."
THE PHILIPPINES: Martin Thomas Sacramento 1d lives in Manila, where the 29-year-old is a 3D Technical Director "for various animated productions such as Hoodwinked and Mickey Mouse Clubhouse." Hobbies include kendo, 3d animation and drawing. His favorite thing about go that it "has combative elements which I enjoy, it's like mind-sparring."
GO QUIZ:
Stone-Faced & Stonewalled
Perhaps it's telling that there are no go players among the four
familiar faces pictured on Mt. Rushmore in South Dakota, the one state
without go club contact info currently on the AGA
website. Just over half of you got it right, with Montana,
Kansas, New Mexico and North Dakota receiving educated guesses.
One person, smelling a trick, incorrectly said "none" and the
ever-careful Grant Kerr makes this generous (with gas well over $3 a
gallon) offer - "Come join us in Regina SK on Friday evenings - it's
only a 10-hour drive from Rapid City!" Congrats to this week's winner
Carrie Lapidus, chosen at random from those responding correctly.
THIS WEEK'S QUIZ: No mystery who's lined up in this photo (right)
from the first Denver Go Congress; from left to right are Hal Small,
Chris Kirschner, Bill Saltman, Ned Phipps, Paul Mathews and Stu
Horowitz. The question is, Why was this photo was taken, and, for bonus
points, why isn't Haskell wearing a shirt? Click
here to enlighten us.
TALKING
STONES: Shirakawa's Search for the Origins of Go
by Peter Shotwell
This
new monthly column is a revival of one that I wrote back in the '80s
for the AGA quarterly print Journal, where I explored topics and
personalities in the world of go which lie outside the actual
game-playing boards. Much has happened in the intervening years, and
I'm excited to continue these adventures with the E-Journal's vastly
expanded worldwide audience.
Shirakawa Masayoshi's ‘A Journey in Search of the Origins of
Go' is both a personal and historical account. Shirakawa includes
pleasant descriptions of games he's played over the past decade or two,
while accompanying Japanese go delegations to China. There's also some
interesting commentary about early Japan and, making it a must-read
book for history and literature buffs, extremely good information about
the go-playing characters of ‘The Romance of the Three
Kingdoms.' It also contains the best story in English of kirichin, the
old Chinese rule that subtracted two points for every live group.
While Shirakawa's dubious
statements about the possibility of Japanese go in the third century AD
and the earliest Chinese playing boards can be overlooked, the cavalier
rendering of his book's main subject cannot. While he attempts to trace
the origins of go to the Shang dynasty 4,000 years ago-which is a
possibility-his 'proofs' are divination devices that are no older than
the Han period, which began in 206 BC, a little more than 2,000 years
ago.
Similarly contrived is
Shirakawa's attempt to link early go history with ideas of eleventh
century Song dynasty writers who began to combine Daoist, Confucian and
Buddhist mystical thinking about the game. So is his curious and
ultimately inexplicable use of a 16th century diviner who tried to
apply go to post-sixth century Buddhist ideas about 'number,'
'substance' and 'function.'
Admittedly, Shirakawa's essays
were cobbled together after being written over several decades.
However, probably because the translator was told 'not to change a
word,' the book suffers from a lack of editing. Furthermore, its
mystical terms and concepts aren't explained in the English version,
since he was writing for a Japanese audience who perhaps would have
understood at least some of them.
Perhaps because Shirakawa is a
journalist and not a historian, when he tries to associate the origins
of go with calendars or divination practices without logic or real
historical evidence, his presentation often comes across as chaotic and
mystifying at best, and downright deceptive at worst. By failing to
tell a straightforward story of how magic squares, trigrams, hexagrams,
Nine Star Divination and other such esoteric matters came to be
associated with go by mystics such as Go Seigen and a few Chinese
historians, Shirakawa unfortunately winds up doing a great disservice
to those readers new to these vast, fascinating subjects.
Peter Shotwell is a longtime go
writer whose books include 'Go! More Than a Game,' 'Go Basics' and
'Beginning Go.' His go research, including a detailed look at
Shirakawa's book and two new appendices on cognitive psychology and
Tibet, can be found online. Reach him at journal@usgo.org
GO
CLASSIFIED
SELL IT, BUY IT OR TRADE IT HERE with
nearly 13,000 go-players worldwide! Classified ads are FREE and run for
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GO
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(5/5)
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(4/28)
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(4/21)
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PLAYERS WANTED: Western Colorado: Rifle, Grand Junction, Glenwood Springs,
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(4/6)
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 Photo Editor); Peter
Dijekma (Dutch/European Correspondent); Marilena Bara (Romania/European
Correspondent); Ian Davis (Ireland Correspondent)
Columnists: James Kerwin 1P; Kazunari Furuyama; Rob van Ziejst; Roy
Laird; Peter Shotwell
Translations: Chris Donner (Japan); Bob McGuigan (Japan); Matt Luce
(China)
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, re-distributed, or made available on the web without the explicit written permission of the Editor of the E-Journal. Please direct inquiries to journal@usgo.org
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.