CDavis7M wrote:Whatever the origins of Tai Chi were, the only Tai Chi I've seen are grandmas and grandpas stretching in the park at 7am on a Sunday.
Following Nakamura Sumire
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pajaro
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Re: Following Nakamura Sumire
This was already said when she turned pro, let's say it again:Ferran wrote:I haven't had time to grep GoGod, yet, but I can't find a single game between the two of them. We want that game. We need that game.pajaro wrote:A record previously held by Cho Chikun, at 4 years and 1 months, when Cho was 15... some time ago.
There should be a way to crowdfund pro face-offs.
an exhibition game, please!
but really... is there any tournament where they might cross paths? I am thinking, perhaps Sumire will enter NHK after becoming a title challenger. It would be **great** to have Cho vs. Sumire on TV.
(AFAIK, title holders and former title holders qualify to play in the NHK tournament. But I see players that have never won a title, so maybe some spots are filled with challengers, league players...)
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Re: Following Nakamura Sumire
An article on this achievement: https://mainichi.jp/articles/20220606/k ... 40/134000c

In celebration of Sumire's 100 wins, Kenji Konoha (a Mainichi photographer, I think) remembers the time he took Sumire's photo as police chief. https://twitter.com/kenji_konoha/status ... 2706702336. He posted a few other photos too from when he interviewed her. Kenji Konoha has his photos everywhere it seems (maybe just mainichi in reality).

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I bet Sumire will play Cho Chikun sooner than later.
In celebration of Sumire's 100 wins, Kenji Konoha (a Mainichi photographer, I think) remembers the time he took Sumire's photo as police chief. https://twitter.com/kenji_konoha/status ... 2706702336. He posted a few other photos too from when he interviewed her. Kenji Konoha has his photos everywhere it seems (maybe just mainichi in reality).
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I bet Sumire will play Cho Chikun sooner than later.
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Ferran
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Re: Following Nakamura Sumire
It's about as easy to find a Taichi practitioner who does it martially as it is to find a kickboxer who does it for personal growth. It's possible but, even if the instructor can do it, sometimes the setup won't allow him to. But it does happen. If you know someone who wants to get into that, it's usually easier (or less difficult, at least) to look for people who also practice Ba Gua or Xing Yi (other spellings may apply). These tend to be less insistent on the "good vibes" mindset.CDavis7M wrote:Whatever the origins of Tai Chi were, the only Tai Chi I've seen are grandmas and grandpas stretching in the park at 7am on a Sunday.
Take care.
一碁一会
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Elom0
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Re: Following Nakamura Sumire
She's the new generation's Cho Chikun. I really thought he'd play her in her Shin-Shodan Match!pajaro wrote:This was already said when she turned pro, let's say it again:Ferran wrote:I haven't had time to grep GoGod, yet, but I can't find a single game between the two of them. We want that game. We need that game.pajaro wrote:A record previously held by Cho Chikun, at 4 years and 1 months, when Cho was 15... some time ago.
There should be a way to crowdfund pro face-offs.
an exhibition game, please!![]()
![]()
but really... is there any tournament where they might cross paths? I am thinking, perhaps Sumire will enter NHK after becoming a title challenger. It would be **great** to have Cho vs. Sumire on TV.
(AFAIK, title holders and former title holders qualify to play in the NHK tournament. But I see players that have never won a title, so maybe some spots are filled with challengers, league players...)
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pajaro
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Re: Following Nakamura Sumire
A result.
Sumire beat Yo Kaei 8-dan in the B prelim of the Meijin. I saw a review in youtube, Sumire was way behind in the first half of the game, but she recovered and ended up winning. Impressive mental strength. Next is Koyama Kuya 5-dan, member of the Koyama clan. He is 10-5 this year. They will fight for a seat in the A prelim.
This game counts for promotion. How far is she from 3-dan?
Sumire beat Yo Kaei 8-dan in the B prelim of the Meijin. I saw a review in youtube, Sumire was way behind in the first half of the game, but she recovered and ended up winning. Impressive mental strength. Next is Koyama Kuya 5-dan, member of the Koyama clan. He is 10-5 this year. They will fight for a seat in the A prelim.
