World Go Championship 2019
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macelee
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World Go Championship 2019
We had some interesting discussion last year on this tournament. I am happy to report that the sponsor has made big effort to turn this into a truly reputable international tournament.
This year, the final stage will be similar to last year, although expanding slightly to accommodate eight players: winner of last year (Park Junghwan); 4 top players representing Japan, Korea, China and Chinese Taipei; and three positions from a very proper preliminary tournament.
The newly introduced preliminary tournament has three groups:
Group 1 is open to more senior players (24 of them, including China's Yu Bin and Rui Naiwei, Korea's Seo Bongsoo and Yoo Changhuk, and Japan's Takao Shinji and Hane Naoki, among others).
Group 2 and 3, 32 players each, cover the world's strongest players, including almost all former international titleholders. The quality of these groups are themselves like that of major international tournaments.
Group 2 has current or former international titleholders Shi Yue, Tan Xiao, Kang Dongyun, Tang Weixing, Park Yeonghun, Choi Cheolhan, Gu Zihao, Kim Jiseok, Zhou Ruiyang, Fan Tingyu, Weon Seongjin and Tuo Jiaxi.
Group 3 has current or former international titleholders Chen Yaoye, Lee Sedol, Xie Erhao, Jiang Weijie, Mi Yuting and Cho Chikun.
See https://www.nihonkiin.or.jp/match/wgc/003.html for more detail.
This year, the final stage will be similar to last year, although expanding slightly to accommodate eight players: winner of last year (Park Junghwan); 4 top players representing Japan, Korea, China and Chinese Taipei; and three positions from a very proper preliminary tournament.
The newly introduced preliminary tournament has three groups:
Group 1 is open to more senior players (24 of them, including China's Yu Bin and Rui Naiwei, Korea's Seo Bongsoo and Yoo Changhuk, and Japan's Takao Shinji and Hane Naoki, among others).
Group 2 and 3, 32 players each, cover the world's strongest players, including almost all former international titleholders. The quality of these groups are themselves like that of major international tournaments.
Group 2 has current or former international titleholders Shi Yue, Tan Xiao, Kang Dongyun, Tang Weixing, Park Yeonghun, Choi Cheolhan, Gu Zihao, Kim Jiseok, Zhou Ruiyang, Fan Tingyu, Weon Seongjin and Tuo Jiaxi.
Group 3 has current or former international titleholders Chen Yaoye, Lee Sedol, Xie Erhao, Jiang Weijie, Mi Yuting and Cho Chikun.
See https://www.nihonkiin.or.jp/match/wgc/003.html for more detail.
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Uberdude
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Re: World Go Championship 2019
Who are the lucky top players who don't have to fight through the prelims? Iyama Yuta, Ke Jie, Shin Jinseo, Wang Yuanjun?
P.S. Glad to see Mi Yuting is not left out.
P.S. Glad to see Mi Yuting is not left out.
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macelee
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Re: World Go Championship 2019
Uberdude wrote:Who are the lucky top players who don't have to fight through the prelims? Iyama Yuta, Ke Jie, Shin Jinseo, Wang Yuanjun?
I don't see this mentioned anywhere. But those are all the big names missing from the preliminary game tables.
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John Fairbairn
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Re: World Go Championship 2019
The seeding has been announced. The format (after a now completed domestic preliminary) is an international preliminary broken up into two General sections and one Senior section.
The two General sections (knockouts) each comprise 10 people from each of Japan, China and Korea plus 2 from Taiwan. These have been arranged so that there are no Round 1 games between players from the same country.
The Senior section is weighted 12 places to Japan, 10 to Korea and 3 to China (0 to Taiwan). I assume this disparity reflects the strength of the veterans' events in JK as opposed to C and T. Some Japanese seniors qualified for the General sections, of course.
There seems to be no western component.
The three sections play to produce a single winner each and these join seeds in an 8-person final. The seeds are the previous winner (Pak Cheong-hwan) plus the top ranked player from each country. I haven't seen the names mentioned specifically.
The winner's prize 200 million yen (approx. US$180,000, or 60 million farthings for the seniors).
The two General sections (knockouts) each comprise 10 people from each of Japan, China and Korea plus 2 from Taiwan. These have been arranged so that there are no Round 1 games between players from the same country.
The Senior section is weighted 12 places to Japan, 10 to Korea and 3 to China (0 to Taiwan). I assume this disparity reflects the strength of the veterans' events in JK as opposed to C and T. Some Japanese seniors qualified for the General sections, of course.
There seems to be no western component.
The three sections play to produce a single winner each and these join seeds in an 8-person final. The seeds are the previous winner (Pak Cheong-hwan) plus the top ranked player from each country. I haven't seen the names mentioned specifically.
