Shin Jinseo
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Uberdude
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Re: Shin Jinseo
Strength at go is not a simple attribute of a person that can be accurately represented by a total ordering, as rating numbers attempt to do so. It's perfectly possible for A to generally beat B, B to generally beat C, but C to generally beat A. Shin is better at beating the world top 5-50 players more often than Ke Jie, but Ke beats Shin in head-to-head. The same used to be true of Shin and Park, but Shin has now figured out how to beat Park. Who is stronger just depends what you mean by stronger.
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John Fairbairn
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Re: Shin Jinseo
Yes, but it can also depend on what you mean by who.Who is stronger just depends what you mean by stronger.
The Chinese have developed a system, good in its way, for providing work as coaches for once-top players to be available to help out Chinese players in international competitions. I imagine this includes analysing the games of foreign opponents. I have no idea whether Ke Jie avails himself of such help, but at least it's available and for the Koreans and Japanese it is not available. They seem instead to provide support for veteran players through restricted tournaments or through keeping the number of players down.
I wonder, too, whether the relative decline in prestige of Korean events has fed through into their title matches feeling less intense. There's a difference between performing at La Scala and the Turin Opera House that can only be overcome by experience.
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AloneAgainstAll
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Re: Shin Jinseo
Uberdude, isnt Shin better are beatin all top 3-100 than Ke Jie? Anyway, 14 games is not significant amount of games to judge (if match between Shusaku and Yuzo would last only 14 games he would not beat him down to sen-ai-sen
), and looking at Shin Jinseo results its imho obvious that he was improving in all those years when he met Ke Jie, so past games between them should be considered in same manner as we consider Shusaku games from 1844.
If someone is dominating all top players in rating system, and system is good, he is strongest. Ofc, there is possibility that there is somoene who has positive score against him. Was Fischer dominating player in 1972? Sure, no doubt about that. But he had minus score against at least 2 players. Shin Jinseo has minus score only against Ke Jie afaik.
There is just one thing i am sad about - there is possibility that they will not play too many games against each other. The only hope is that someone wealthy decide to sponsor match like in old good times (we are still grateful for all ppl like Akai Gorosaku!). But as a pesimist (who thinks of himself as rather realist) i think thats not gonna happen.
You wanna hear sth funny? There is long debate who was stronger Shuwa or Shusaku. Ofc that depends on year, Shusaku from 1844 is a bit different guy that Shusaku from 1860, and they could probably never play match in peak time (Shusaku peak was probably around year of his death, while Shuwa probably around 1850) but who should you bet if they would play a challenge match on even terms? I would put my money on Shusaku. Why? I took a look at games of Shuwa and Shusaku against Tempo Top Four, and results are that Shusaku did better than Shuwa against them. I would say significally better. Thats ofc not final argument, and 100% proof, but imho a strong hint.
If someone is dominating all top players in rating system, and system is good, he is strongest. Ofc, there is possibility that there is somoene who has positive score against him. Was Fischer dominating player in 1972? Sure, no doubt about that. But he had minus score against at least 2 players. Shin Jinseo has minus score only against Ke Jie afaik.
There is just one thing i am sad about - there is possibility that they will not play too many games against each other. The only hope is that someone wealthy decide to sponsor match like in old good times (we are still grateful for all ppl like Akai Gorosaku!). But as a pesimist (who thinks of himself as rather realist) i think thats not gonna happen.
You wanna hear sth funny? There is long debate who was stronger Shuwa or Shusaku. Ofc that depends on year, Shusaku from 1844 is a bit different guy that Shusaku from 1860, and they could probably never play match in peak time (Shusaku peak was probably around year of his death, while Shuwa probably around 1850) but who should you bet if they would play a challenge match on even terms? I would put my money on Shusaku. Why? I took a look at games of Shuwa and Shusaku against Tempo Top Four, and results are that Shusaku did better than Shuwa against them. I would say significally better. Thats ofc not final argument, and 100% proof, but imho a strong hint.
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Lucian
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Re: Shin Jinseo
Shin Jinseo gave an extensive interview after the Nongship Cup final victory. Among other things, interesting remarks on Ke Jie and Park Junghwan, and on how he studies recently.
https://www.cyberoro.com/news/news_view.oro?num=527534
https://www.cyberoro.com/news/news_view.oro?num=527534
Re: Shin Jinseo
Shin had 7 games matches against Park Junghwan and won all games last year. This does not mean he will win always against Park.
