Report: European Go Congress 2011
Venue and Date
The event was from July 23 to August 6. Advertised as a congress
amidst beautiful wine fields, the actual venue was a heap of a
university's awful creton blocks scattered over a by far too large area with great walking distances - pretty much the last place where you would want to make holiday. Rooms and furniture were acceptable, the too few rest rooms were not. Students type accommodation was within walking distance, partly a few tram stations apart. Those taking meals at the university also had to go there by tram. The alternative was a nearby supermarket until it was not nearby any longer: On Sundays and during the second week the rear gates of the campus were closed and people either had to climb over the fence or walk an extra kilometer. Not nice! Players arriving a day earlier had quiet some trouble to access their accommodation when keys were handed out elsewhere and did not work in the described building at 3 am and
you had to guess and then find building G when the used "alphabet" order was A G B C D E F H I J etc...
Organisation, Supergroup and French Kyus
For French standards with an expected 4 hours delay of round 1, the congress organisation was almost reasonable with exceptions. Rounds tended to start almost on time, although remaining clocks were started with ca. 18 minutes delay. Pairings were published only minutes before a round, except that round 8 pairings were available the evening before. Referees were easier to find than substitute clocks. According
to experience by weaker players, the dropping system was not held properly; I experienced quite some problems with it during the Rapid.
Generally the organisers were very willing to cooperate with the EGF's Tournament Supervisors and made our job rather easy. They even asked for my advice about how to distribute EUR 10.000 prize money to the top 12 players of the main tournament and KO; the French would rather have preferred the EGF to specify the prizes. With two major exceptions: 1) The organisers were unable to copy their player database file. Therefore the supergroup formation had to be done during night until 3 am (my second night in succession with too little
sleep; luckily I got an easy opponent in round 1). As a side effect, we were so tired to forget adjusting the fake 6d rank of the infamous Bahadur Tahirbayov, AZ, who got - for his standards - an exceptionally good result 2:8 by beating two 1 kyus. The supergroup of 30 players had an incredibly high bottom rating of 2525, which is about 100 above all earlier years. In other words, many strong Europeans participated.
Even Vladimir Danek's rating was too low to qualify for the
supergroup. 2) The organisers refused to apply the rule that
self-declared ranks are used and instead ratings were used to derive ranks. They got away with that because we supervisors were not supported by Martin Stiassny, EGF president, in this respect. While this made the French organisers happy, then same cannot be said about all French players. Many of them have such a low rank compared to most other European countries that they don't know what their French rank is worth internationally. Typical guesses were that French 10 - 15k is ca. European 5k, French 3 - 5k is ca. European 1k to 2d. E.g., of 20
of 22 (or 91%) players with kyu rank and 8 or 9 wins were French. It cannot be shown more clearly that using the EGF rating system for kyu ranks does not work at all, although some of those French kyus have told me that they play a lot of tournaments regularly.
The organisers and some fellow players were of very great help with medical problems and related translation.
European Championship
The new tournament applied: After round 7 of the McMahon, the top 16 Europeans are compared, some might have to play a relegation game and the top 8 enter the KO and possibly place 3 game. So after round 7, these were the standings:
Code:
# Name Rank MMS SOS Rating
1 Taranu Catalin 7D 40 270 2730
2 Silt Ondrej 6D 39 272 2607
3 Shikshin Ilja 7D 39 271 2744
4 Mitic Dusan 6D 39 271 2567
5 Debarre Thomas 6D 39 269 2580
6 Din. Alexandr 7D 39 268 2721
7 Kacha. Artem 7D 39 268 2663
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8 Burzo Cornel 6D 39 267 2624
9 Surin Dmitriy 5D 39 266 2536
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10 Pop Cristian 7D 38 267 2667
11 Balogh Pal 6D 38 267 2629
12 Simara Jan 5D 38 267 2548
13 Mero Csaba 6D 38 266 2630
14 Sankin Timur 5D 38 265 2492
15 Bohat. Dmytro 6D 38 264 2551
16 Jabarin Ali 6D 38 264 2550
MMS 39 means 5 wins. The first seven players qualified automatically because they have greater MMS than the last 7, who continue the McMahon. Only one relegation game between Burzo and Surin had to be played; Burzo won it by 0.5 points! This pair was a repetition, which could not be avoided. During the KO and place 3 game, no repetition occurred. Including this year, the expected average number of relegation game players drops below 5.3. It is the first studied year that relegation players had 5 wins; in earlier years, they always would have had 4 wins in the first 7 rounds. Burzo would not have wanted to use the second Wednesday as a free day; he would have
participated in a side tournament instead; Surin's weak English foiled my attempt to interview him about having to play the relegation game.
The quarter finals were bubble sorting by rank: The 7d players won. The top four Europeans turned out to be:
1 Shikshin Ilja 7D
2 Taranu Catalin 7D
3 Kachanovskyi Artem 7D
4 Dinershteyn Alexandr 7D
You need to ignore them for themselves in the main tournament result table
http://egc2011.eu/index.php/en/results- ... main-roundIt might still be wrong; having left early, I do not know yet if there might have been reason to state 0.5 fractions in MMS and SOS; usually the rules round down. I count 6 ghosts ("players" missing all rounds) in the table, so the there might have been 760 main tournament players; in 1997 Marseille, there had been 51 ghosts and 539 genuine players. 760 and among them lots of high dans is much, especially when considering the doubtful venue.
The rules of play were AGA / French style: Simplified Ing Rules with pass stones and White passes last. Their announcement and explanation of strategy on the walls and in the congress tournament information booklet was very good (using also my comments texts). Nevertheless there will always be players who read nothing, then start wondering why the hell the last white pass stone changes strategy, as if they had never played under area scoring rules before (they had many times!), confuse the counting means "last pass stone" with the scoring definition and then and blame the rules for being more difficult than
Japanese rules instead of recognizing their laziness to read the rules and strategy information in time. There were also other players who read and understood the rules and were very happy with them. For me they were a joy, of course. They were also used in side tournaments and there free handicap placement without komi recompensation was used.
Side Tournaments and Other Events
Here are some side tournament winners:
http://egc2011.eu/index.php/en/results- ... oi-annexeshttp://www.eurogofed.org/results/congress/egc2011.htmThe author entered 13x13 and 9x9 as 5 dan (refusing the stupid French style rating rank) and made it to the quarter-finals in each. Watching the later KO rounds was great fun, as always. 13x13 was announced as group qualifications but Swiss was used. Sort of. Some Gotha pairings paired players with 2 wins difference! Lighting qualifications were boringly slow: a "group system" without group table sheets. In between
every two games, result forms were evaluated and only then the next game could start. 20 minutes playing interrupted by 20 minutes waiting. Gulp! I did not qualify, being thrown out by two of those French kyus; it did not help that the handicap was reduced by 4 stones.
This year's referee workshop had a record number of 30 participants! And a record of almost 6 hours lecture for rules of play because also some WMSG Rules had to be prepared.