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Taking stock of the Nongshim Cup victory record, the most powerful is not Lee Chang-ho

author:Apricot Grove Yike

The Nongshim Cup Go Tournament has a history of 22 years, and countless masters have appeared to show their strength. At the same time, some records have been born, and today I will take stock of these records with you.

Nongshim Cup first win and first consecutive win

On December 16, 1999, the first Nongshim Cup match was played against South Korean pioneer Mu Jinshuo and Japanese pioneer 21-year-old Keigo Yamashita. After a 152-hand battle, MuJin Shuo defeated Keigo Yamashita, and Mu Jinshuo won the first set of the Nongshim Cup.

Taking stock of the Nongshim Cup victory record, the most powerful is not Lee Chang-ho

Then, Chinese pioneer Qiu Jun challenged Mu Zhenshuo, and Qiu Jun, a 231-hand player, conceded defeat in mid-set, and Mu Zhenshuo won the first two consecutive wins in the history of the Nongshim Cup.

The first win in the history of the Nongshim Cup by Japanese chess players

South Korean pioneer MuJinshuo won consecutive victories over The Chinese and Japanese Pioneers, and was cut down by Japanese sub-striker Norio Kudo in a match, and the Japanese chess player won the first victory of the Nongshim Cup.

Taking stock of the Nongshim Cup victory record, the most powerful is not Lee Chang-ho

The first win in the history of the Chinese chess player Nongshim Cup

Mu Jinshuo's two-game winning streak was ended by Japanese secondary striker Norio Kudo, followed by a 22-year-old Defeat by Kudo Kio by the Chinese player for the first victory in the history of the Nongshim Cup.

Taking stock of the Nongshim Cup victory record, the most powerful is not Lee Chang-ho

The first consecutive win by a Japanese player

After defeating Kudo Kio, Roche lost to South Korean sub-striker Kim Young-san, and then Kiki Ida began to take the stage.

At this time, almost all of Japan's six super leagues, which had once been in the chess world, were in decline, and Noriki Ida took over the baton of the six supers to lead Japanese chess players against Chinese and Korean chess players. At that time, Yitian Kiki had the title of "Korean Killer", what "the world's first attacker Liu Changhe" and what "Immovable Like a Mountain Lee Chang-ho" were not 60% sure of winning the Yitian Tiger, at the same time, the Yitian Tiger had a good record against Chinese chess players.

Taking stock of the Nongshim Cup victory record, the most powerful is not Lee Chang-ho

Noriki Iida won Kim Ei-san with an 11.5-eyed blade, followed by the slaughter of Wang Lei Dalong with only 117 hands, and the Japanese chess player won the first consecutive victory in the history of the Nongshim Cup. But then Eda Kiki was defeated by Cho Kao Hyun.

The Chinese player's first streak and the first three-game winning streak in the history of the Nongshim Cup

To say that Chang Hao, it is really not insulting Nie Men, the Sino-Japanese Go tournament he ended the game, ended the ring. In the first Nongshim Cup, he came out as a Chinese vice general, defeated The Korean "Emperor of Go" Cao Xuanxuan with a black three-and-a-half eye, defeated the Japanese vice-general Yamada Norisei with one and a half eyes, and defeated the South Korean vice general Liu Changhe in 134 hands, achieving the first three consecutive victories in the history of the Nongshim Cup.

Taking stock of the Nongshim Cup victory record, the most powerful is not Lee Chang-ho

The Lord will win two in a row

Chang Hao lost to Japan's zhao shanjin after three consecutive victories, and lee chang-ho, the world's first go player, won consecutive victories over Zhao Shanjin and Ma Xiaochun to end the match. This is not only a winning streak for the Korean main player, but also a winning streak that ended the first tournament.

Taking stock of the Nongshim Cup victory record, the most powerful is not Lee Chang-ho

Three consecutive wins by Korean chess players

In the second competition, South Korean pioneer Choi Chul-han won consecutive victories over China-Japan pioneers and Chinese secondary strikers, and South Korea won the first three consecutive wins in the history of the Nongshim Cup.

Taking stock of the Nongshim Cup victory record, the most powerful is not Lee Chang-ho

The Japanese player won the first three-game winning streak

In the 5th Nongshim Cup from 2003 to 2004, Japan's second-in-command and older six-super player Kobayashi Kobayashi won a row against Wang Lei, Park Ji-eun and Zhou Heyang, breaking The record of two consecutive wins by Noriki Ida to win three consecutive victories.

Taking stock of the Nongshim Cup victory record, the most powerful is not Lee Chang-ho

The Chinese player won the first five consecutive wins

In the 4th Nongshim Cup from 2002 to 2003, Gu Li, Kong Jie and Hu Yaoyu made their debut in the Nongshim Cup, and the three of them formed the Chinese team together with Chang Hao and Luo Xiehe. The Chinese team had a bad start, but Hu Yaoyu, who played as vice coach, set off a wave of five consecutive wins, knocking Japan's vice coach Masao Kato, coach Kiki Ieda, and South Korea's deputy coach Cao Kaoru Hyun out of the ring one by one.

Taking stock of the Nongshim Cup victory record, the most powerful is not Lee Chang-ho

This is the first five consecutive wins of Chinese chess players in the Nongshim Cup, and it is also the first five consecutive wins in the history of the Nongshim Cup.

