Ah, the old human wall theory. Great masses of Chinese go players overwhelming everything in front of them. Strong kids picking up the stones of their fallen, older brethren in a quest to be the last man standing. I suppose that if different Chinese players won the international tourneys, as they did, that would add credence to your argument. I need to consider this one for a while.oren wrote:It's a stake in the ground, but I'm not sure it's a correct one. The skill level differences between the top players is very thin. No one will argue right now that there are more high level Chinese players and as a result, they will win more tournaments.wineandgolover wrote: How's that for a stake in the ground?
That doesn't specifically mean the best player is not Korean or Japanese though.
Poll: Who was the best player in 2013?
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Re: Poll: Who was the best player in 2013?
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Re: Poll: Who was the best player in 2013?
Well, all else being equal, you would expect that the world's best player would be more likely to come from the country with the highest go-playing population, which is probably somewhat correlated to actual population in countries with a history of playing go. If, hypothetically, 66% of the world's go players come from China, you would then expect that the world champion would come from China roughly the same proportion of the time.wineandgolover wrote:Ah, the old human wall theory. Great masses of Chinese go players overwhelming everything in front of them. Strong kids picking up the stones of their fallen, older brethren in a quest to be the last man standing. I suppose that if different Chinese players won the international tourneys, as they did, that would add credence to your argument. I need to consider this one for a while.oren wrote:It's a stake in the ground, but I'm not sure it's a correct one. The skill level differences between the top players is very thin. No one will argue right now that there are more high level Chinese players and as a result, they will win more tournaments.wineandgolover wrote: How's that for a stake in the ground?
That doesn't specifically mean the best player is not Korean or Japanese though.
Now that China, Korea, and Japan all have serious professional training programs with demonstrable results, I don't think that there will be a decisive advantage to one program or another in the future, aside from the pool of players they have to draw on for their talent.
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Re: Poll: Who was the best player in 2013?
Park Junghwan and Choi Cheolhan were the best among captains in Chinese A League 2013 with impressive 13-4 and 15-3 score. And they also won the 13th Nongshim Cup for Korea.
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Re: Poll: Who was the best player in 2013?
To play devil's advocate, I would imagine the strongest player would use his strength to earn the most money, and not necessarily worry about which tournaments it came from. Under that assumption, all the votes for Iyama Yuta make sense.wineandgolover wrote:Well OP has announced that, per his definition, best player = strongest.
Because China won all but one of the international tournaments in 2013, doesn't that mean the strongest player was likely Chinese?
I'm not saying who is strongest at this very moment, I am just proposing that given the way the question is worded, I don't see how 2013's strongest player wouldn't hail from the country that won virtually all the international contests.
How's that for a stake in the ground?
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Re: Poll: Who was the best player in 2013?
That is ignoring a lot of important facts.Mef wrote:To play devil's advocate, I would imagine the strongest player would use his strength to earn the most money, and not necessarily worry about which tournaments it came from. Under that assumption, all the votes for Iyama Yuta make sense.wineandgolover wrote:Well OP has announced that, per his definition, best player = strongest.
Because China won all but one of the international tournaments in 2013, doesn't that mean the strongest player was likely Chinese?
I'm not saying who is strongest at this very moment, I am just proposing that given the way the question is worded, I don't see how 2013's strongest player wouldn't hail from the country that won virtually all the international contests.
How's that for a stake in the ground?
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Re: Poll: Who was the best player in 2013?
emerus wrote:That is ignoring a lot of important facts.Mef wrote:To play devil's advocate, I would imagine the strongest player would use his strength to earn the most money, and not necessarily worry about which tournaments it came from. Under that assumption, all the votes for Iyama Yuta make sense.wineandgolover wrote:Well OP has announced that, per his definition, best player = strongest.
Because China won all but one of the international tournaments in 2013, doesn't that mean the strongest player was likely Chinese?
I'm not saying who is strongest at this very moment, I am just proposing that given the way the question is worded, I don't see how 2013's strongest player wouldn't hail from the country that won virtually all the international contests.
How's that for a stake in the ground?