This game counts for promotion. How far is she from 3-dan?
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Ferran
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Re: Following Nakamura Sumire
Yep. I want to check that game with some time. The spill towards the top left is interesting. I don't usually this kind of games, and yet...pajaro wrote:Sumire beat Yo Kaei 8-dan in the B prelim of the Meijin. I saw a review in youtube, Sumire was way behind in the first half of the game, but she recovered and ended up winning. Impressive mental strength. Next is Koyama Kuya 5-dan, member of the Koyama clan. He is 10-5 this year. They will fight for a seat in the A prelim.
Take care.
一碁一会
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silviu22
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Re: Following Nakamura Sumire
By my calculations she's got 17 wins. She needs 40 for 3p. Here are my records of her last promotion wins:pajaro wrote: This game counts for promotion. How far is she from 3-dan?
13: 1/24/2022 Honimbo 78 - Aoki Kikuyo 8p (f) B+ 3.5
14: 2/28/2022 Honimbo 78 - Terayama Rei 6p B+R
15: 3/14/2022 Kiriyama 29 - Rin Shien 8p
16: 3/14/2022 Kiriyama 29 - Takuji Yamada 8p
17: 4/28/2022 Meijin 48 - Shinji Yamada 6p
18: 6/13/2022 Meijin 48 - Yo Kaei (YANG, Chia Jung) 8p
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pajaro
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Re: Following Nakamura Sumire
Are you sure?silviu22 wrote:
By my calculations she's got 17 wins. She needs 40 for 3p.
According to this:
https://twitter.com/KK_joryu/status/1534104956357451776
When she got her 100th win, she had won 55 games in non female-only tournaments. I assume that most of them count for promotion (not all). For the 1-dan -> 2-dan promotion, she needed 30 wins. So now, she would have more or less 25 more games for promotion. These numbers are not accurate, I know, but I still find a big difference with your 17 (or 16, if we don't count the game with Yo Kaei, that happened after that post).
International games, Globis prelims... do they make up for the difference?
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pajaro
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Re: Following Nakamura Sumire
A few days ago, Sumire beat Jo Bunen in the C prelim of the Gosei. Frankly, not surprising.
But the game was very short. Jo resigned after move 113, because one of her groups died. What I find surprising is that she resigned so early. I have seen other games that began badly for some player, and they kept playing. When the game has progressed enough, it is not polite to keep playing a lost game, because you can only win if the other makes a mistake. But so early, many players don't resign, because they try some big attack, or go for a big ko that because you have lots of threats. Jo didn't do something like that. She saw that the group was dead, ignored the aji, and resigned.
Was Jo overwhelmed? Is Sumire so scary that opponents lose desire to fight?
But the game was very short. Jo resigned after move 113, because one of her groups died. What I find surprising is that she resigned so early. I have seen other games that began badly for some player, and they kept playing. When the game has progressed enough, it is not polite to keep playing a lost game, because you can only win if the other makes a mistake. But so early, many players don't resign, because they try some big attack, or go for a big ko that because you have lots of threats. Jo didn't do something like that. She saw that the group was dead, ignored the aji, and resigned.
Was Jo overwhelmed? Is Sumire so scary that opponents lose desire to fight?
Last edited by pajaro on Thu Jun 30, 2022 10:16 pm, edited 1 time in total.
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John Fairbairn
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Re: Following Nakamura Sumire
I'm sure I'm not alone in finding it strange that the NK does not cater more to fans' interest by publishing things like "how many games to go for promotion".When she got her 100th win, she had won 55 games in non female-only tournaments. I assume that most of them count for promotion (not all). For the 1-dan -> 2-dan promotion, she needed 30 wins. So now, she would have more or less 25 more games for promotion.
But what thing we can glean from the figures that are produced is that Sumire does seem to be improving noticeably.
Last year her official-games tally was 23-12 (65.7%).
This year she is on 43-18 (70.5%).