The winner's prize 200 million yen (approx. US$180,000, or 60 million farthings for the seniors).
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Uberdude
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Re: World Go Championship 2019
The first rounds of this event were today on WBaduk and some already on go4go, though I can't find a website for this year's event https://www.nihonkiin.or.jp/match/wgc/003.html (though the machine translation of names is pretty rubbish) and Mr Kin hasn't added it to his website. Young Japanese hope Shibano Toramaru had an interesting game against Park Yeonghoon, playing out a ladder he was captured in for ko threats but he still didn't have enough threats to win the monster ko (I think the reason he played that not-good-enough n1 threat rather than ladder threats (which would be answered) is they are lossy threats but black has more local threats at top so you'd rather play the non-lossy one first and bet the game on your opponent being dumb and answering it than playing all the lossy ladder threats first and then this one afterwards). Onishi Ryuhei also lost to Jiang Weijie.
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Uberdude
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Re: World Go Championship 2019
Known results:
General:
Park Yeonghoon beat Shibano Toramaru
Zhou Ruiyang beat Kyo Kagen
Mi Yuting beat ?
Fan Tingyu beat Weon Seongjin
{Lian Xiao beat Yu Zhengqi
Lee Donghoon beat Fan Yunruo} Lian vs Lee
{Jiang Weijie beat Onishi Ryuhei
Lee Yeongkyu beat Ichirki Ryo} Jiang vs Lee next
Senior:
Imamura Toshiya beat Yu Bin
Han Zenki (who LZ beat here) beat Jimmy Cha
Translating 2nd general bracket:
General:
Park Yeonghoon beat Shibano Toramaru
Zhou Ruiyang beat Kyo Kagen
Mi Yuting beat ?
Fan Tingyu beat Weon Seongjin
{Lian Xiao beat Yu Zhengqi
Lee Donghoon beat Fan Yunruo} Lian vs Lee
{Jiang Weijie beat Onishi Ryuhei
Lee Yeongkyu beat Ichirki Ryo} Jiang vs Lee next
Senior:
Imamura Toshiya beat Yu Bin
Han Zenki (who LZ beat here) beat Jimmy Cha
Translating 2nd general bracket:
Code: Select all
Yu Zhengqi
Lian Xiao Liao
Lee Donghoon Lee
Fan Yunruo
Ohashi Naruya
Na Hyun Na
Chen Yaoye Chen
Yao Zhiteng
Wu Baiyi
Lee Sedol Lee
Yang Dingxin Yang
Chen Shiyuan
Park Geunho Park!
Xie Erhao
Hong Seongji Hong
Shida Tatsuya-
macelee
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Re: World Go Championship 2019
I've just seen the full result. It was quite shocking that the complete Japanese squad of 20 players in the two common groups was wiped out.
This is statistically quite unlikely: assuming each of them having only a 10% chance to win against their generally stronger opponent, the possibility of them all losing is merely 12%.
This is statistically quite unlikely: assuming each of them having only a 10% chance to win against their generally stronger opponent, the possibility of them all losing is merely 12%.
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Uberdude
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Re: World Go Championship 2019
Ouch! I think 10% underestimates Shibano's chances: goratings has him at 3385 and Park at 3466 so 36%. And Onishi at 3297 vs Jiang at 3526 so 21% (that feels too high to me). Mamumamu gives Shibano 22% and Onishi 9% which look more realistic. (Using handy https://wismuth.com/elo/calculator.html ... ou+Ruiyang)
But then you have Ohashi Naruya, a pro I've never heard of down at #500, playing Na Hyun so mamumamu gives him 3% chance to win.
But then you have Ohashi Naruya, a pro I've never heard of down at #500, playing Na Hyun so mamumamu gives him 3% chance to win.
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TheCannyOnion
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Re: World Go Championship 2019
The results are hardly surprising, not to me at least. Japan has indeed fallen THAT far behind Korea and China. IMO, this is why Mamumamu's rankings more accurately reflect reality than Goratings.macelee wrote:I've just seen the full result. It was quite shocking that the complete Japanese squad of 20 players in the two common groups was wiped out.
This is statistically quite unlikely: assuming each of them having only a 10% chance to win against their generally stronger opponent, the possibility of them all losing is merely 12%.
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Uberdude
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Re: World Go Championship 2019
2nd round results:
1st group
Shi Yue beat Song Jihoon
Kang Dongyun beat Tang Weixing
Park Yeonghun beat Xie Ke
Gu Zihao beat Kim Jiseok
Shin Minjun beat Zhou Ruiyang
Lee Jihyun beat Li Qincheng
Fan Tingyu beat Cho Hanseung
Liao Yuanhe beat Tuo Jiaxi
2nd group:
Lian Xiao beat Lee Donghoon
Chen Yaoye beat Na Hyun
Yang Dingxin beat Lee Sedol
Hong Seongji beat Park Geunho
Jiang Weijie beat Lee Yeongkyu
Mi Yuting beat Wang Yuanjun
Kim Myounghoon beat Han Sanghoon?