I guess to restate the thesis in a more clear way:
Iyama Yuta is on a pace to make on the order of $2 million this year from his domestic play in Japan. International tournaments do not present a particularly enticing incentive for him to compete, given that they require a large disruption from his domestic schedule and have a much larger pool of entrants. His total time to prepare for events is limited, and the format of international events is quite different from domestic championships (thus would require different preparation). One would hardly expect his best efforts to be given to any international event, as such efforts would detract from his domestic performance, which is much more lucrative. Therefore, one cannot come to an objective, generalizable measurement of Iyama Yuta's skill based solely on performance in international tournaments.
I do not mean to speak ill of any other player, I simply want to point out that trying to say that Iyama wasn't performing as well simply because he didn't care about international tournaments isn't a particularly compelling argument to me.
Because (as many on this forum who know me know) I'm a baseball fan, I'll include a baseball analogy in the hide tags.
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Re: Poll: Who was the best player in 2013?
Nobody said that? In fact, the bold part is entirely speculation on your behalf.Mef wrote:trying to say that Iyama wasn't performing as well simply because he didn't care about international tournaments isn't a particularly compelling argument to me.
You can imagine all you like, that doesn't make it real.Mef wrote:I would imagine the strongest player would use his strength to earn the most money, and not necessarily worry about which tournaments it came from.
Basically you're speculating here on why his results are worse than those of other players, with your main argument being "greed".
Iyama Yuta is already financially secure (I assume at least) and will probably go down in history should he be the one to bring Japan back to the international top in go, so imho it makes sense for him to try his best on the international stage.
But all of this is just more speculation and thus fairly pointless.
The only relevant data are tournament results, which aren't in Iyama Yuta's favour, as far as I'm aware.
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Re: Poll: Who was the best player in 2013?
I know I am on dangerous ground when I challenge analogies lately, sigh.Mef wrote: Because (as many on this forum who know me know) I'm a baseball fan, I'll include a baseball analogy in the hide tags.
But I think your baseball analogy isn't very useful for two primary reasons.
1) Baseball is a team sport, which by its nature is different than individual sports and games like go.
2) Today's era in go doesn't correspond with today's era in baseball at all. In baseball, you have several countries that play well, but only one that is dominant. Many, if not most, of the best players eventually go to MLB to prove themselves, and, yes, to earn the big bucks.
For most of the last century, go was similar. The best players in the world were Japanese, or often migrated to Japan to prove themselves. However, that is no longer true. Korea overtook Japan twenty years ago, and Chinese has recently moved to the top of the heap (arguable, I know).
So, unlike in baseball, in go the only way to determine who is strongest is international tournaments. Else how do we know if a successful player isn't just a big fish in a small pond?
Don't get me wrong, I think Iyama Yuta is great, and I admire his domestic success greatly. But best in the world? As they say in Missouri, "Show me."
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Re: Poll: Who was the best player in 2013?
We're talking about who's best, not who's richest, right?Mef wrote: Iyama Yuta is on a pace to make on the order of $2 million this year from his domestic play in Japan. International tournaments do not present a particularly enticing incentive for him to compete, given that they require a large disruption from his domestic schedule and have a much larger pool of entrants. His total time to prepare for events is limited, and the format of international events is quite different from domestic championships (thus would require different preparation). One would hardly expect his best efforts to be given to any international event, as such efforts would detract from his domestic performance, which is much more lucrative. Therefore, one cannot come to an objective, generalizable measurement of Iyama Yuta's skill based solely on performance in international tournaments.
The strongest players in China and Korea do not go play in Japan to earn the greater tournament money. Whether they aren't allowed to, or choose not to doesn't matter, it just doesn't happen. So it seems unreasonable to use earnings as a metric for best, when the overwhelming majority of players don't have access to those earnings.
If you want to argue which go player was the best capitalist, maybe you'd have a case, but I'm not even sure of that.
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Re: Poll: Who was the best player in 2013?
If it is really (still) true that the biggest market for Go arguably does not have the best playing field, then the world of Go has a big problem.
It is undeniable that Iyama dominates the Japanese go scene and apparently that scene has still the biggest prize money. On the international scene, the Japanese are overpowered by Chinese and Korean players. There is great reason to believe that it points to a structural lag of the Japanese.
Putting that lag on the account of the mediocre prize money in international tournaments is just too easy.
Making the analogy to soccer/football, it is known that loads of money are to be earned in the Oil states for players and managers that are either thinking of retiring or take a big paycheck along their career. However, we also know those states to be a sandbox cemetery. Players' reputation is damaged when moving there and it is very hard to get back to the real high level competitions like England, Spain or Germany.
