dfan wrote:How does a 2200 player play differently from me? Of course his calculating skills are stronger and he know more patterns. But largely I think he just wants it more. He concentrates hard on every move, and if I pull ahead he will fight back hard on every move, instead of collapsing, lashing out, or marching glumly to the end as we all know it is easy to do. These are skills I can work on too, in go as well as chess.
This is something that has cropped up a few times in this discussion - it falls under "fighting spirit." You attribute it to your 2200 opponent wanting it more, but I suspect that there is also a big element of knowledge and experience. If you have seen and remember how it is possible to get out of a bind, to dig yourself out of a hole, to not drown in deep water, then you are all the more likely to believe it is possible and do what you can to make it happen.
Just today, an opponent of mine beat me in a situation where his one eyed group was surrounded, and instead of rolling over and dying, he kept pushing until one of the weak links broke. He knew from experience that instead of striving for a second eye that he couldn't get, it would be worth trying to capture some of the surrounding stones. I knew it too, but instead of keeping my stones safe and letting him out (where I could have continued to pressure him) I let greed get the best of me and died.
The idea of using spaced repetition to strengthen your pattern recognition seems quite good. I've often considered it with go, but haven't done it - partly because I don't really know what would be the best info to put on the cards. I've heard that Guo Juan has a spaced repetition system for studying on her website. Has anyone here tried it?
180 ) ; make this a habit, too.