gowan wrote:Right now Korea seems to be falling behind China. Will the hunger to be at the top persist in Korea? And will China's fire keep burning? Maybe the West might rise.
I've lived in the Seattle area for the past few years. For any football fans out there, that's the home of the
Seahawks. Compared to any other place that I've lived, the football fans here are... intense. Just today, the middle of the afternoon, apparently the Seahawks did something good on TV, and someone in my town is shooting fireworks. Baristas at coffee shops sport Seahawks football gear, babies in strollers wear jerseys on game days, and local churches cancel services to accommodate important football games.
When I first moved here, I noticed that the most popular player appeared to be some guy named Fan. Okay, whatever. Mr. Fan must be a good football player. But upon closer investigation, I realized that "Fan" is not a person. "Fan" is
the 12th man, with 12 being a jersey number retired for Seahawks fans themselves. What the...? The majority of these jersey toting football proselytes are fans of not any particular player - not anyone that has any football skill, but the Seahawks themselves. It doesn't matter if Russell Wilson (yes, I had to look the name up - he's not the 12th man, afterall) is a skilled quarterback - at least not as much as it matters that the Seahawks win. It doesn't matter if Richard Sherman has any affiliation with Seattle, Washington, or anything else - as long as he helps the Seahawks win. It doesn't even matter if a player used to play for the Greenbay Packers - if they are on the Seahawks team this year, let's hope they win. If they switch to Greenbay next year - then **** them.
As you can probably tell, I don't care much about football. But still, it's somewhat sad. Looking at this page of players for research right now, I see a Seahawk's player named Jimmy Graham. I don't know who he is. Maybe a diehard Seahawks fan does. But I'd bet that most don't. I bet Jimmy Graham worked hard to be in the NFL. He probably spent hours of his life devoted to the sport. And yes, he's probably getting some money for his efforts. But 50 years from now, nobody is going to remember who Jimmy Graham is (sorry, Jimmy). But I'd bet that there are still Seahawks fans wearing that 12th man jersey.
After all, it's the team that matters. Not the people that actually play the game.This phenomenon saddens me also when it comes to go. We may not wear our 12th man jerseys or get
12-cent coffee for showing our team spirit, but all to often, we focus on "the teams" rather than the players themselves. Who won the last Ing Cup? China? Japan? Korea? Those are the wrong choices.
To answer the original questions, "Will the hunger to be at the top persist in Korea? And will China's fire keep burning?", I don't really care. But I do care about seeing a hunger to be at the top. And I do care about a fire burning for go. I truly respect and admire someone that has this hunger, this drive... this fire. Certainly Go Seigen had it. Probably Koichi Kobayashi, Cho Chikun, Nie Weiping, Kong Jie, Gu Li, Lee Changho, Lee Sedol, and Ke Jie had this drive at one point in their careers. Maybe even players from the west - Andy Liu, Eric Lui - maybe they have it, too. That hunger - that fire - is amazing to see. And I really get interested in the players that have it. Who cares if China has fire? Who cares if there is a hunger to be in the top in Korea? These are geographical locations. Dirt. Dirt that happens to lie within a particular geographical region. I'm interested in the people themselves.
So if we had jerseys for go, I'd be sporting names honoring my favorite players. Maybe people that I've learned a little bit about. Someone who has a career that I've followed. These people are real. They deserve respect. They are the ones that have put in the work, put in the study, and deserve our admiration - not some stupid organization or geographical region that's written on their passport.
You won't find a 12th man jersey in my closet.