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The First Battle of the Nongshim Cup Chinese Team won the victory Li Weiqing lightly took Yuan Shengqin

The First Battle of the Nongshim Cup Chinese Team won the victory Li Weiqing lightly took Yuan Shengqin

On October 12, the second game of the 23rd "Nongshim Shin Ramen Cup" World Go Team Championship was played online. Chinese pioneer Li Weiqing 9 Dan 180 hands lightly won the Korean pioneer Yuan Sheng Qin 9 dan, for the Chinese team to win the opening red. At 13:00 tomorrow, the Japanese team sent Xu Jiayuan Jiudan to challenge on the stage. Yike Go has brought wonderful live broadcasts to all chess players:

Li Weiqing Sheng Yuan Shengqin (Poisonous Milk Mushroom Live)

When selected for the Nongshim squad, Won Seung-jin ranked 5th in South Korea (6th in real time), and although he was already the age of the big brother of the Korean team, he still maintained a good competitive state. In the first game, Gensen Shinichi played against the Japanese pioneer and the youngest player on the Japanese team, Shibano Tiger Maru Kudan. Unexpectedly, Yuan Shengqin directly crushed Shibano Tiger Maru in the prologue contact battle, leaving the opponent with no chance to breathe.

In this game, Yuan Shengqin played against Chinese pioneer Li Weiqing Jiudan, who was also the youngest chess player in the Chinese team. This game was Lee Wei-ching's debut at the Nongshim arena and his first encounter with the South Korean "Sledgehammer" in an official match. After guessing first, Li Weiqing got the white chess piece.

The First Battle of the Nongshim Cup Chinese Team won the victory Li Weiqing lightly took Yuan Shengqin

Yuan Shengqin, who was black, changed his tactics and chose the layout of diagonal small purposes. On the left, Li Weiqing took the initiative to put pressure on the black chess pieces, and Yuan Shengqin also endured one by one, forming a pattern in which the black chess pieces took the land and the white chess pieces gained momentum. The upper right white chess piece continued to take the initiative to provoke the black chess piece to fly to defend the corner, and the contact battle finally broke out. After the big set, the black 57 grew out and made the first mistake, and the tightness here caused the subsequent black chess to be continuously oppressed. Yuan Shengqin wanted to tangle the mid-abdomen Bai Qi, but was blocked by a string of rolling bags from Bai 72 to 84, and he was miserable.

Yuan Shengqin, who was seriously deficient in real space, was forced to empty below, which was tantamount to drinking and quenching thirst. After the white chess piece is ready, 100 hand points blow the attack horn against the mid-belly black chess dragon. By black 139, Yuan Shengqin was tired of running for his life, and a single official contacted dalong, but the whole situation was already in danger.

The First Battle of the Nongshim Cup Chinese Team won the victory Li Weiqing lightly took Yuan Shengqin

There is always no shortage of dramatic scenes in the Nongshim Cup arena, and just when the broadcaster Poison Milk Mushroom is dozing, Li Weiqing, who is a significant leader in time, helps him drive away drowsiness. Hawkeye analysis shows that the White Chess 154 Sticky is a giant spoon with a 55% loss in one step (the forehand is h18 stand). Yuan Shengqin only needed to stand at j18 at this time, and the local area would give birth to a black first-mention catastrophe for no reason, and Li Weiqing's previously accumulated advantages would be destroyed at once. I don't know whether it is inertia or exhaustion, the question mark on the screen full of poisonous milk mushrooms has not yet been knocked, Yuan Sheng qin stupid sticky hand, and the white chess winning rate returns to 100%. Since then, the situation has not been wavered, until 180 hands of Yuan Shengqin threw a loss, and the Chinese team won the first battle.

The 3rd round of the 23rd Nongshim Xin Ramen Cup World Go Team Tournament will continue at 13:00 on the 13th, and Japan's second general Xu Jiayuan will challenge Li Weiqing, please pay attention to the follow-up report brought to you by Yike Go.

Pictures of the scene

The First Battle of the Nongshim Cup Chinese Team won the victory Li Weiqing lightly took Yuan Shengqin
The First Battle of the Nongshim Cup Chinese Team won the victory Li Weiqing lightly took Yuan Shengqin

Li Weiqing nine paragraphs

The First Battle of the Nongshim Cup Chinese Team won the victory Li Weiqing lightly took Yuan Shengqin
The First Battle of the Nongshim Cup Chinese Team won the victory Li Weiqing lightly took Yuan Shengqin

Yuan Sheng Qin nine paragraphs

The 23rd Nongshim Shin Ramen Cup China Korea and Japan Squad (as of now):

China: Ke Jie, Mi Yuting, Fan Tingyu, Li Qincheng, Li Weiqing (1 win)

South Korea: Shin Jin-chan, Park Young-hwan, Shin Min-woo, Bian Sang-il, Won Seung-jin (1 win, 1 loss)

Japan: Yuta Iyama, Akira Ichiriki, Yoshoki, Makimoto, Toramaru Shibano (1)

In the Nongshim Cup China lineup, Ke Jie Jiu Dan and Mi Yu Ting Jiu Dan were exempted from the selection as the world champion, and the top 24 chess players in the ranking decided 3 final places after the selection match, namely Fan Tingyu 9 Dan, Li Qincheng 9 Dan and Li Weiqing 9 Dan. South Korea sent a super-luxury lineup: Shin Jin-chan, Park Young-hwan, Shin Min-hoon, Bian Sang-yi, and Won Seung-jin (wild card). Japan designated title holders Yuta Iyama, Torano Toramaru, Ichiri Liao, Xu Jiayuan, and Yu Zhengqi, aiming to get rid of the penultimate position.

