Magics way up the hill
Posted: Thu Jul 15, 2010 12:42 am
The term is ending, and together with the prospect of more free time came the motivation to do something for my Go. Knowing myself, it's clear that having a plan is crucial for my success in improving.
This study journal is also a motivator for me, as i should feel obligated to have something to report every week.
Goals:
With "Dan-Trophy" i mean a game-record of a game against a solid 1d, which i won. Though only serious and even games qualify for this (so it has to happen at a tournament)
To achieve these goals i have formulated four groups of study. I ordered them in the priority, i think they have for myself improving.
1. Playing Games:
I haven't played very much in the last time, and therefore i have problems concentrating in tournament-games which leads to a lot of small silly mistakes. Playing should give me the practice i need, to get my concentration back up.
Also, playing is what i enjoy most.
2. Analysing Games:
I don't intend to memorize the pro-games i replay (if it happens, it's a nice bonus), instead i want to get a feeling for shape and the flow of a game. Trying to understand what the pro could have meant with each move.
Giving a review each week to a weaker player is important for me. Not only may verbalizing my thoughts help me understand go better, it also wouldn't feel right to ask for a review each week without me giving something similar back.
3. Tsumego:
I don't enjoy tsumego that much, but i know from experience that doing some tsumego each day will greatly help my play. I have put my sources of tsumego also on this list, i will try to avoid goproblems.com (where i will aimlessly click around instead of reading the sequence out).
I would like to add some tesuji-problems to the mix, but unfortunatly i have no source of tesuji-problems at hand. Maybe they will be added later.
4. Theory:
I really need to read Kageyama, as it seems most (if not all) of my lost games are thanks to mistakes in the fundamentals. I have put A&D also on the list, as re-reading it always helps me to correct my way of attacking groups.
Well, thats my plan. When i'm in the mood and have time, i may play more or do more tsumego but the numbers in my plan are the minimum which i want to achieve every week. Everything above that is considered a nice bonus.
What i already achieved
14. July 2010:
This study journal is also a motivator for me, as i should feel obligated to have something to report every week.
Goals:
- Starting rank: 2k (KGS 2k and EGF 2k - Current Gor: 1762)
- Reaching 1d for the next german pair-go championsship (there is currently no date for this, but i think/hope it will be around summer 2011 or later) - 2011:Failed
- Playing at least as 1k at the Bonner Torunament 2011 (End of February) - Failed (didn't even played in the tournament)
- Managing to get a "Dan-Trophy" - Done
- Having a correct Gor for my rank (long-term goal) Done (30. May, 2012)
With "Dan-Trophy" i mean a game-record of a game against a solid 1d, which i won. Though only serious and even games qualify for this (so it has to happen at a tournament)
To achieve these goals i have formulated four groups of study. I ordered them in the priority, i think they have for myself improving.
1. Playing Games:
- 1 to 3 serious games per week
- Played on KGS via Automatch using the middle time-setting (25m+5x30s)
- At least 1 game per week on another server (IGS or WBaduk) to experience different playing-styles
- I should use at least 20 to 25 minutes in every game
- Count in every game, at least after fuseki and once during the middle game
I haven't played very much in the last time, and therefore i have problems concentrating in tournament-games which leads to a lot of small silly mistakes. Playing should give me the practice i need, to get my concentration back up.
Also, playing is what i enjoy most.
2. Analysing Games:
- Self-Review every serious game of myself, to spot 1-2 crucial mistakes
- Replay 1 pro-game on my real board per week
- Give 1 review per week to a weaker player (5k - 8k)
- Put one of my games per week online to get a review from a stronger player
I don't intend to memorize the pro-games i replay (if it happens, it's a nice bonus), instead i want to get a feeling for shape and the flow of a game. Trying to understand what the pro could have meant with each move.
Giving a review each week to a weaker player is important for me. Not only may verbalizing my thoughts help me understand go better, it also wouldn't feel right to ask for a review each week without me giving something similar back.
3. Tsumego:
- Do tsumego (L&D) for 30minutes each day
- 1001 Life&Death Problems
- Cho Chikuns E. of L&D 1-3
- Tsumego cards (4k-2k)
I don't enjoy tsumego that much, but i know from experience that doing some tsumego each day will greatly help my play. I have put my sources of tsumego also on this list, i will try to avoid goproblems.com (where i will aimlessly click around instead of reading the sequence out).
I would like to add some tesuji-problems to the mix, but unfortunatly i have no source of tesuji-problems at hand. Maybe they will be added later.
4. Theory:
- Kageyama: Lessons in the Fundamentals of go
- Audiogolessons - 1 Lesson per week (starting in august)
- Attack & Defense
I really need to read Kageyama, as it seems most (if not all) of my lost games are thanks to mistakes in the fundamentals. I have put A&D also on the list, as re-reading it always helps me to correct my way of attacking groups.
Well, thats my plan. When i'm in the mood and have time, i may play more or do more tsumego but the numbers in my plan are the minimum which i want to achieve every week. Everything above that is considered a nice bonus.
What i already achieved
14. July 2010:
- 15 minutes of tsumego (1001 L&D) - most problems solved on sight, some wrong (about 1 in 10)
- One game on KGS against my girlfriend, with a short post-game analysis
- 30 minutes of tsumego (1001 L&D) - most solved pretty quick, only a handfull wrong