Money usually attracts the best in the field but under certain cultural circumstances this is not always true. And it seems to me that the situation in Japan has become unbalanced too.
It is undeniable that Iyama dominates the Japanese go scene and apparently that scene has still the biggest prize money. On the international scene, the Japanese are overpowered by Chinese and Korean players. There is great reason to believe that it points to a structural lag of the Japanese.
Putting that lag on the account of the mediocre prize money in international tournaments is just too easy.
Making the analogy to soccer/football, it is known that loads of money are to be earned in the Oil states for players and managers that are either thinking of retiring or take a big paycheck along their career. However, we also know those states to be a sandbox cemetery. Players' reputation is damaged when moving there and it is very hard to get back to the real high level competitions like England, Spain or Germany.
Money usually attracts the best in the field but under certain cultural circumstances this is not always true. And it seems to me that the situation in Japan has become unbalanced too.
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Re: Poll: Who was the best player in 2013?
Please go back and reread what I wrote. I never claim that "because he makes the most money he is the best". I claim that because he makes the most money, this claim you make...wineandgolover wrote:
We're talking about who's best, not who's richest, right?
The strongest players in China and Korea do not go play in Japan to earn the greater tournament money. Whether they aren't allowed to, or choose not to doesn't matter, it just doesn't happen. So it seems unreasonable to use earnings as a metric for best, when the overwhelming majority of players don't have access to those earnings.
If you want to argue which go player was the best capitalist, maybe you'd have a case, but I'm not even sure of that.
...does not strike me as a compelling argument. The state of the discussion was you saying "Many people did Y, I think that's strange because of X" to which I respond "I don't find X to be terribly convincing" and the implied statement of "therefore people who did Y may have been entirely justified in doing so for whatever their own reasons were".I find all the votes for Iyama Yuta before the vote purge curious, because he hasn't ever won a major international tournament
I don't think Iyama is terribly incentivized to participate in international events, certainly not to the extent of his Korean and Chinese counterparts. Therefore, I do not think that a counting statistic based on international play (number of titles won) is a good metric for evaluating his strength relative to his international peers.
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Re: Poll: Who was the best player in 2013?
Thanks for replying, Mef. Out of interest, do you have a better metric?Mef wrote: Therefore, I do not think that a counting statistic based on international play (number of titles won) is a good metric for evaluating his strength relative to his international peers.
I understand your argument, and it makes some sense. But really it smacks as more of an excuse than a justification. IMHO, you can't be considered the strongest if you can't, or choose not to, play and beat the big dogs.
Out of interest, does anybody know if Iyama played in the big 2013 international tournaments? Was he beaten, or merely absent?
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Re: Poll: Who was the best player in 2013?
1. He missed most of the tournaments this year: http://igokisen.web.fc2.com/news.html
2. His performance in the tournaments he participated in was only ok. But it also wasn't statistically very significant.
3. The obvious right way to do this is to do ratings based on all tournaments, and based on that, calculate performance metrics.
4. Regarding the excuse point, I think mef's point about number of championships is entirely accurate. And there simply is no guarantee that there always has to be an answer to your questions, much less an easy one.
5. Nonetheless, I know of no reason to think that Iyama is the best, and some reason to think that he is not (c.f. #2, and the last set of ratings done by Dr. Bae Taeil, though I'd like to see more people discuss his methods).
2. His performance in the tournaments he participated in was only ok. But it also wasn't statistically very significant.
3. The obvious right way to do this is to do ratings based on all tournaments, and based on that, calculate performance metrics.
4. Regarding the excuse point, I think mef's point about number of championships is entirely accurate. And there simply is no guarantee that there always has to be an answer to your questions, much less an easy one.
5. Nonetheless, I know of no reason to think that Iyama is the best, and some reason to think that he is not (c.f. #2, and the last set of ratings done by Dr. Bae Taeil, though I'd like to see more people discuss his methods).
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Re: Poll: Who was the best player in 2013?
Thanks hyperpape (autocorrect hell, btw).hyperpape wrote: 5. Nonetheless, I know of no reason to think that Iyama is the best, and some reason to think that he is not (c.f. #2, and the last set of ratings done by Dr. Bae Taeil, though I'd like to see more people discuss his methods).
Wow,
Bae Taeil's system rated Iyama #21 the last time it was run, admittedly pre-2013.
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