Shin will also play 10 games matches against Ke 1 game/month starting probably next month. This will resolve all dispute.
Shin is stronger than Ke definitely at this moment. Shin's nick name is Shin AI.
Shin will also play 10 games matches against Ke 1 game/month starting probably next month. This will resolve all dispute.
Shin is stronger than Ke definitely at this moment. Shin's nick name is Shin AI.
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silviu22
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Re: Shin Jinseo
This page http://www.eweiqi.com/index.php?m=conte ... 8&id=32941 seems to talk about a 10-match game between China and Korea. The google translation for Chinese web sites is not great, so I don't really know what they're saying.
Tang Weixing seems to be playing against Shin Jinseo in a best-of-2 format starting on Apr 7th. The article says the result is currently 4-4. Does anybody know when were the previous games and what were the results?
Tang Weixing seems to be playing against Shin Jinseo in a best-of-2 format starting on Apr 7th. The article says the result is currently 4-4. Does anybody know when were the previous games and what were the results?
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silviu22
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Re: Shin Jinseo
Shin Jinseo won the Chunlan Cup 13 final vs Tang Weixing 2-0.
I believe one of their games is in this youtube video.
A bit anticlimactic since the Chunlan Cup semifinals were held 8 months earlier in January 2021.
This reddit page has some pictures.
So now he has 2 or 3 international tournament wins, depending on how you count:
A bit anticlimactic since the Chunlan Cup semifinals were held 8 months earlier in January 2021.
This reddit page has some pictures.
So now he has 2 or 3 international tournament wins, depending on how you count:
- Asian TV Cup 31 (Jun 2019)
- LG Cup 24 (Feb 2020)
- Chunlan Cup 13 (Sep 2021)
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silviu22
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Re: Shin Jinseo
Shin Jinseo won the LG cup 26 defeating Yang Dixin 2-0. He now has 3 big international titles (2 LG, 1 Chunlan) and one other international (Asian TV cup). I bet he is kicking himself for losing Kuksu Mountains final to Byun Sangil 1-2 after winning the first game.
He also made a new highest gorating: 3838 (as seen today, Feb 12, 2022).
He also made a new highest gorating: 3838 (as seen today, Feb 12, 2022).
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gazzawhite
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Re: Shin Jinseo
silviu22 wrote:Shin Jinseo won the LG cup 26 defeating Yang Dixin 2-0. He now has 3 big international titles (2 LG, 1 Chunlan) and one other international (Asian TV cup). I bet he is kicking himself for losing Kuksu Mountains final to Byun Sangil 1-2 after winning the first game.
The Kuksu Mountains final (which he indeed lost to Byun Sangil) was only one game. It was the Samsung Cup final where Shin Jinseo won the first game but lost 1-2 (however his opponent was Park Junghwan). In fact, that was the first final (domestic or international) where Shin Jinseo won the first game but still lost.
Also worth mentioning that Shin Jinseo has won his last 21 games against Chinese opponents.
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Elom0
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Re: Shin Jinseo
This thread seems to have gotten quiet. Shin Jinseo is still supreme leader in South Koean baduk.
I think we should wait until Ke Jie finishes university before he plays in a Jubango eith Shin Jinseo. I would like to see a gobango of two-day matches between Shin Jinseo and Iyama Yuta. One, Iyama only has a few peak years left so anything like this must be done now. Two, while obviously a Jubango would be pointless , if it's only five games and they are the two-day games in the Yuugen no Ma then it's possible Iyama might have a 1% chance. In any case I'd love to see how Shin Jinseo performs in two-day games against Iyama.
I think we should wait until Ke Jie finishes university before he plays in a Jubango eith Shin Jinseo. I would like to see a gobango of two-day matches between Shin Jinseo and Iyama Yuta. One, Iyama only has a few peak years left so anything like this must be done now. Two, while obviously a Jubango would be pointless , if it's only five games and they are the two-day games in the Yuugen no Ma then it's possible Iyama might have a 1% chance. In any case I'd love to see how Shin Jinseo performs in two-day games against Iyama.
