speedchase wrote:SmoothOper wrote:No one addressed my rebuttal that while pros generally don't play handicaps in tournaments they probably use them while training in there dojos.
Actually I did, several times
You said something to the effect that Japanese were more successful when they played the traditional handicap less, which I thought was a very interesting point, however I didn't see that it followed that they were some how able to over come traditional handicap training during tournament play.
speedchase wrote:SmoothOper wrote:Furthermore people always cite that Takemiya won with ninrensei as an argument for the traditional placement
I don't think anyone has mentioned this in the thread. I certainly diddn't
gowan wrote:This claim that the traditional handicap placement is responsible for the Japanese performance in international professional tournaments is clearly wrong for several reasons.
1. Pros don't play handicaps games against other pros.
2. All pros play 4-4 openings, some more frequently than others, but never-the-less they all play the move, even the Koreans and the Chinese. Check out on GoGoD how many times a corner 4-4 move is made by Chinese and Korean players. Takemiya, who won some international tournaments, almost always played 4-4 moves as Black and White.
3. Koreans play traditional star-point handicaps. So, by some people's reasoning, the Koreans should be weak![]()
4. Because a person doesn't understand how to play with 4-4 point moves doesn't mean the moves are bad.
speedchase wrote:SmoothOper wrote:so it seems like it ought to be established that this may have been only a fluke, and that neither is the Japanese tradition very good or ninrensei a very good strategy since they aren't able to really win with it at the top levels in modern play.
Do you have any statistics to back up this statement? I would like to hear what ez4u has to say about the statistics
Edit:
I also am not sure what the relevance of nirensei is to the discussion we are having.
The chart in this thread. In fact is relevant because it show who has been winning recently in some, but not all international matches.
Uberdude wrote:I've posted this link before, but as it's relevant again you might like this colour-coded table I made which shows the rise of Korean (blue) and then Chinese (red) over the Japanese (green) in international tournaments:
http://homepage.ntlworld.com/andrew.j.s ... Table.html
P.S. In the book Nie Weiping On Go there is a load of communist propaganda style biography, in which it is clear that the encouragement he received from politicians (until they fell out with Mao, cultural revolution etc.) to get stronger was fuelled by nationalistic pride.
P.P.S. "Japanese are weak because they have 4-4 handicaps" is such a laughable argument I won't even bother to refute it.