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History of Go: The first Sino-Japanese Go Tournament, the eighth game kobayashi Koichi vs Shao Zhenzhong

author:Brother Tumu Jun

introduction

The first China-Japan Go Tournament has a strong Japanese lineup, with three super-first-class players sitting in the seat. On the Chinese side, Nie Weiping and Ma Xiaochun led the way, and they were not optimistic about public opinion before the game.

Jiang Zhujiu's five consecutive victories have made the Chinese side see the hope of victory.

But Kobayashi's wrench made the ring game wave again.

Now look at the eighth inning, where Kobayashi Koichi beats the main player to face Shao Zhenzhong.

History of Go: The first Sino-Japanese Go Tournament, the eighth game kobayashi Koichi vs Shao Zhenzhong

Chinese team: Wang Jianhong (losing), Jiang Zhujiu (5 wins and 1 loss), Shao Zhenzhong, Qian Yuping, Cao Dayuan, Liu Xiaoguang, Ma Xiaochun, Nie Weiping

History of Go: The first Sino-Japanese Go Tournament, the eighth game kobayashi Koichi vs Shao Zhenzhong

Japanese lineup: Noriki Ida (1 win and 1 loss), Kyaw Kobayashi (1 loss), Shuzo Awaji (1 loss), Satoshi Kataoka (1 loss), Akira Ishida (1 loss), Koichi Kobayashi (1 win), Masao Kato, Hideyuki Fujisawa

Koichi Kobayashi Introduction

Kobayashi Koichijidan was born on September 10, 1952 in Asahikawa, Hokkaido, Japan, to the son of Hiromitsu, the son of a young son, the eldest son of the family.

History of Go: The first Sino-Japanese Go Tournament, the eighth game kobayashi Koichi vs Shao Zhenzhong
History of Go: The first Sino-Japanese Go Tournament, the eighth game kobayashi Koichi vs Shao Zhenzhong

Koichi Kobayashi once played eight consecutive championships in the holy war and seven consecutive masters in the celebrity war, and defeated Wang Licheng in 1997 to win the Fujitsu Cup championship.

Kobayashi won a total of 59 championships, second only to Cho's 75 and Sakata's 64, ranking third in Japan.

History of Go: The first Sino-Japanese Go Tournament, the eighth game kobayashi Koichi vs Shao Zhenzhong

Lifelong opponents, Koichi Kobayashi and Cho Ji-hoon

Shao Zhenzhong Introduction

History of Go: The first Sino-Japanese Go Tournament, the eighth game kobayashi Koichi vs Shao Zhenzhong

Shao Zhenzhong's ninth dan and Wang Runan's eighth dan were in the game

Shao Zhenzhong, born on October 1, 1958 in Huai'an, Jiangsu Province, joined the training team in 1974. In 1982, it was set to six dan and in 1995 it was upgraded to nine dan. He is currently the president of Jiangsu Chess Academy.

Shao Zhenzhong won the 3rd Go National Hand Tournament in China in August 1983. Being able to win the championship in the hands of Nie Ma is full of weight.

In 1983, shao Zhenzhong and Nie Weiping's chess game was a typical confrontation between the field and the appearance. It's hard to see such a layout now.

History of Go: The first Sino-Japanese Go Tournament, the eighth game kobayashi Koichi vs Shao Zhenzhong

In the 1983 National Hand War, Shao Zhenzhong defeated Nie Weiping with Bai

Round 8: Kobayashi Koichi black vs Shao Zhenzhong white

History of Go: The first Sino-Japanese Go Tournament, the eighth game kobayashi Koichi vs Shao Zhenzhong

First spectrum

Shao Zhenzhong's white chess piece actively sought a battle at the beginning. Perhaps it is to learn the lesson of the previous bureau Jiang Zhujiu and avoid a bland situation.

