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Continue to talk about Go, the first Sino-Japanese Go Tournament

author:Lee Good Bad 666

Last time, after Chen Zude defeated the Japanese professional nine-dan chess players in the case of the first place, the Chinese chess players immediately doubled their confidence, and then a number of chess players defeated the Japanese professional nine-dan players (but all of them were ordinary nine-dan, not super-first-class nine-dan). In the next 10 or 20 years, Chinese and Japanese Go exchanged in the form of confrontations. Although the Chinese chess players lose more than they win, it is not very ugly, but it makes the Japanese professional masters feel that the confrontation tournament has some losses (which definitely also includes the strategy of The Field Ji Horse Racing) After multi-party matchmaking, the Japanese NEC Electric Group sponsored it, so the "NEC Sino-Japanese Go Tournament" was released.

In the first tournament, China and Japan each sent 8 chess players to attack each other. Chinese players: Nie Weiping, Ma Xiaochun, Liu Xiaoguang, Cao Dayuan, Qian Yuping, Shao Zhenzhong, Jiang Zhujiu, Wang Jianhong. Japanese players: Hideyuki Fujisawa, Masao Kato, Koichi Kobayashi, Akira Ishida, Satoshi Kataoka, Shuzo Awaji, Kyaw Kobayashi, Kiki Iida. The two sides pioneered Wang Jianhong and Yi Tian Jiji started in October 1984. Our pioneer Wang Jianhong had nosebleeds when he played against Ida Kiki because of nervousness and long exams... After the defeat of the north, Yi Tian sat on the throne of the lord.

Our second chess player Jiang Zhujiu (Jiang Zhujiu belongs to the wild road, has no systematic training, and the jianghu chess player is good at attacking and killing... If Shinsuke passes all the way, he will win a series of five chess players, including Noriki Ida, Kyaw Kobayashi, Shuzo Awaji, Satoshi Kataoka, and Akira Ishida, and stop at Koichi Kobayashi (Kobayashi was known as Japan's six super-first-class at the time).

Kobayashi Guangyi defeated our six-member general one by one, directly approaching our master Nie Weiping. Our master Nie Whirlwind kicked three times in a row, and finally locked the score at 8:7 (Nie Weiping won consecutive victories over Koichi Kobayashi, Masao Kato, Hideyuki Fujisawa) The first China-Japan Go Tournament came to an end, and the Chinese side narrowly won 8:7! [Than heart] [Than heart] [Than heart]

Continue to talk about Go, the first Sino-Japanese Go Tournament

Jiang Zhujiu in the ring (left)

Continue to talk about Go, the first Sino-Japanese Go Tournament

Nie Weiping in the ring (right)

Continue to talk about Go, the first Sino-Japanese Go Tournament

A scene of celebration after the victory