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Re: Following Iyama Yuta (no world ranking discussions)
Posted: Sun Nov 21, 2021 2:47 am
by vier
kvasir wrote:There is an amateur Honinbo championship and the winners of the ama and pro Honinbo play a game with handicap that is changed every year depending on who won.
It is not clear to me if the 2019 match took place but the 2020 amateur Honinbo was cancelled.
For the game record of the 2019 match (played on 2020-02-09), see
https://homepages.cwi.nl/~aeb/go/games/ ... index.html
Re: Following Iyama Yuta (no world ranking discussions)
Posted: Sun Nov 21, 2021 11:29 am
by pajaro
John Fairbairn wrote:The 2020 Pro-Am Honinbos [note the plural] match, Term 57, was played. Ozeki Minoru beat Iyama with 2 stones, 0 komi.
Do you mean the 2019 match, term 57? That's according to the previous link. The 58th match would be skipped. I would expect the next one played, whenever it was, to be 58.
Anyway, in this match(2021, Term 59), Iyama won by resign. Next year we'll see black placing 2 stones again.
Re: Following Iyama Yuta (no world ranking discussions)
Posted: Sat Nov 27, 2021 9:29 am
by CDavis7M
Iyama beat Fan Tingyu in the Nongshim Cup yesterday. It was an exciting game. Iyama was under pressure but ended up handling overtime better. He is playing again today against Byun Sangil. The game is being streamed by the Nihon Kiin on YouTube. There are a few more games happening over the next few days.
I got some Nongshim at home that I've been avoiding. Time to cook it up.
Re: Following Iyama Yuta (no world ranking discussions)
Posted: Sun Nov 28, 2021 12:25 am
by CDavis7M
https://youtu.be/3azw_7vVJ2Q
Lots of Iyama fans in the 日本棋院 chat, of course. I noticed that the number people watching increased as the game went on and the possibility of Iyama winning increased. Baduk TV had 2-3x as many live viewers. They also have a neat real board setup with superimposed stones for commentary. It was fun to watch.
Thanks to Iyama for a short game. I'm looking forward to the next round tomorrow.
Re: Following Iyama Yuta (no world ranking discussions)
Posted: Mon Nov 29, 2021 4:16 am
by Harleqin
It seems he beat both Byun Sangil and the next player from China, 李欽誠 (not sure how that's pronounced).
Re: Following Iyama Yuta (no world ranking discussions)
Posted: Mon Nov 29, 2021 4:33 am
by Harleqin
The game with Byun Sangil had an exciting big kill.
Re: Following Iyama Yuta (no world ranking discussions)
Posted: Mon Nov 29, 2021 8:48 am
by CDavis7M
Iyama won against Li Qincheng and today he will be facing Shin Minjun.
I'm ready

Re: Following Iyama Yuta (no world ranking discussions)
Posted: Mon Nov 29, 2021 11:46 am
by jlt
So you'll have a Nongshim Cup for dinner?
Re: Following Iyama Yuta (no world ranking discussions)
Posted: Mon Nov 29, 2021 12:53 pm
by John Fairbairn
In the days of two-day matches it was the norm in the newspapers to discuss what players had for lunch. It was like reading tea leaves, as far as I was concerned, but the colour writer would make sage remarks such White had noodles and so was building up stamina in preparation for a long game, or Black had fish and was sharpening his brain for some deep calculations.
But all this was in the days of almost 100% traditional food, and young readers don't want to hear about that. Lord knows what a traditional colour writer would make of a young Kisei ordering a burger for lunch. Maybe he'd expect a brain fart before 3. Or in the case of the real youngsters like Sumire - chocolate cake leading to a sugar rush and whizzing round the board 300 times before playing a gurugurumawashi.
Re: Following Iyama Yuta (no world ranking discussions)
Posted: Mon Nov 29, 2021 1:04 pm
by CDavis7M
jlt wrote:So you'll have a Nongshim Cup for dinner?
Yup, another night of eating and watching Nongshim Cup. "Shin" flavor as tribute for Shin Minjun.
Someone's got to support the sponsor's 500 million KRW payout. I learned that 辛 "shin" means "spicy-hot." Definitely hot!
...Maybe as an Iyama fan I should be eating soba instead...
Re: Following Iyama Yuta (no world ranking discussions)
Posted: Tue Nov 30, 2021 12:47 am
by CDavis7M
Wow! What a hero!