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Elom0
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Re: Shin Jinseo
This thread seems to have gotten quiet. Shin Jinseo is still supreme leader in South Koean baduk.
I think we should wait until Ke Jie finishes university before he plays in a Jubango with Shin Jinseo. I would like to see a gobango of two-day matches between Shin Jinseo and Iyama Yuta. One, Iyama only has a few peak years left so anything like this must be done now. Two, while obviously a Jubango would be pointless , if it's only five games and they are the two-day games in the Yuugen no Ma then it's possible Iyama might have a 5% chance. In any case I'd love to see how Shin Jinseo performs in two-day games against Iyama.
I think we should wait until Ke Jie finishes university before he plays in a Jubango with Shin Jinseo. I would like to see a gobango of two-day matches between Shin Jinseo and Iyama Yuta. One, Iyama only has a few peak years left so anything like this must be done now. Two, while obviously a Jubango would be pointless , if it's only five games and they are the two-day games in the Yuugen no Ma then it's possible Iyama might have a 5% chance. In any case I'd love to see how Shin Jinseo performs in two-day games against Iyama.
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Ferran
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Re: Shin Jinseo
I'm actively not interested in Ke Jie, but if we're going classic I'd vote for a san-jubango (all three players, a single jubango per partnering), with "classic" time limits, oshirogo style (no moving from the mat until it's done). I'd follow that. And oshirogo time limits might make have it finished in a couple of months.Elom0 wrote:I think we should wait until Ke Jie finishes university before he plays in a Jubango eith Shin Jinseo. I would like to see a gobango of two-day matches between Shin Jinseo and Iyama Yuta.
Take care.
一碁一会
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Elom0
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Re: Shin Jinseo
Yes that would be the TRUE match we deserve! I back that!Ferran wrote:I'm actively not interested in Ke Jie, but if we're going classic I'd vote for a san-jubango (all three players, a single jubango per partnering), with "classic" time limits, oshirogo style (no moving from the mat until it's done). I'd follow that. And oshirogo time limits might make have it finished in a couple of months.Elom0 wrote:I think we should wait until Ke Jie finishes university before he plays in a Jubango eith Shin Jinseo. I would like to see a gobango of two-day matches between Shin Jinseo and Iyama Yuta.
Take care.
Okay, I'm confident that Ke Jie will return to form at some point in the future. He's just not focused on weiqi at the moment.
It's weird, in China both their male and female players with top ability are basically not focused on weiqi and in a slump for years. I mean in Beijing-controlled area they have so many pros and so few games. So sad. While in Korea the make and female number one's just dominant, especially in long time setting. Who knows, Shin Jinsei might just be at home in a two-day game.
Last edited by Elom0 on Mon May 23, 2022 6:50 am, edited 1 time in total.
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Ferran
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Re: Shin Jinseo
I hope this does not mean that, a couple of years down the line, they'll basically scrap their whole system. Not for the system itself, because I couldn't care less, but because what it'd mean for Go.Elom0 wrote:It's weird, in China both their male and female players with top ability are basically not focused on weiqi and in a slump for years. I mean in Beijing-controlled area they have so many pros and so few games.
I wasn't aware that Korea also liked long time settings. We're talking 2-day long matches or similar, right?While in Korea the make and female number one's just dominant, especially in long time setting. Who knows, Shin Jinsei might just be at home in a two-day game.
Take care.
一碁一会
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Re: Shin Jinseo
That rumor about a Shin vs Ke match was exciting. Too bad it didn't materialize or was just made up. I'd rather see that, than vs Iyama.
Long games are fun but in the moment I really appreciate the short games because I can (and will) watch the entire game. I try to not watch Day 1 of the 2 day Japanese matches because it's too much commitment. Sponsors must feel the same.
So, who would even sponsor this match? MLily is still sponsoring Go but I wonder how their last 10 game match paid off for them.
Long games are fun but in the moment I really appreciate the short games because I can (and will) watch the entire game. I try to not watch Day 1 of the 2 day Japanese matches because it's too much commitment. Sponsors must feel the same.
So, who would even sponsor this match? MLily is still sponsoring Go but I wonder how their last 10 game match paid off for them.