Byun Sangil beat Tong Mengcheng
Senior:
Yu Changhyeok beat Takao Shinji
etc...
1st group
Shi Yue beat Song Jihoon
Kang Dongyun beat Tang Weixing
Park Yeonghun beat Xie Ke
Gu Zihao beat Kim Jiseok
Shin Minjun beat Zhou Ruiyang
Lee Jihyun beat Li Qincheng
Fan Tingyu beat Cho Hanseung
Liao Yuanhe beat Tuo Jiaxi
2nd group:
Lian Xiao beat Lee Donghoon
Chen Yaoye beat Na Hyun
Yang Dingxin beat Lee Sedol
Hong Seongji beat Park Geunho
Jiang Weijie beat Lee Yeongkyu
Mi Yuting beat Wang Yuanjun
Kim Myounghoon beat Han Sanghoon?
Byun Sangil beat Tong Mengcheng
Senior:
Yu Changhyeok beat Takao Shinji
etc...
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macelee
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Re: World Go Championship 2019
Hope the organisor won't treat this very high-profile and competitive preliminary tournament the same as those preliminaries of LG and Samsung cup, by just releasing a few game records every round.
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Uberdude
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Re: World Go Championship 2019
Looks like this is a video of it; no game recorders, would they ask players to record game after event? Compare with the KPMC with their cameras auto-recording the games from above the board...macelee wrote:Hope the organisor won't treat this very high-profile and competitive preliminary tournament the same as those preliminaries of LG and Samsung cup, by just releasing a few game records every round.
https://youtu.be/GljwuigFn9M
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macelee
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Re: World Go Championship 2019
The room was so small and packed. That was rather pathetic. On the positive side, the game boards are quite thick and apparently good quality.
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Uberdude
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Re: World Go Championship 2019
3rd round:
1st group:
Shi Yue beat Kang Dongyun
Gu Zihao beat Park Yeonghun
Lee Jihyun beat Shin Minjun!
Liao Yuanhe beat Fan Tingyu!
2nd group:
Chen Yaoye beat Lian Xiao
Yang Dingxin beat Hong Seongji
Jiang Weijie beat Mi Yuting!
Byun Sangil beat Kim Myounghoon
Senior:
Yuki Satoshi beat Wang Lei
Cho Sonjin beat Hane Naoki
O Meien beat Imamura Toshiya
Yoo Changhyuk beat Seo Bongsu
1st group:
Shi Yue beat Kang Dongyun
Gu Zihao beat Park Yeonghun
Lee Jihyun beat Shin Minjun!
Liao Yuanhe beat Fan Tingyu!
2nd group:
Chen Yaoye beat Lian Xiao
Yang Dingxin beat Hong Seongji
Jiang Weijie beat Mi Yuting!
Byun Sangil beat Kim Myounghoon
Senior:
Yuki Satoshi beat Wang Lei
Cho Sonjin beat Hane Naoki
O Meien beat Imamura Toshiya
Yoo Changhyuk beat Seo Bongsu
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WindCaliber
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Re: World Go Championship 2019
macelee wrote:I've just seen the full result. It was quite shocking that the complete Japanese squad of 20 players in the two common groups was wiped out.
This is statistically quite unlikely: assuming each of them having only a 10% chance to win against their generally stronger opponent, the possibility of them all losing is merely 12%.
Out of curiousity, I took the time to calculate these percentages. Using the ratings on goratings as of today(which is different from two days ago but should be close enough), the average chance ofthe Japanese player winning was about 20%, so the likelihood of all 20 losing is actually 1%. Mamumamu would probably give something like a 10% chance, judging by their relative winning percentages compared to GoRatings. So the probability of all of them losing is probably between 1% and 10%. Quite shocking, indeed.Uberdude wrote:Ouch! I think 10% underestimates Shibano's chances: goratings has him at 3385 and Park at 3466 so 36%. And Onishi at 3297 vs Jiang at 3526 so 21% (that feels too high to me). Mamumamu gives Shibano 22% and Onishi 9% which look more realistic. (Using handy https://wismuth.com/elo/calculator.html ... ou+Ruiyang)
But then you have Ohashi Naruya, a pro I've never heard of down at #500, playing Na Hyun so mamumamu gives him 3% chance to win.
At first I thought that maybe the time controls were short, but based on the video, it appears that the time controls are 2 hours per player for the preliminary tournament. This shouldn't have been too bad for the Japanese players?