gowan wrote:This claim that the traditional handicap placement is responsible for the Japanese performance in international professional tournaments is clearly wrong for several reasons.
1. Pros don't play handicaps games against other pros.
It matters how they train. If they train with 4-4 placement handicaps then get white against a Chinese handicap good luck.
gowan wrote:2. All pros play 4-4 openings, some more frequently than others, but never-the-less they all play the move, even the Koreans and the Chinese. Check out on GoGoD how many times a corner 4-4 move is made by Chinese and Korean players. Takemiya, who won some international tournaments, almost always played 4-4 moves as Black and White.
So at the moment the orthodox fuseki is dominating international play both Koreans and Chinese, I suggest you use orthodox fuseki placement handicaps, because well right now it is better.
gowan wrote:3. Koreans play traditional star-point handicaps. So, by some people's reasoning, the Koreans should be weak
Koreans didn't win this year, maybe they aren't as strong as they thought.
gowan wrote:4. Because a person doesn't understand how to play with 4-4 point moves doesn't mean the moves are bad.
I personally enjoy playing against the 4-4 point, I just don't want to have to play it myself, and in even games the nirensei openings aren't as useful as one might think.