Splatted wrote:I have to agree with Robert about the age limit. It's completely arbitrary and serves no purpose.
Same here.
There are not that many strong players in Europe. Why lower the available count (and possibly skill) even more?
Splatted wrote:I have to agree with Robert about the age limit. It's completely arbitrary and serves no purpose.
John Fairbairn wrote:If we start from the standpoint that the aim is to produce players who will benefit European go, then most of the conditions make some sort of sense. You want somebody young enough to be around long enough to deliver on the investment. You want a guy whose roots are firmly in Europe so that he doesn't up sticks and leave that fair continent. You want someone who belongs to a country that supports the EGF because it's the EGF that is both the most supportive environment and also can benefit most from professional input.
I don't know whether that was the thinking, but it does seem much more likely than a simple plan to find the best player and cart him off the Orient.
But if that sort of thinking was behind it, it is absurd to call it discrimination. Nevertheless, the end result (in any circumstances) is much more likely to be a teaching pro rather than a tournament pro, and so Robert's point that teachers are excluded has some weight.
The real problem as I see it in that putative scenario is the continued wilfulness of the would-be pros and/or their backers not to engage with the wider base of people it is supposedly designed to help eventually. Of course we all know management and democracy don't mix very well, but this is not about managing a project to make a profit or a controversial change. It's about delivering benefits to the masses. A bit of consultation about which flavour lollipops we get would not go amiss. After all, we may not like lollipops at all.
RobertJasiek wrote:So it is not the strongest Europeans that can become European Professionals, but it is those not being discriminated, e.g., by
RobertJasiek wrote:Why? It is possible to qualify the same number of players per year without setting additional restrictions for age, number of years of residence of holders of a European citizenship etc.
deja wrote:Besides, Japan does it. What further justification is needed?
oren wrote:deja wrote:Besides, Japan does it. What further justification is needed?
Sponsorship is the main one. They're putting a lot of effort to train a younger generation to raise the level of go in Europe. In some ways, since they did an age limit at all, I'm surprised it was that high.
Japan, Korea, and China all have significantly lower age limits to become professional. Of course the competition is also much higher there.
RobertJasiek wrote:So it is not the strongest Europeans that can become European Professionals.