Reading vs direction of play
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foeZ
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Reading vs direction of play
A friend of mine and me are both roughly equally strong but our styles are completely different from eachother.
My friend is very strong at reading long and deep sequences, but I'm much stronger at direction of play.
So I was wondering, what do you think is more important?
Reading deeply, or direction of play?
(and please don't say both, that'd be pointing out the obvious)
My friend is very strong at reading long and deep sequences, but I'm much stronger at direction of play.
So I was wondering, what do you think is more important?
Reading deeply, or direction of play?
(and please don't say both, that'd be pointing out the obvious)
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vpopovic
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Re: Reading vs direction of play
I would say direction of play, if I have to choose. It's impact is always global and deep reading very often have only local implications.
However, IMO if you're very bad at one of this two, no matter how strong you're in other, you can't expect good result.
However, IMO if you're very bad at one of this two, no matter how strong you're in other, you can't expect good result.
- jts
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Re: Reading vs direction of play
I'm somewhat surprised by the question. I thought direction of play was reading long deep sequences (in the opening or early middle game, rather than in a L&D).
- moyoaji
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Re: Reading vs direction of play
jts wrote:I'm somewhat surprised by the question. I thought direction of play was reading long deep sequences (in the opening or early middle game, rather than in a L&D).
Well, according to "The Direction of Play," direction of play is about the stones that are currently on the board. You look at what the current stones imply about which part of the board is most important then you play in that area.
Deep reading is the exact opposite. You envision what stones will exist on the board and where the game is progressing from there. This requires educated guesses, but direction of play is only based on what already has been played, so there is no guess work.
If you use these together then you become very strong in the opening and mid game, but the OP is asking which is stronger on its own.
In my mind, deep reading is stronger. I read "The Direction of Play" and now am decent (for my rank) at that, but from my understanding only practice and patience will make your reading better.
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- jts
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Re: Reading vs direction of play
moyoaji wrote:Well, according to "The Direction of Play," direction of play is about the stones that are currently on the board. You look at what the current stones imply about which part of the board is most important then you play in that area.
Deep reading is the exact opposite. You envision what stones will exist on the board and where the game is progressing from there.
Did you look at the diagrams in Direction of Play? When Kajiwara says that the stones "imply" this or that, he's talking about reading out sequences up to forty moves deep.
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Re: Reading vs direction of play
jts wrote:moyoaji wrote:Well, according to "The Direction of Play," direction of play is about the stones that are currently on the board. You look at what the current stones imply about which part of the board is most important then you play in that area.
Deep reading is the exact opposite. You envision what stones will exist on the board and where the game is progressing from there.
Did you look at the diagrams in Direction of Play? When Kajiwara says that the stones "imply" this or that, he's talking about reading out sequences up to forty moves deep.
I read exactly the opposite. The forty move sequence is mentioned merely to prove the idea.
The whole point of direction of play is to understand what is going to happen or should happen - without reading.
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RobertJasiek
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Re: Reading vs direction of play
Reading and strategy are equally important. Direction of region to play in and direction in which stones move or cooperate are specific strategic concepts. There are many strategy concepts. Reading applies to each of them and to other aspects. Otherwise, strategic concepts are mainly part of strategy. For these reasons, reading is much more important than direction.
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Bill Spight
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Re: Reading vs direction of play
There are high amateur dan players whose direction of play is below average, but whose reading is superb. AFAIK, there are no high amateur dan players whose reading is below average.
This suggests that reading is more important than direction of play. But what do we mean by reading? If we mean the conscious calculation of variations, then, IMO, it is not so important. Reading, as I understand it, involves also seeing and judgement. Unlike Monte Carlo gobots, humans do not read games to the end, but stop before the end and evaluate the resulting positions. The better you are able to see possibilities and to evaluate them, the better your reading will be.
Also, IMO, the payoff from learning direction of play is greater than that from reading, for the effort invested. Bruce Wilcox's EZGo concepts have allowed kyu players to advance up to 4 stones in a couple of weeks. When Sakata was a little kid, his teacher, Masubuchi, would set up whole board problems and ask him where he would play. He would tell her and she would pat his head.
Not that Sakata never studied hard reading problems, but he started out with a good understanding of the direction of play.
The following is from John Fairbairn's translation of Jowa's Advice. ( viewtopic.php?f=15&t=7508 ). It seems to me to tell against spending much time calculating variations.
"There are both right and wrong ways to study. If you aspire to the right way you will improve. If you aspire to the wrong way you will deteriorate.
"The wrong way refers to being profoundly greedy. Greed refers a way of playing which arises by trying to discover moves that are hard to see and thus drawing things out. They are moves you will not see, unless you know them, no matter how much you think about them. Therefore, the more you play this way the more you deteriorate.
"The right way refers to not being profoundly greedy. That skill lies in concentrating on a way of playing in which you play faster. When you play quickly, there is no time for greed to emerge. If greed does not emerge, the way you playing will be better and you will progess to the next stage."
This suggests that reading is more important than direction of play. But what do we mean by reading? If we mean the conscious calculation of variations, then, IMO, it is not so important. Reading, as I understand it, involves also seeing and judgement. Unlike Monte Carlo gobots, humans do not read games to the end, but stop before the end and evaluate the resulting positions. The better you are able to see possibilities and to evaluate them, the better your reading will be.