The Chinese player won the first four consecutive wins

In the 10th Nongshim Cup from 2008 to 2009, Chinese pioneers Yu Jiaxi won consecutive victories over Xu Yinghao, Yamashita Keigo, Yin Yuxiang and Kono Lin, which was the first four consecutive wins of the Nongshim Cup by Chinese chess players, although there were previously two five-game winning streaks by Hu Yaoyu and Peng Quan, but this was the first consecutive four wins.

Taking stock of the Nongshim Cup victory record, the most powerful is not Lee Chang-ho

The Chinese player won the first seven consecutive wins

In the 18th Nongshim Cup from 2016 to 2017, Chinese pioneer Fan Tingyu won seven consecutive victories to kill only Japan and South Korea, which was the first seven consecutive wins in the history of the Nongshim Cup.

Taking stock of the Nongshim Cup victory record, the most powerful is not Lee Chang-ho

The South Korean players won their first four-game winning streak

In the 4th Nongshim Cup from 2002 to 2003, South Korean pioneer Park Yongxun won four consecutive victories, becoming the first four consecutive wins in the history of the Nongshim Cup.

Taking stock of the Nongshim Cup victory record, the most powerful is not Lee Chang-ho

Korean players have won five in a row

In fact, the first five consecutive wins of Korean chess players were created by South Korean player Lee Chang-ho in the first five competitions. In addition, in addition to the main player, South Korean chess player Kang Dong-yun won five consecutive victories in the 10th Nongshim Cup in 2008-2009.

Taking stock of the Nongshim Cup victory record, the most powerful is not Lee Chang-ho

The South Korean player won the first six-game winning streak

In the 19th Nongshim Cup from 2017 to 2018, South Korean pioneer Shin Min-woo won six consecutive victories over Fan Tingyu, Yu Zhengqi, Zhou Ruiyang, Xu Jiayuan, Chen Yaoye and Yamashita Kyung-go, which is the highest winning streak of the Korean team so far in the period of Lee Chang-ho. It is also the first non-cross-session single-player six-game winning streak in the history of the Nongshim Cup.

Taking stock of the Nongshim Cup victory record, the most powerful is not Lee Chang-ho

Since Japanese chess players have not played as well as Chinese and Korean chess players in previous Nongshim Cup competitions, the highest consecutive winning record of Japanese chess players is still three consecutive wins.

Finally, the overall score of all chess players and the winning game is unified

Invincible: Due to the large number of people, they are listed separately.

China team: Ma Xiaochun, Jiang Weijie, Park Wenyao, Mi Yuting, Xie Erhao, Qiu Jun, Liu Jing, Yu Ping, Ding Wei, Wang Yao.

Taking stock of the Nongshim Cup victory record, the most powerful is not Lee Chang-ho

Korea Team: Choi Byung-gyu, Park Ji-un, Han Jong-jin, Anda-hoon, Park Seung-hwa, Kim Seung-joon, Yoon Hyun-sang, Yoon Hyun-jae, Kim Seung-jae, Kim Myung-hoon, Choi Ki-hoon, Baek Eun-hyun, Kang Ru-taek, Min Heon-ran.

Japan team: Shuzo Awaji, Mingji Wang, Licheng Wang, Hidetoshi Sakai, Satoshi Yuki, Kono Rin, Yanagi Shifu, Toshiya Imamura, Yao Jiteng, Choi Ki-hoon, Toshishi Itada, Nobuaki Yasai, Yu Zhengqi, Hsu Ka-won.

Ichisho: Due to the large number of people, they are listed separately

China team: Fan Yunruo (here to pay tribute to Dafan, thank you Dafan for defeating Park Tinghuan), Wu Guangya, Lian Xiao, Zhou Ruiyang, Tang Weixing, Shi Yue (including a lying win).

Japan: Masao Kato, Tomoyasu Mimura, Keigo Yamashita, Takeo Kudo, Akihiko Fujita, Rei Yamada, Yoshitsu Tsuba, Akira Kobayashi, Shoji Takeno, Koya Nakano, Kaoru Yanagi, Daisuke Murakawa

South Korea team: Hong Min-woo, Lee Ho-bum, Kim Young-sam, Lee Dong-hoon, Kemi Benmu, Hong Ki-woo

Two wins: Wang Lei, Shao Weigang, Yu Bin, Zhou Heyang, Liu Xing, Kong Jie, Ke Jie (including two lying wins), Shibano Tiger Maru

Three wins: Chen Yaoye, Gu Zihao (including one lie win), Zhang Xu, Jingshan Yutai, Zhao Hancheng

Four wins: Cho Hwan-hyun, Roh-hwa-ho, Gu Li

Five victories: Kiki Ida, Koichi Kobayashi, Shinji Takao, Ichiri Liao, Gen Shengqin, Shin Shin-chan, Hu Yaoyu, Kao Ka-hee, Dang Yifei

Six wins: Peng Tsuen, Shen Min

Seven victories: Mu Jinshuo, Lee Sedol, Naoki Hagen, Yang Dingxin

Eight wins: Park Yong-hoon, Tan Xiao,

Jiusheng: Wang Tan, Jiang Dongrun,

Eleven wins: Chang Hao, Kim Ji Seok,

14 wins: Park Young-hwan (including one lying win),

Fifteen wins: Choi Chul-han, Sheikh,

Sixteen wins: Lee Chang-ho (including two lying wins),

Seventeen wins: Fan Tingyu

Taking stock of the Nongshim Cup victory record, the most powerful is not Lee Chang-ho

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