Here is a treat for Bill, mainly. I believe he is a great fan of the Great Senchi. It just so happens that this game can also be used to discuss the abstract concepts of solid and empty. Nb "solid" means "having substance" rather than just 'thick'.
White here was Suzuki Chisei, who was a much more than respectable player. He reached 6-dan, which today would mean 9-dan, and the only reason more is not heard of him is that he was the in-house go tutor for the Owari daimyo and so was not always in Edo. But quite a lot of his games remain, and his series of 100 games with Okunuki Chisaku is a famous jewel (Okunuki was a huge talent who gave Jowa a hard time, but he died young). Another distinction of Chisei is that his wife Yoshiko was an excellent player ranked as 1-dan and so they are counted as the first husband-and-wife professionals in history.
His opponent Ishihara Yasohachi was also a very decent player - a 4-dan in both go and shogi, but as he was a brewer by trade he counts as an amateur.
Now both these players were pupils of Senchi, hailed as the "Father of Modern Go" because he was perhaps the first properly to appreciate the centre of the board. What we see here is Chisei evidently trying to impress his teacher with his understanding of that style of play. And succeeding brilliantly in my opinion. First he creates a strong centre presence out of a couple of wispy groups: empty --> solid. He then converts the emptiness of the centre into substance of corner/side territory (but more than that forces his opponent to make him do it!). In this process, the "solid" move White 60 is noteworthy not just as a thick connection but as a way of suddenly transforming the empty centre into a place of substance.
But Black here is nobody's fool. He makes a very good fist of resisting White's intentions. The fatal flaw - pointed out by Shusai, not me - is Black 65. This was an "empty" (too open) move. It should have been a solid one, at 80. In other words, it was a strategic mistake through misjudging the interplay of solid and empty in the centre. It's a pity the game ended with a blunder by Black (181), but Shusai found not much else to criticise, and next to nothing by White.
Appreciating the game in these abstract terms may not give you any instant gratification in terms of go strength, but surely will enrich your feel for the depth of the game.
But even if you choose to view it in other terms, I think it is possible to feel the players striving not just to win but to impress the Great Senchi.
(;FF[3]SZ[19]PC[Home of Yasui Senchi]
PB[Ishihara Yasohachi]PW[Suzuki Chisei]KM[0]RE[W+R]US[GoGoD95]
;B[cp];W[pq];B[qd];W[cd];B[od];W[fc];B[ep];W[cj];B[qo];W[mc];B[qj];W[me];B[lq];W[op]
;B[pn];W[mp];B[lp];W[gq];B[rq];W[ol];B[nn];W[mo];B[mm];W[lo];B[jp];W[lm];B[ll];W[km]
;B[hp];W[gp];B[go];W[ho];B[hn];W[io];B[ip];W[fo];B[gn];W[fp];B[ko];W[ml];B[eq];W[fn]
;B[in];W[mk];B[pk];W[fl];B[cm];W[cn];B[dn];W[dm];B[bn];W[cl];B[co];W[pi];B[oj];W[qi]
;B[rj];W[mi];B[fe];W[em];B[de];W[dd];B[gd];W[gc];B[id];W[df];B[ef];W[ce];B[dg];W[ee]
;B[fg];W[gf];B[ed];W[ec];B[de];W[pl];B[ql];W[ee];B[ff];W[hd];B[he];W[ge];B[hc];W[fd]
;B[hg];W[hf];B[if];W[hd];B[ie];W[gg];B[gh];W[gd];B[ih];W[fh];B[fi];W[eh];B[nb];W[gi]
;B[oi];W[ng];B[pg];W[pf];B[og];W[oc];B[nc];W[nd];B[pd];W[kc];B[ne];W[md];B[nf];W[ob]
;B[mf];W[jj];B[pb];W[lf];B[lg];W[kf];B[kg];W[mg];B[ki];W[oh];B[ph];W[of];B[oe];W[nh]
;B[qf];W[lj];B[kd];W[jc];B[mb];W[lb];B[le];W[ma];B[bl];W[bk];B[hi];W[hh];B[dl];W[ck]
;B[gh];W[gj];B[gk];W[hh];B[fk];W[ek];B[gh];W[ok];B[pj];W[hh];B[hj];W[ig];B[fj];W[ic]
;B[gh];W[gi];B[jf];W[mr];B[qr];W[qq];B[rr];W[lr];B[fr];W[kq];B[kp];W[pr];B[kk];W[kj]
;B[jk];W[ik];B[jl];W[lk];B[jm];W[kl];B[kr];W[gl];B[mq];W[nq];B[ls];W[ms];B[ks];W[or]
;B[hr];W[gr];B[gs];W[ir])
John, I don't know if this is what you want, but you can click on "profile" under someone's post, and then click "add foe" and it will hide all of their posts by default, so you'll see e.g.
Doesn't actually stop the hijacking and "foe" is way too strong. Incidentally, I never saw any lifting of his ban on making more than two posts in a thread. Did I miss something?