History of Go: The first Sino-Japanese Go Tournament, the eighth game kobayashi Koichi vs Shao Zhenzhong

Second spectrum

White chess small tip, provoke the middle game battle ~

History of Go: The first Sino-Japanese Go Tournament, the eighth game kobayashi Koichi vs Shao Zhenzhong

Third spectrum

White 24 and White 28 two steps nose top, very handsome, grasped the weakness of the black chess, successfully broke through from below.

History of Go: The first Sino-Japanese Go Tournament, the eighth game kobayashi Koichi vs Shao Zhenzhong

Fourth spectrum

The white chess piece in the lower right corner continues to use strong, retaining the means of robbery, but to be honest, the bottom of the white chess piece is a bit excessive. Because after black A, white B, and black C are mentioned, the D-bit white chess piece has to make up for the breakpoint, so even if the local black chess piece loses the robbery, it is also a living chess piece, and the white chess piece does not mean much if it is robbed.

After the white 44 hand clip, the 46-bit tip, expecting the black chess to retreat, and then the central white chess pieces fly out, so that the head is cheerful, which is the ideal picture of the white chess.

But the black chess immediately counterattacked, jumping one in the center. In this way, the white chess dragon is faced with a situation of doing work.

History of Go: The first Sino-Japanese Go Tournament, the eighth game kobayashi Koichi vs Shao Zhenzhong

Fifth spectrum

White 48 immediately robbed, black chess directly eliminated robbery, white chess 50, 52 consecutive two hands, but black chess 53 grew out, so that white chess trouble, if there is no harvest, the lower right corner will be white damage.

History of Go: The first Sino-Japanese Go Tournament, the eighth game kobayashi Koichi vs Shao Zhenzhong

Sixth spectrum

On the right is finally a white chess piece. Up to the present situation, the part is white chess to kill black chess. Once the white chess robbery fails, the outside dragon cannot account for it. The black chess piece is much lighter, and it is only a 20-mesh chess piece that is eaten.

History of Go: The first Sino-Japanese Go Tournament, the eighth game kobayashi Koichi vs Shao Zhenzhong

Change chart

Local black chess block, white chess must be robbed. The white chess piece below is obviously the robbery library of black chess. White chess has only two robbery materials of its own. In this way, the white chess piece was immediately defeated.

History of Go: The first Sino-Japanese Go Tournament, the eighth game kobayashi Koichi vs Shao Zhenzhong

Seventh spectrum

The following white chess can no longer follow, the more you go, the more you rob the material. So 76 make up the chess pieces, to relieve the trouble of robbery.

But black 77 stood tall, and the white chess piece below was dead. In this way, white chess is unsustainable.

History of Go: The first Sino-Japanese Go Tournament, the eighth game kobayashi Koichi vs Shao Zhenzhong

Eighth spectrum

At the time of 84, as long as the black chess piece will be in the direction of 85 play, it will be no problem.

84 If you deal with it lightly, the situation is still broad, and it is difficult to turn around blindly running the big dragon.

History of Go: The first Sino-Japanese Go Tournament, the eighth game kobayashi Koichi vs Shao Zhenzhong

Ninth Score (Endgame)

The final situation.

A game of white chess that does not play at all.

The next article will introduce a round of Koichi Kobayashi and Qian Yuping, so stay tuned

The progress of the first Sino-Japanese Go Tournament

First set: Kiki Ida wins against Wang Jianhong in the middle

Second set: Ezuku Hisashi 2-and-a-half-eyes victory over Noriki Iida

Third set: Jiang Zhujiu won the black mid-set against Kobayashi Jue

Fourth set: Ezuku Hisashi 4-and-a-half-eyes victory over Shuzo Awaji

Fifth set: Jiang Zhujiu won the black mid-game against Satoshi Kataoka

In the sixth set, Jiang Zhujiu won the white mid-game against Ishida Akira

In the seventh inning, Kobayashi took a white mid-game victory over Ekuhisa

In the eighth set, Kobayashi Koichi won the black mid-set against Shao Zhenzhong

In the ninth inning, Kobayashi Koichi held Bai vs. Qian Yuping

The world of Go of Junge Tumu welcomes your attention

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