Thank you for the very informative background. I had no idea how decrepit the current insei system is, and I didn't know the dearth of young talent in Japan is so very severe. Viewed in that light, I now can appreciate why Sumire's promotion bypassed the insei system.John Fairbairn wrote:I think you need to raise your eyes from the floor and look at the big picture.Ah, my dear Elom, but Sumire was never an insei, she never took the 'pro exam', and she has never participated in the insei league. As far as I know, she was plucked from obscurity by a panel and promoted directly to professional status. Meanwhile, outside the fawning spotlight, dozens of inseis are toiling mightily against each other for a precious few openings. If strength is the most important element for promotion, as it should, then let Sumire participate in the insei league to prove her merit.
I understand Sumire was deemed to have some talent and upside to merit this special promotion, but I find this entire affair rather distasteful. Mind you, I'm not criticizing Sumire in any way; she's cute as a button. I'm simply miffed by the adults behind this 'special promotion' malarkey, which cheapens the Shodan diploma and trivializes competition, not to mention is unfair to the current as well as aspiring inseis who must earn their promotion the hard way.
The current system is not really working. Japanese parents are now reluctant to pay professionals for tuition, and even more reluctant to go down the old live-in pupil road. The result is that keen aspirants are now playing in a sort of part-time insei system or studying alone for the pro exams. That means they are taking longer and longer to reach pro strength. In the latest crop of four new pros in the Nihon Ki-in, the youngest is 13. Not too long ago that would have caused a stir of hope. Now it's time to buy a Zimmer frame. The other three new pros were 22, 19 and 17.
The 17-year-old, Ikemoto Ryota, scored an incredible 157-9 in his inseiship. With apparent talent like that, why is he starting prodom at 17? Does it tell us something about the level of competition in the insei ranks?
The Nihon Ki-in is not a government body. It is a self-perpetuating guild. It does not have to make its ranks open to just anybody. It "owes" nothing to the public as a potential employer. It has made its entry system more or less open in recent years but more out of desperation than choice. Those who have succeeded (domestically) have generally been older than in the past and/or are foreign-born. Internationally, their collective accomplishments have been disappointing. The Nihon Ki-in is just not getting the right clay to make bricks. And it can't change Japan or the world. But what it can do is spot an opportunity and grasp it. So kudos to them for that.
You can have a separate debate about putting too much on the shoulders of a very young player (recall Tracy Austin in tennis), but that's not the Nihon Ki-in's responsibility. Its responsibility is to its own existing members (other pros).
Is there any hope for Japanese Go to make a comeback of sorts in the next 20 to 30 years, given the dire state of things currently?