I think it is fair to say that this year she will have faced a tougher class of opponent as she moves into the higher reaches of tournaments (which is also reflected in her higher number of games). On that basis her improvement is even more than the bare figures show.
Historically, players who have been extra special have almost all had career percentages of 65% to 70%.
PS
A reminder that the Globis Cup, Shinjin-O, Young Carp and Ryusei (but not Shin-Ryusei) count for promotion. Several domestic tournaments allow wins against amateurs. Preliminaries of foreign tournaments generally do NOT count. Women's tournaments do NOT count.
But with her win rate, Sumire may be in line for a promotion based on prize money. There are two slots available at her grade. But that would be in January.
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pajaro
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Re: Following Nakamura Sumire
I think you have this wrong.John Fairbairn wrote:
Last year her official-games tally was 23-12 (65.7%).
This year she is on 43-18 (70.5%).
43-18 was last year, this year it's 23-12.
This does not change your post. She is playing more and her opponents are stronger. The percentage, slightly lower (not higher), is still very good.
Right in the middle of the year, she has played more than half of total games last year. So she could end with more games.
This prize money thing... I think I have asked before: could it be total prize money since the player is 2-dan (or 3-dan, or...). Because this year, there was some player (I don't remember the name) who was promoted based on prize money, with worse records. But I thought that maybe it was the prize money after 3-4 years being 2-dan.John Fairbairn wrote:
But with her win rate, Sumire may be in line for a promotion based on prize money. There are two slots available at her grade. But that would be in January.
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Re: Following Nakamura Sumire
Interesting question. I wonder too and I found this explanation: https://www.nihonkiin.or.jp/player/rank.htmlpajaro wrote:This prize money thing... I think I have asked before: could it be total prize money since the player is 2-dan (or 3-dan, or...). Because this year, there was some player (I don't remember the name) who was promoted based on prize money, with worse records. But I thought that maybe it was the prize money after 3-4 years being 2-dan.
1. Title performance
2. Winning games
3. Prize earnings
If 1-6dan and not promoted by winning games this year, you can be promoted by prize earnings from that year. But it looks like it's actually the top 1-2 prize winners of each Dan rank, not some overall competition. Which is good for Sumire, right? Though it also seems like it's only earnings from the 7 major titles.
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silviu22
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Re: Following Nakamura Sumire
Not all games count towards promotion. Right now, I believe she is exactly half way, with 20 wins. Here are her wins this year that count towards promotion to 3p:pajaro wrote:Are you sure?silviu22 wrote:
By my calculations she's got 17 wins. She needs 40 for 3p.
According to this:
https://twitter.com/KK_joryu/status/1534104956357451776
When she got her 100th win, she had won 55 games in non female-only tournaments. I assume that most of them count for promotion (not all). For the 1-dan -> 2-dan promotion, she needed 30 wins. So now, she would have more or less 25 more games for promotion. These numbers are not accurate, I know, but I still find a big difference with your 17 (or 16, if we don't count the game with Yo Kaei, that happened after that post).
International games, Globis prelims... do they make up for the difference?
13: 1/24/2022 Honimbo 78 - Aoki Kikuyo 8p (f) B+ 3.5
14: 2/28/2022 Honimbo 78 - Terayama Rei 6p B+R
15: 3/14/2022 Kiriyama 29 - Rin Shien 8p
16: 3/14/2022 Kiriyama 29 - Takuji Yamada 8p
17: 4/28/2022 Meijin 48 - Shinji Yamada 6p
18: 6/13/2022 Meijin 48 - Yo Kaei (YANG, Chia Jung) 8p
19: 6/23/2022 Oza 71 - Takeshita Ryoya 1p
20: 6/27/2022 Gosei 48 - Jo Bunen 1p
As you can see, there are only 8, even though she has won 23 games this year according to https://www.nihonkiin.or.jp/player/htm/ki000496.html. https://www.nihonkiin.or.jp/player/rank.html lists the tournament whose games count for promotion. In short, the major 7 + Agon/Kiryama and a few others. Wins in big international tournaments count as well.
In particular, women-only tournaments or special invitational or exhibition (like NHK cup) do not count.