Nicola Mitic Of Serbia has been an insei in Japan for some time now. He qualified for the winter qualifying tournament in Tokyo and play began last weekend. He is currently 1-1 as shown on the results page (Japanese only). Play continues with a game each Saturday and Sunday until November 19th. Wish him luck!
Re: Nicola Mitic In Japanese Pro Qualifier
Posted: Tue Oct 04, 2016 4:46 am
by macelee
He has to have a top 2 finish from the group of 16 players to qualify.
Re: Nicola Mitic In Japanese Pro Qualifier
Posted: Tue Oct 04, 2016 5:08 am
by ez4u
I'm guessing that as a non-CJK person he only needs a 50%+ score. That is how Antti made it last year.
Re: Nicola Mitic In Japanese Pro Qualifier
Posted: Tue Oct 04, 2016 5:28 am
by Uberdude
ez4u wrote:I'm guessing that as a non-CJK person he only needs a 50%+ score. That is how Antti made it last year.
Unless of course the Nihon Ki-in decide Antti has used up their recent "easier pro places for foreigners" quota. That would be rather harsh on Nikola though, plus I think Antti was the first Western pro since Hans Pietsch 16 years ago so hopefully there's a backlog of any such quota that's accumulated.
Btw talking to Dusan (6 dan), Nikola's older brother, at the Gold Cup he said Nikola's judgement/theory/direction was still kind of similar to Dusan's and he still made silly mistakes, but his reading was now much better, for example some tsumego that took Dusan 2 minutes Nikola did in 30 seconds.
Re: Nicola Mitic In Japanese Pro Qualifier
Posted: Tue Oct 11, 2016 12:22 pm
by shoryuu
There was nothing on that page that indicated whether B or W means a win or a loss. Care to enlighten?
Posted: Tue Oct 11, 2016 1:04 pm
by EdLee
There was nothing on that page that indicated whether B or W means a win or a loss. Care to enlighten?
Based on HnG ( and UI design ), I guess = win ?
Assuming = win, mnemonic: :
image.jpeg (10.93 KiB) Viewed 13147 times
Re: Nicola Mitic In Japanese Pro Qualifier
Posted: Tue Oct 11, 2016 3:08 pm
by Jhyn
Not a good start from him, I'm afraid.
Re: Nicola Mitic In Japanese Pro Qualifier
Posted: Tue Oct 11, 2016 3:14 pm
by oren
Clear is win, filled black is loss.
Re:
Posted: Tue Oct 11, 2016 9:16 pm
by shoryuu
EdLee wrote:
There was nothing on that page that indicated whether B or W means a win or a loss. Care to enlighten?
Based on HnG ( and UI design ), I guess = win ?
Assuming = win, mnemonic: :
image.jpeg
Ah yes. Forgot to refer to the great HNG for info.
Thanks! The white flag is 1 way to think about it, but then again black could also be seen as a black mark on your record so I was kinda on the fence.
Re: Nicola Mitic In Japanese Pro Qualifier
Posted: Tue Oct 11, 2016 11:54 pm
by Shenoute
I'd say like oren: white is a win, black a loss.
If I remember correctly, in HnG, Hikaru puts a white mark on his hand so that victory be with him.
So it seems Mitic is doing quite well at the moment (even if it still is really soon, there are 6 players with a 3-1 result).
Re: Nicola Mitic In Japanese Pro Qualifier
Posted: Wed Oct 12, 2016 12:54 am
by shoryuu
Sorry Ed. I checked last year's honsen and the white is indeed a win and black a loss so you're wrong. Nicola is doing pretty well considering he was 1 or 2 classes behind Antti when he was in A class.
Posted: Wed Oct 12, 2016 3:06 am
by EdLee
shoryuu, why sorry ?
Maybe ( = loss, = win ) is a national standard ?
From kindergarten all the way to pro ? Anyone knows ?
Otherwise, it takes up very little room to include a simple legend.
Re: Nicola Mitic In Japanese Pro Qualifier
Posted: Wed Oct 12, 2016 3:55 am
by John Fairbairn
Maybe ( = loss, = win ) is a national standard ?
From kindergarten all the way to pro ? Anyone knows ?
Otherwise, it takes up very little room to include a simple legend.
This needs a legend no more than a tick and a cross do in English. It's standard in all Japanese life.
The white/empty circle is maru and may be filled in the sense that a teacher may put the circle round the correct answer. The solid-circle failure mark can also be a cross or even a tick and is called batsu, or peke in some dialects.
The signs can also be used for yes-no in conversations. You cross your arms under your chin for no/wrong and put your arms round your head for yes/right. Little kids play a maru-batsu game like this.
If you are a foreigner in a conversation in Japan and sit with your arms crossed you could be taken as sending literally the wrong signals. And if you say "Oh my god!" and wrap your arms round your head in despair you may be misinterpreted.
In go, I suppose you could say that all White's moves are correct and all Black's are batsu
Re: Nicola Mitic In Japanese Pro Qualifier
Posted: Wed Oct 12, 2016 4:03 am
by Jhyn
To get to this point Nicola went through a qualifier for outsiders and lower-ranked insei.
Seems like Nicola was having some consistency at the top of the B-class.
Re:
Posted: Wed Oct 12, 2016 5:32 pm
by shoryuu
EdLee wrote:shoryuu, why sorry ?
Because I had to correct you? Just being polite.
Anyone knows whether you can apply for all the different branch applications? Eg. Chubu,Tokyo and Kansai Branch? At least you have 3 separate chances. I know the girls usually do at least 2 different ones (eg. Tokyo and Girl's qualifier). And there's also Kansai Kiin's one.