Heretix wrote:by78 wrote:A lot of theses kids are probably as strong as many top-50 Japanese pros, if not stronger. Quite a few of them could probably take out a top-10 Japanese pro.
Such a surfeit of talent...
Isn't it amazing what having more than a billion people in one country can do??
I think your judgement is incorrect and insulting to the Japanese professional Go scene, especially the latter statement regarding top-10 pros. This isn't the finals of a big Chinese tournament, this is a qualification tournament to become a professional *ONE* dan. When was the last time you saw a Chinese 1p defeat a top 10 Japanese professional?
Actually I do not think by78's statement is completely off base. IMHO the gap between a new pro and a top ranked one is surprisingly narrow these days. For example, due to the open nature of some international tournaments and smaller number of pros in Korea their inseis have more opportunity to participate in these international tournaments (usually entered as amateur) and they constantly beat Japanese/Korean/Chinese pros (a recent case is An Jungki won 5 in a row to get into final stage of LG cup in May last year and then beat Chen Yaoye to advance and lost to the eventual champion Kang Dongyun. An was ranked 6th among Korean inseis at the time and failed the pro exam in February before the surprising performance in LG cup. Now An is a middling pro ranked 163 on goratings.com). I do not think Korean inseis are particularly strong compared to Chinese new pros. If An could beat Chen Yaoye when he was still an insei it would not surprise me that a few of these new pros can take out some top 10 Japanese pros.