Re: Following Iyama Yuta (no world ranking discussions)
Posted: Tue Nov 30, 2021 2:07 am
by Ember
A true hero indeed!

Looks like Shin overlooked the weakness in the lower left. I'm kinda proud I saw F5 coming, a few years ago I'd have answered meekly and missed the chance.
Remaining players now:
China: Ke Jie (9d), Mi Yuting (9d),
Fan Tingyu (9d),
Li Qincheng (9d),
Li Weiqing (9d)
Japan: Iyama Yuta (9d), Ichiriki Ryo (9d),
Shibano Toramaru (9d),
Kyo Kagen (9d), Yu Zhengqi (8d)
Korea: Shin Jinseo (9d),
Park Junghwan (9d),
Byun Sangil (9d),
Shin Minjun (9d),
Won Sungjin (9d)
Looks a little desperate for Korea to have only 1 player left. And Japan has 3 players left, one of them Ichiriki. That looks kinda promising... But there's still players like Ke Jie and Shin Jinseo left, so Japan's fans better not celebrate too early. I wonder if China will send out Ke Jie next to end Iyama's roll. I hope, though, that Iyama may keep it up with the Kisei title match vs. Ichiriki starting in January and keep on winning for Japan (or maybe Ichiriki). And I hope Iyama won't be too tired now since he'll be quite busy until mid-December: Oza title matches on 3 December + maybe 9 December vs. Shibano and Tengen title matches on 6 December + maybe 16 December vs. Ichiriki.
Go, Iyama-sensei! 
Re: Following Iyama Yuta (no world ranking discussions)
Posted: Tue Nov 30, 2021 6:55 pm
by gazzawhite
Ember wrote:I wonder if China will send out Ke Jie next to end Iyama's roll.
It's confirmed that Mi Yuting is the upcoming opponent. And the next game is not until 21st February, so neither player will be focusing on Nongshim for a while.
Ember wrote:And I hope Iyama won't be too tired now since he'll be quite busy until mid-December: Oza title matches on 3 December + maybe 9 December vs. Shibano and Tengen title matches on 6 December + maybe 16 December vs. Ichiriki.
Iyama isn't playing in the Tengen title match. That's Seki Kotaro.
However, there is the Kuksu Mountains International Baduk Championship from 9-12 December. It would be great to see him compete in that, although he would likely have to win the Oza game on 3 December (and thus avoid a game 5).
Re: Following Iyama Yuta (no world ranking discussions)
Posted: Wed Dec 01, 2021 12:32 am
by Ember
gazzawhite wrote:Ember wrote:I wonder if China will send out Ke Jie next to end Iyama's roll.
It's confirmed that Mi Yuting is the upcoming opponent. And the next game is not until 21st February, so neither player will be focusing on Nongshim for a while.
Thanks for posting this! I was wondering if the order of the players would be revealed only before the game or would be fixed from the beginning oder would be decided on as early as possible before the next game.
gazzawhite wrote:Ember wrote:And I hope Iyama won't be too tired now since he'll be quite busy until mid-December: Oza title matches on 3 December + maybe 9 December vs. Shibano and Tengen title matches on 6 December + maybe 16 December vs. Ichiriki.
Iyama isn't playing in the Tengen title match. That's Seki Kotaro.
You're right, thanks for noting. I was so used to Iyama being in all the title matches and a bit too happy maybe after his win yesterday to check that correctly.
Re: Following Iyama Yuta (no world ranking discussions)
Posted: Thu Dec 16, 2021 11:50 am
by hyperpape
John Fairbairn wrote:In the days of two-day matches it was the norm in the newspapers to discuss what players had for lunch. It was like reading tea leaves, as far as I was concerned, but the colour writer would make sage remarks such White had noodles and so was building up stamina in preparation for a long game, or Black had fish and was sharpening his brain for some deep calculations.
But all this was in the days of almost 100% traditional food, and young readers don't want to hear about that.
Sometime in the late 2000s, I used to watch Japanese title matches live on IGS. Seeing photos of the players’ traditional lunches was always the silver lining of the hour of dead time around midnight. I didn’t speak Japanese so I have no idea if the commentators still tried to connect the meals to the strategy in those days.