SmoothOper wrote:Polama wrote:In a game, missing a tesuji might mean something that could've been sente is now gote, or you've jumped out one space when you could've gotten away with two. It's difficult to realize, even in review, that the move was a mistake. If you just can't see the solution to a tsumego, there are going to be analagous situations you'll also miss in a game and never realize you missed them.
I know I get away with many L&D situations that my opponent just hasn't read out, and I know sometimes I don't take maximum advantage of a situation and really take it to my opponent, but those are opportunities for improvement and many times after a game is over if I lose (or sometimes even when I win), I look at the board to see if there were any specific locations I could have earned more points perhaps with a tesuji, joseki, yose or if I had solved a tsumego correctly sometimes I even have to consider a strategic change, what do people who study tsumego do after they lose? Keep doing the same thing they have been doing?
I preface this by saying I group tesuji problems and life-and-death problems and endgame problems together in my head, so if I say tsumego it means all of these.
Every time I would play a game and my teacher, Feng Yun, reviewed it, she would point out at least two places where I could have been sharper (killed a group, saved my group, saved a move, etc.) had my tsumego skills been sharper. This is why I consider tsumego so important: even in the games of a mid-dan, the amount of potential for point gain
just for solving a single tsumego problem is enormous. Besides that, in my own reviews, I usually look at joseki choice, a few strategic things in the opening (how could I have prevented that moyo from happening? was my count here accurate?). I dislike the endgame, and usually count before it begins so I know how much I have to try. My endgame isn't bad when I count everything, but it's kind of boring.
I don't think it's the best choice to study tsumego to the exclusion of everything else, but I think that that's only one step below the ideal way to study, and studying strategy to the exclusion of everything else is far more detrimental to your growth as a player. If your opponent doesn't know a shred of strategy, but has tsumego skill, the game can be reversed in his favor in an instant if he manages to kill your group or make life in a place he should not rightfully be able to live in.