Also, IMO, the payoff from learning direction of play is greater than that from reading, for the effort invested. Bruce Wilcox's EZGo concepts have allowed kyu players to advance up to 4 stones in a couple of weeks. When Sakata was a little kid, his teacher, Masubuchi, would set up whole board problems and ask him where he would play. He would tell her and she would pat his head.
The following is from John Fairbairn's translation of Jowa's Advice. ( viewtopic.php?f=15&t=7508 ). It seems to me to tell against spending much time calculating variations.
"There are both right and wrong ways to study. If you aspire to the right way you will improve. If you aspire to the wrong way you will deteriorate.
"The wrong way refers to being profoundly greedy. Greed refers a way of playing which arises by trying to discover moves that are hard to see and thus drawing things out. They are moves you will not see, unless you know them, no matter how much you think about them. Therefore, the more you play this way the more you deteriorate.
"The right way refers to not being profoundly greedy. That skill lies in concentrating on a way of playing in which you play faster. When you play quickly, there is no time for greed to emerge. If greed does not emerge, the way you playing will be better and you will progess to the next stage."
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At some point, doesn't thinking have to go on?
— Winona Adkins
Visualize whirled peas.
Everything with love. Stay safe.
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SmoothOper
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Re: Reading vs direction of play
Reading long sequences is primarily useful in the endgame. Lee Changho has said that he reads "hundreds of moves deep" and is very strong at the endgame. Cho Hunhyun his teacher eventually adopted strategies to end the game early with big dead groups to try to compete and Lee SeDol is well known for his early endings, of course they were all at different stages in their careers, so it is difficult to say one strategy(of reading) was better than another. Though Cho Chikun seemed to think that Lee's style wouldn't last.
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snorri
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Re: Reading vs direction of play
Modern pro: You are dragging things out. Play 10 minutes absolute. 10 games in 3 hours!
Jowa: You are dragging things out. Try to finish your game before sunset.
Jowa: You are dragging things out. Try to finish your game before sunset.
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Re: Reading vs direction of play
My answer is 100% reading.
If you can't punish overplays, you aren't strong. If your opponents can cut with impunity, you aren't strong.
This is why kyu KGS'ers find Tygem so uncomfortable. Those kids are literally playing a different game. "What happens if I cut here?" Not, "Well go theory tells me to play here."
Finally, a disclaimer: I think my reading is plodding and below average.
If you can't punish overplays, you aren't strong. If your opponents can cut with impunity, you aren't strong.
This is why kyu KGS'ers find Tygem so uncomfortable. Those kids are literally playing a different game. "What happens if I cut here?" Not, "Well go theory tells me to play here."
Finally, a disclaimer: I think my reading is plodding and below average.
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Re: Reading vs direction of play
foeZ wrote:A friend of mine and me are both roughly equally strong but our styles are completely different from eachother.
My friend is very strong at reading long and deep sequences, but I'm much stronger at direction of play.
So I was wondering, what do you think is more important?
Reading deeply, or direction of play?
(and please don't say both, that'd be pointing out the obvious)
Heh...
I am not strong enough to answer this with any authority, but my current line of thinking leads me to the statement that it might depend on what level you ar at. If we assume that for weak(er) players general strategy and direction of play trumps reading, and for the strong(er) player the other way around, there should be a level at which it 'flips'. I am not sure exactly what level it is at (probably stronger than european 5d, judging by what RJ says) - but I really have no clue.
I would assume that, since you ask this question, you must be well below that level - which makes me suspect that the answer for you is: direction of play.
Which conveniently brushes aside the whole issue of 'learn the right way to begin with and you won't have to go through the pain of unlearning' - since this depends on your goals and abilities. Do you think you will ever reach the level at which concepts like 'direction of play' will become obsolete? If not, you might be safe just learning it.
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Phoenix
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Re: Reading vs direction of play
In "The Direction of Play", Kajiwara clearly looks to the stones first, decides which direction (area) to play in, or from which side to play to take advantage of a weakness indirectly, etc.
However, the moves he chooses are always backed up by at least some reading, usually quite a bit of it. Principles are important, but they are heuristics. The more you can use your reading skills to 'prove' the heuristics in question, in actual play, the better.
There are examples in the book of mistakes made not in direction, but in placement. The reason is always insufficient preparation (reading) and anticipation (more reading).
On the other hand, you can read out a perfect sequence in the wrong direction and still come out at a disadvantage.
Despite my obsession with this subject, my vote goes out to reading. It truly is the basis for all go tactics and strategy, and all the proverbs in the world will not help you win if your opponent is proficient in it, and may even lead you astray.
However, the moves he chooses are always backed up by at least some reading, usually quite a bit of it. Principles are important, but they are heuristics. The more you can use your reading skills to 'prove' the heuristics in question, in actual play, the better.
There are examples in the book of mistakes made not in direction, but in placement. The reason is always insufficient preparation (reading) and anticipation (more reading).
On the other hand, you can read out a perfect sequence in the wrong direction and still come out at a disadvantage.
Despite my obsession with this subject, my vote goes out to reading. It truly is the basis for all go tactics and strategy, and all the proverbs in the world will not help you win if your opponent is proficient in it, and may even lead you astray.