No Longer Blindly Reaching
- Numsgil
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Re: No Longer Blindly Reaching
I find it hard to believe anyone could legitimately make dan without doing thousands and thousands of problems. I just don't see how you'd drill in the tesuji, life and death, and shapes otherwise. It'd be like becoming a concert pianist only practicing piano twice a week for 20 minutes. The guys I knew doing music majors were practicing hours a day. It's just the way it is to become good at something.
Some people do have a natural affinity for the game, and if you have a stronger player constantly playing against you that probably counts for quite a bit, but I just don't see anyone getting to dan without significant effort from either problems or the equivalent of problems (game reviews maybe, if you really stop and concentrate and figure out the life and death positions yourself that you missed in game).
Some people do have a natural affinity for the game, and if you have a stronger player constantly playing against you that probably counts for quite a bit, but I just don't see anyone getting to dan without significant effort from either problems or the equivalent of problems (game reviews maybe, if you really stop and concentrate and figure out the life and death positions yourself that you missed in game).
- Numsgil
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Re: No Longer Blindly Reaching
Just another follow up (not to derail this thread any more, but I guess it's too late. Sorry hailthorn), is your main account Kamomille? I don't mean to insinuate that anyone that disagrees with me is weaker than they claim! But you haven't played many ranked games, so the sample size is pretty narrow. KGS ranks at low sample sizes are basically pretty random (the +/- factor is several stones). You actually haven't played any ranked games as a 1 kyu yet, even. If you had 50-100 games as a 1 kyu I'd be more inclined to consider you a valid counter data point. A dan in my book means they can play an infinite number of games against other dans and win half of them. Someone who manages to get an account with a game or two to 1 dan doesn't quite count.OtakuViking wrote:Numsgil, 10000 go problems from 10k to dan sounds absolutely ridiculous. If you need that many, you're not doing it right. You need to mix it up with playing games too. So far I've solved about 2000 go problems, some being opening, endgame and middlegame problems from the graded go problems set... and I'm 1kyu on KGS. So you see ... solving 10000 go problems to get to dan level seems a little ridiculous to me
Again, I don't mean to be dismissive at all. I'm just saying that if you're presenting yourself as a counter case I'd argue that you need more data points. I don't mean this as a personal attack or anything (it's hard to do unbiased analysis when people are themselves data points :/)
- OtakuViking
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Re: No Longer Blindly Reaching
I've hidden my response to Numsgil because I don't want to hijack the thread any more than we've done already:)
Just to clarify. The point of doing Life and death problems is to increase your reading ability. Which helps mainly with your middle and endgame calculations. The point of Tesuji problems is to learn the tesuji and remember it, it's ok to get it wrong, ok to look at the answer. Other types of problems speak for themselves, opening, endgame etc. Notice no shape. Shape comes naturally when you play games, study books like Shape up! Charles Matthews and study joseki.
If you simply glance at a life and death problem, find something that looks like a vital point and immediately jump to the answer. You have totally missed the point of the problem. The solution is not NEARLY as important as the fact that you tried your best to read out all the possible variations to make sure your answer is correct. The main point of life and death problems is simply to train your reading muscle. Life and death problems are usually not limited to shapes found in games, many are artificial and you'll never encounter them in a game. The main point is, I repeat, to exercise your reading muscle.
If you simply glance at a life and death problem, find something that looks like a vital point and immediately jump to the answer. You have totally missed the point of the problem. The solution is not NEARLY as important as the fact that you tried your best to read out all the possible variations to make sure your answer is correct. The main point of life and death problems is simply to train your reading muscle. Life and death problems are usually not limited to shapes found in games, many are artificial and you'll never encounter them in a game. The main point is, I repeat, to exercise your reading muscle.
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shapenaji
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Re: No Longer Blindly Reaching
Well, bear in mind I wrote "experience AND experimentation"karaklis wrote:This is probably not the whole truth. I've seen people playing hundreds and thousands of such games and haven't improved a single stone.shapenaji wrote:Most of the time, you're better off with 2-3 10-20 minute games than 1 30 minute game + review.
It's very easy to do the same thing over and over and not try out new ideas. The important thing is that you're trying out your ideas, not spending a lot of time on a game.
Tactics yes, Tact no...
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Re: No Longer Blindly Reaching
I did about 2000 tsumego and got stuck at 7k before I burnt out from tsumego. Your improvement is obviously not only dependent on tsumego but many other factors as well.illluck wrote:I also think 10k is absolutely ridiculous. I think I did less than 1000 before hitting kgs 1d, and I don't think they were a significant factor (they definitely sped up the process, though).
