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The first-man World Go Tournament between China and South Korea has been counted

author:A stroke flew out of the sky

The semi-finals of the 26th LG Cup ushered in the first-person showdown between China and South Korea. This is the 7th collision between Ko Jie and Shin Jin-hyun in the World Championship, and in the quarterfinals that have passed, Ke Jie and Park Ting-hwan, the former first person in South Korea, are also the 7th collision in the World Championship. However, the results of the match were very different, Ke Jie and Park Tinghuan could be said to be evenly matched, but they were almost crushed against Shin Jin-chan, which was extremely incompatible with the recent public opinion atmosphere.

The confrontation between China and South Korea has been the main axis of the world chess world in the past 20 years, and the first-person showdown between China and South Korea is the focus of everyone's attention. Looking back at the entire process of the world championship, the confrontation between the first person in China and South Korea has made people's blood boil.

Nie Weiping vs Cao Xuanxuan: (The following collisions and matches are from the perspective of Chinese players)

4 collisions, 1 blocking, 3 blocking. 9 sets against each other, 3 wins and 6 losses.

Nie Weiping's final opponents in the previous World Championships: (The tournament is marked by the starting year, the following are the same)

The first-man World Go Tournament between China and South Korea has been counted

The defeat of the NieQi Shengying Cup is almost the division of The growth of Chinese and Korean Go more than 30 years ago, and chess fans know it in detail and do not need to repeat it. Nie Cao did not have many collisions in the world championship, which was caused by the premature decline of Nie Qisheng, and the two defeats of the chess game were doomed to the world chess world.

Ma Xiaochun vs Lee Chang-ho:

13 collisions, 2 blockings, 11 blocked. 22 sets, 5 wins and 17 losses.

The first-man World Go Tournament between China and South Korea has been counted

Chang Hao vs Lee Chang-ho:

13 collisions, 3 blocking, 10 blocked. 20 sets of matches, 7 wins and 13 losses.

The first-man World Go Tournament between China and South Korea has been counted

Ma Xiaochun and Chang Hao could only sigh that the time had come, facing the overwhelming dominance of the Stone Buddha. In terms of the number of blocks and the number of matches, Chang Hao has improved a bit more than Ma Xiaochun, at least two of the three crowns were won after the duel with Lee Chang-ho.

Gu Li vs Lee Sedol:

11 collisions, 7 blockings, 4 blocked. 21 sets, 13 wins and 8 losses.

The first-man World Go Tournament between China and South Korea has been counted
The first-man World Go Tournament between China and South Korea has been counted

Although Gu Li could not compete with Lee Sedol in terms of the number of championships, the collision of the world championship changed the decline of the first-man showdown between China and South Korea in the past and countered Lee Sedol. Unfortunately, the two have played each other 4 times in the world game, and Gu Li has won 1 and lost 3 times (1 semi-final and 3 finals), and the overall strength is not as good as Lee Sedol is an undeniable fact.

The first-man World Go Tournament between China and South Korea has been counted

Ke Jie vs Park Tinghuan:

7 collisions, 3 blockings, 4 blocked attacks. 8 sets against each other, 4 wins and 4 losses.

The first-man World Go Tournament between China and South Korea has been counted
The first-man World Go Tournament between China and South Korea has been counted

After this year's LG Cup, Ke Jie and Park Tinghuan led 15:14 in the total number of matches, and also equalized 4:4 in the world match, and the number of times to block the opponent was still 3:4 behind, but the only semi-final win (2:0) was finally worthless.

Incidentally, Chen Yaoye, the transitional first person who connects Gu Li and Ke Jie, collided with Park Tinghuan 12 times, blocked 9 times, and was blocked 3 times. 13 sets of matches, 10 wins and 3 losses. It is Park Tinghuan's real hard hand.

Ke Jie vs Shen Zhenchen:

6 collisions, 5 blocking, 1 blocking. 8 sets against each other, 7 wins and 1 loss.

The first-man World Go Tournament between China and South Korea has been counted
The first-man World Go Tournament between China and South Korea has been counted
The first-man World Go Tournament between China and South Korea has been counted

On November 10, Ke Jie was about to collide with Shen Zhenchen for the 7th time in the world championship, and Ke Jie's only missed hand created Shen Zhenchen's first crown, and the enmity between the two did not need to be repeated, but ke fan and Shen Fan's mouth cannon who won and who lost, will soon be revealed.

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