Krama wrote:
I am probably not at that level yet.. maybe 5 kyu atm.
I did not say those things with the intention of being disrespectful. I just found it rather odd that such mistakes would occur in a game between 2k players.
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The sad thing is I have not made any progress after a year of active studying...
What would be meant by "active studying"? Reading books? Intensively analyzing reviews of your games? Lessons from a dan-level player?
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Then again I don't play a lot so that could be the problem. The 25 minute game was very short considering time management.
Playing as many games as you can on a regular basis is important. However, if you do not take the time to eliminate bad habits from your play, they can persist and plague you everywhere you go. This happened to me for the first few years that I played Go. I found that a solid program of replaying pro games and doing exercises helped me to begin shedding the bad habits.
I play mostly turn-based games and ought to play more real-time games. However, I notice that replaying pro games and doing exercises in different skill categories (life & death, tesuji, endgame, middle game, fuseki, and joseki) help me to read more accurately. If only I played more, I'd be well on my way to shodan.
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If I had 60 minutes on my clock then I could probably enjoy playing more.
No harm in being a slow, deep-thinking player. Hon'inbo Shusai (1874-1940) was just that kind of player and he did not like time limits. I believe this is why replaying games by Hon'inbo Shusaku (1829-1862) and other classical players, Hon'inbo Shusai included, is a good idea; they did not have time limits back then for the most part, so they had ample time to find the best move. Which means that their games are beneficial for the amateur player, even if one only replays move by move from start to finish.
I recommended Shusaku since I imagined you were a Hikaru no Go fan; he is mentioned in the first episode of the anime. Shusaku was the strongest player of his time, so strong, in fact, that hardly anyone could beat him consistently. Even Hon'inbo Shuwa and Ota Yuzo, the only 2 players that offered any real challenge to his skill, knew that Shusaku was the best of the best in his time and place. Even today Hon'inbo Shusaku's games are still good models of study for many an aspiring amateur and even professional Go player.
If Shusaku is not your cup of tea, there are also Hon'inbo Shuho (1838-1886), known for his attack-oriented style of play that has been compared to that of Rin Kai-ho (b.1942), and Hon'inbo Shuei (1852-1907), whose games are the most studied by Japanese professional Go players out of all those of the pre-1900 era. Shuei's style of play was compared to the flow of water. Not very confrontational, but very effective. From 1896 Shuei never again took Black. His games from 1897 and after are definitely worth looking at.
There are many pros out there from which to choose. They important thing is to get acquainted with how they do things and to apply that in your own games.
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Then again it would take too much time to finish a single game.
This is the main reason I don't play go so much.
It is possible to play blitz games and improve. For one, it will force you to analyze board positions accurately, more rapidly. In the blitz games that are the norm in most online Go servers, rapid reading is vital to winning your games.
Hon'inbo Jowa, an old Japanese master known for his crazy fighting ability, once said that analyzing too much is never good. Better to just play what comes to you naturally, review the game to see if it worked, and then keep it or change it as needed. Constant practice and refinement is the point that Jowa is making with this statement.
I want you to play less and study more. Two or three 30-minute games a week should be enough. The lion's share of the time is to be spent replaying pro games and doing exercises. Pick up good playing habits and practice applying them through exercises and practice games. When it comes time to play those 30-minute games, you should have a clearer idea of what to do during play, even if you will not have all the time in the world to read everything out accurately. This will translate into victory after victory, especially against players that still have bad habits in their play. Of course you will lose some games, but at least you will be winning some as well and avoid a fiasco like what happened in the above posted game.