Last edited by karaklis on Fri Jan 13, 2012 4:22 pm, edited 1 time in total.
- Numsgil
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Re: No Longer Blindly Reaching
OtakuViking wrote:I've hidden my response to Numsgil because I don't want to hijack the thread any more than we've done already:)
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illluck
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Re: No Longer Blindly Reaching
I find it a bit amusing that less than 1k problems is considered "hard to believe". As Karaklis says, progress is dependent on a lot of factors. Problems is not a necessary condition for reaching 1d. If anything, I think the number of games played is more meaningful, but even there different players have very different rates of progress. I probably played more than 2k games before hitting 1d, whereas someone with about 700 is almost dan (and surely there are players who reach dan in significantly fewer games).
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hailthorn011
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Re: No Longer Blindly Reaching
Self-Review Game #2:
Let me begin by saying that I enjoyed this game very much. But it was marred by mistakes.
1. Still playing too fast.
2. Failure to recognize Big Moves
Black could have won this if not for a few critical errors which I point out to the best of my ability.
Let me begin by saying that I enjoyed this game very much. But it was marred by mistakes.
1. Still playing too fast.
2. Failure to recognize Big Moves
Black could have won this if not for a few critical errors which I point out to the best of my ability.
Slava Ukraini!
- OtakuViking
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Re: No Longer Blindly Reaching
A few quick comments.
Move 7. I understand why you played K16, but O17 already reduces whites potential with that opening. Maybe approach the 4-4 or make an extension of your own in the middle?
Move 9. Playable, but game variation was weird and not very good. White should C16, then black jumps away. But I would play elsewhere... There are bigger things to consider than invasions.
Move 31. Don't cut if you can't follow it up. You just end up with a weak, useless group that you look after. Better abandon those stones and aim at something else.
move 47. Yes:=)
move 51. WEAK. Jump and continue attack.
...no more time, hope it helped:=)
Move 7. I understand why you played K16, but O17 already reduces whites potential with that opening. Maybe approach the 4-4 or make an extension of your own in the middle?
Move 9. Playable, but game variation was weird and not very good. White should C16, then black jumps away. But I would play elsewhere... There are bigger things to consider than invasions.
Move 31. Don't cut if you can't follow it up. You just end up with a weak, useless group that you look after. Better abandon those stones and aim at something else.
move 47. Yes:=)
move 51. WEAK. Jump and continue attack.
...no more time, hope it helped:=)
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hailthorn011
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Re: No Longer Blindly Reaching
Thanks for the comments! As for your comment on Move 31, I completely agree. Cutting there was a bad decision that hurt me quite a bit in end game.OtakuViking wrote:A few quick comments.
Move 7. I understand why you played K16, but O17 already reduces whites potential with that opening. Maybe approach the 4-4 or make an extension of your own in the middle?
Move 9. Playable, but game variation was weird and not very good. White should C16, then black jumps away. But I would play elsewhere... There are bigger things to consider than invasions.
Move 31. Don't cut if you can't follow it up. You just end up with a weak, useless group that you look after. Better abandon those stones and aim at something else.
move 47. Yes:=)
move 51. WEAK. Jump and continue attack.
...no more time, hope it helped:=)
Slava Ukraini!
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shapenaji
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Re: No Longer Blindly Reaching
Move 11, what's the rush to settle in the corner? there's barely any room for you there. Learn to play that stone lightly. Consider tenuki-ing from that initial play or jumping out. It leaves aji there later either way, and you can invade when it won't give him a massive useful wall.
EDIT: H15, for example, would make sense
EDIT: H15, for example, would make sense
Tactics yes, Tact no...
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Marcus
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Re: No Longer Blindly Reaching
A few comments to add to the advice given above. Caveat to all this advice, be prepared to fail a lot until things start to make sense. I'm a big fan of jumping in and trying new things, and failing a lot to gain experience. 
First, concerning your cut at 31 and, more importantly, the follow up. I think cutting wasn't a big issue, even if it was a mistake. The issue began at move 35, where you activated that stone without a plan.
Advice #1: Don't activate stones without a plan.
You touch on this a few times in this thread, where you talk about moving too quickly. I'd like to see you take this a bit further: Identify less important stones (this is the hard part), and leave them alone. When you move without a plan, you make it easy on your opponent. Instead, make your opponent worry about what that unimportant stone COULD do later in the game (or he could spend a move eliminating the threat, which is probably better for you anyways).