The Nongshim Cup will be held in three stages, with 1-4 rounds of the ring on October 11-14 and 5-9 sets on November 26-30, and the winner will be decided in the third stage. The champion team will receive a prize of 500 million won, a fee of 3 million won per match, and a winning streak starting from three consecutive wins (10 million won for three consecutive wins, followed by another 10 million won per extra round). Previously, each country won the championship 13 times in South Korea, 8 times in China and 1 time in Japan.

Results of previous Nongshim Cup Three Kingdoms Tournaments:

Annual Cup Champion Runner-up 3rd Place

1999-2000 1 South Korea wins 4 wins and 4 losses China 4 wins 5 losses Japan 4 wins 5 losses Chang Hao wins 3 consecutive wins

2000-2001 2 South Korea 7 wins 4 losses Japan 4 wins 5 losses China 3 wins 5 losses Choi Chul Han 3 consecutive wins

2001-2002 3 South Korea 6 wins 4 losses China 7 wins 5 losses Japan 1 win 5 losses RocheHe 3 consecutive wins

2002-2003 4 Korea 6 wins 4 losses China 6 wins 5 losses Japan 2 wins 5 losses Hu Yaoyu 5 consecutive wins Park Yongxun 4 consecutive wins

2003-2004 5 Korea 5 wins 4 losses Japan 6 wins 5 losses China 3 wins 5 losses Kobayashi Kazumoto Seigen 3 consecutive wins

2004-2005 6 Korea wins 4 losses China 4 wins 5 losses Japan 4 wins 5 losses Lee Chang-ho won 5 consecutive wins

2005-2006 7 Japan 6 wins 4 losses South Korea 5 wins 5 Losses China 3 wins 5 losses Yoshiki Zhao Han multiplied by 3 consecutive wins

2006-2007 8 South Korea 6 wins 4 losses China 6 wins 5 losses Japan 2 wins 5 losses Peng Quan won 5 consecutive wins Park Yongxun won 4 consecutive wins

2007-2008 9 China 7 wins 3 losses South Korea 4 wins 5 losses Japan 2 wins 5 losses Chang Hao 4 consecutive wins Mu Zhen Shuo Wang Tan 3 consecutive wins

2008-2009 10 South Korea 7 wins 3 losses China 5 wins 5 losses Japan 1 win 5 losses Jiang Dongrun 5 consecutive wins 4 consecutive wins

2009-2010 11 South Korea 6 wins 4 losses China 6 wins 5 losses Japan 2 wins 5 losses Sheikh 5 consecutive wins Kim Ji Seok Lee Chang-ho 3 consecutive wins

2010-2011 12 South Korea 7 wins 3 losses China 4 wins 5 losses Japan 2 wins 5 losses Sheikh Choi Chul Han 4 consecutive wins

2011-2012 13 China 8 wins 4 losses South Korea 6 wins 5 losses Japan 0 wins 5 losses Tan Xiao Kim Ji Seok 4 consecutive wins Sheikh 3 consecutive wins

2012-2013 14 South Korea 6 wins 4 losses China 7 wins 5 losses Japan 1 win 5 losses Tan Xiao Wang Choi Chul Han won 3 consecutive wins

2013-2014 15 China 8 wins 4 losses South Korea 5 wins 5 losses Japan 1 win 5 losses Fan Tingyu Chen Yaoye won 3 consecutive wins

2014-2015 16 China 6 wins 3 losses South Korea 4 wins 5 losses Japan 3 wins 5 losses Wang Tan won 4 consecutive wins

2015-2016 17 China 5 wins 4 losses South Korea 5 wins 5 losses Japan 4 wins 5 losses Lee Sedol Li Li Liao 3 consecutive wins

2016-2017 18 China 8 wins 1 loss South Korea 2 wins 5 losses Japan 1 win 5 losses Fan Tingyu 7 consecutive wins

2017-2018 19 South Korea wins 3 losses China 5 wins 5 losses Japan 0 wins 5 losses Shin Min Won 6 consecutive victories Dang Yifei won 5 consecutive wins

2018-2019 20 China 8 wins and 1 loss South Korea 2 wins 5 losses Japan 1 win 5 losses Fan Tingyu 7 consecutive wins

2019-2020 21 China 8 wins 4 losses South Korea 5 wins 5 losses Japan 1 win 5 losses Yang Dingxin 7 consecutive wins Park Tinghuan 4 consecutive wins

2020-2021 22 South Korea 7 wins 3 losses China 4 wins 5 losses Japan 2 wins 5 losses Gu Zihao 3 consecutive wins Shin Jin-chan 5 consecutive wins

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