The life of low-ranked professionals
- Gresil
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The life of low-ranked professionals
I came upon something earlier this year at Sensei's that made me very sad and still does. I meant to post about it at GD at that time but I don't think I did.
http://senseis.xmp.net/?IgamiHajime
The pupils of a deceased Japanese professional retired together March this year. All in their seventies, some of them were 1-dan. Those people had played professionally without promotion for fourty or fifty years. The mere thought of such an existence fills me with the same horror as a Samuel Beckett play.
What is this a glimpse of? Did these people go out every day and lose, lose and lose year after year out of only a sense of obligation to their teacher?
http://senseis.xmp.net/?IgamiHajime
The pupils of a deceased Japanese professional retired together March this year. All in their seventies, some of them were 1-dan. Those people had played professionally without promotion for fourty or fifty years. The mere thought of such an existence fills me with the same horror as a Samuel Beckett play.
What is this a glimpse of? Did these people go out every day and lose, lose and lose year after year out of only a sense of obligation to their teacher?
So you've got an eye?
That don't impress me much
That don't impress me much
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Arms Longfellow
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Re: The life of low-ranked professionals
No different than minor league baseball players, really. It isn't possible for there to be superstars without lower level people for them to dominate.
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Bill Spight
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Re: The life of low-ranked professionals
Look at the ages at which some of them became pro shodans: 28, 36, 42. These are not ordinary pros. Making pro was probably the highlight of their go careers. It is unlikely that they made a living as pros, or that they expected to do so.
The Adkins Principle:
At some point, doesn't thinking have to go on?
— Winona Adkins
Visualize whirled peas.
Everything with love. Stay safe.
At some point, doesn't thinking have to go on?
— Winona Adkins
Visualize whirled peas.
Everything with love. Stay safe.
- Gresil
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Re: The life of low-ranked professionals
I was hoping to hear something like that.
(I always took the "x dan in 19yz" that you see in old players' SL blurbs as meaning "known to have been" and not "promoted to".)
(I always took the "x dan in 19yz" that you see in old players' SL blurbs as meaning "known to have been" and not "promoted to".)
So you've got an eye?
That don't impress me much
That don't impress me much
- Joaz Banbeck
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Re: The life of low-ranked professionals
IF I could make pro, AND then live another 40 or 50 years, I'd consider myself the luckiest man alive.
Help make L19 more organized. Make an index: https://lifein19x19.com/viewtopic.php?f=14&t=5207
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DrStraw
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Re: The life of low-ranked professionals
Joaz Banbeck wrote:IF I could make pro, AND then live another 40 or 50 years, I'd consider myself the luckiest man alive.
With live expectancy increasing today's new pros can probably expect 70 to 80 years as a pro
Still officially AGA 5d but I play so irregularly these days that I am probably only 3d or 4d over the board (but hopefully still 5d in terms of knowledge, theory and the ability to contribute).
- LordYunzi
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Re: The life of low-ranked professionals
Would be nice to become pro nevertheless, as long as you stay realistic being old age..
What did they have to do to become pro, anyway? I mean, what kind of qualification is there for "veterans"?
What did they have to do to become pro, anyway? I mean, what kind of qualification is there for "veterans"?
Yunzi makes the world go round, the world go round...
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gowan
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Re: The life of low-ranked professionals
Until very recently promotion in professional rank in Japan, especially for low ranked players, depended on attaining a certain number of points in the rating tournament (Oteai). This could be achieved only by winning a high percentage of games out of a certain fixed number. Thus it could easily happen that a player could win, say, 52% of all games but could not put together a streak of wins long enough to win promotion. Hence life-long shodans. Such players could make a living from go, but not from tournament winnings or game fees alone. They could support themselves through teaching. Nowadays promotion can be attained simply by reaching a certain plateau of wins, though that is hard enough for low ranked players because they have fewer opportunities to play games that count.
- LordYunzi
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Re: The life of low-ranked professionals
ok, that must suck. would not harm if the nihon kiin would grant extra promotions to all players every decade as pro, to help their self esteem.. 
Yunzi makes the world go round, the world go round...
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John Fairbairn
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Re: The life of low-ranked professionals
This thread is overlooking several things. One is that the people concerned are mainly just lesson pros or local pros, but the Kansai Ki-in doesn't use the Nihon Ki-in's terminology.
Maybe more to the point several of the pros mentioned had their careers blighted by being the wrong age at the time of the war, and some also chose to go to university before getting a pro qualification.
There's nothing specially sad about any of it. All the players had/are having long lives.
Maybe more to the point several of the pros mentioned had their careers blighted by being the wrong age at the time of the war, and some also chose to go to university before getting a pro qualification.
There's nothing specially sad about any of it. All the players had/are having long lives.
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Mivo
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Re: The life of low-ranked professionals
John Fairbairn wrote:Maybe more to the point several of the pros mentioned had their careers blighted by being the wrong age at the time of the war
This is a little off-topic (I would have sent a PM), but speaking of the war and pros: Would you happen to know if Tanaka Fujio fell in war? I had learned of him when looking at players who experimented with tengen openings, and he was intriguing, but he apparently passed at age 24 in 1940 and there is precious little information available about him (in English).
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John Fairbairn
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Re: The life of low-ranked professionals
This is a little off-topic (I would have sent a PM), but speaking of the war and pros: Would you happen to know if Tanaka Fujio fell in war? I had learned of him when looking at players who experimented with tengen openings, and he was intriguing, but he apparently passed at age 24 in 1940 and there is precious little information available about him (in English).
He died of consumption in 1940.