Next, Move 63. This is an opportunity to play a double hane (see here). In this case, you would play M15 instead of M16. Learning when you can do this will give you one more tool in your bat-belt.
Move 75 ... read, then cut at P15. White can't hold you in anymore, and P15 threatens the follow-up cut at Q13. I guess my advice here is, check your safety, double-check, then cut. If you read wrong, so be it. Seems like a lot of the time you play a little too safe.
Along the same lines as above:
Move 133 - read, then cut at H7
Move 139 - read, then play F7 (some interesting lines here to read for practice)
=================================
About go problems ...
I haven't done any, at least not formally or thoroughly. I've played around with some on occasion, but I don't solve them as practice.
For me (and I stress that this is not true of everyone), playing is FAR more effective for learning Tesuji, Life & Death, and Shape.
So Numsgil, why am I KGS 2k? (or 3k, if I'm honest; I'm not consistent enough to really lay claim to the 2k I've been awarded). I don't think problems really are the panacea you seem to claim. Everyone learns differently, and the right balance is personal.
First, concerning your cut at 31 and, more importantly, the follow up. I think cutting wasn't a big issue, even if it was a mistake. The issue began at move 35, where you activated that stone without a plan.
Advice #1: Don't activate stones without a plan.
You touch on this a few times in this thread, where you talk about moving too quickly. I'd like to see you take this a bit further: Identify less important stones (this is the hard part), and leave them alone. When you move without a plan, you make it easy on your opponent. Instead, make your opponent worry about what that unimportant stone COULD do later in the game (or he could spend a move eliminating the threat, which is probably better for you anyways).
Next, Move 63. This is an opportunity to play a double hane (see here). In this case, you would play M15 instead of M16. Learning when you can do this will give you one more tool in your bat-belt.
Move 75 ... read, then cut at P15. White can't hold you in anymore, and P15 threatens the follow-up cut at Q13. I guess my advice here is, check your safety, double-check, then cut. If you read wrong, so be it. Seems like a lot of the time you play a little too safe.
Along the same lines as above:
Move 133 - read, then cut at H7
Move 139 - read, then play F7 (some interesting lines here to read for practice)
=================================
About go problems ...
I haven't done any, at least not formally or thoroughly. I've played around with some on occasion, but I don't solve them as practice.
For me (and I stress that this is not true of everyone), playing is FAR more effective for learning Tesuji, Life & Death, and Shape.
So Numsgil, why am I KGS 2k? (or 3k, if I'm honest; I'm not consistent enough to really lay claim to the 2k I've been awarded). I don't think problems really are the panacea you seem to claim. Everyone learns differently, and the right balance is personal.
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hailthorn011
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Re: No Longer Blindly Reaching
As I have noted before, this game is another prime example of playing far too fast. You don't see it at the beginning, but towards the end I started playing fast again and I ended up losing a lot of points as a result. And this was a Simultaneous game. I was among five of his opponents. The disappointing facts are that I was the only one who lost. I had 3 stones AND a concentration advantage, and I still lost. Since initially reaching 7k (I've lost it since) I'm 0-4. I reckon 3 of those games were well within range, but I lost them because of the pace at which I play.
This may sound like a dumb question, but what is the best way to remedy playing too fast?
Note: This game was not self-reviewed.
This may sound like a dumb question, but what is the best way to remedy playing too fast?
Note: This game was not self-reviewed.
Slava Ukraini!
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Eizero
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Re: No Longer Blindly Reaching
I do not know the remedy of playing too fast because I often play too slow. :p
I`ll just give some comments:
I think c17 for black is a lot better than c16.
*(I think this is the most important) When white plays l2 you should block it, white has to spend an extra move to live with that group while you cut off his weak group.
Also move 54 is almost like passing, black is quite thick there.
I think you`re too concentrated on territory. Most of the time white overplays in handicap games. You should focus on pressuring white as much as possible. You did not really give white a hard time at all.
edit: For example black 64 at m11 is just taking a small point of territory. Instead of that move maybe invade between the two white stones.
I`ll just give some comments:
I think c17 for black is a lot better than c16.
*(I think this is the most important) When white plays l2 you should block it, white has to spend an extra move to live with that group while you cut off his weak group.
Also move 54 is almost like passing, black is quite thick there.
I think you`re too concentrated on territory. Most of the time white overplays in handicap games. You should focus on pressuring white as much as possible. You did not really give white a hard time at all.
edit: For example black 64 at m11 is just taking a small point of territory. Instead of that move maybe invade between the two white stones.