2014 Chunlan Cup
- ez4u
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Re: 2014 Chunlan Cup
Note in the photos (here is a wider one) that Cho U did not play his new opening against Gu Li. Where's the fun in that? 
Dave Sigaty
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"Short-lived are both the praiser and the praised, and rememberer and the remembered..."
- Marcus Aurelius; Meditations, VIII 21
- oren
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Re: 2014 Chunlan Cup
ez4u wrote:Note in the photos (here is a wider one) that Cho U did not play his new opening against Gu Li. Where's the fun in that?
I was also quite disappointed in that. Very standard opening from Cho U.
- cdybeijing
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Re: 2014 Chunlan Cup
Krama wrote:He didn't want to try out new things with someone as strong as Gu Li
I think it had more to do with playing in the quarter-finals of a world championship than it did with playing against Gu Li.
Re: 2014 Chunlan Cup
Round of 4;

Gu Li defeated Kim Jiseok by resign. (Only 118 moves)

Zhou Ruiyang defeated Chen Yaoye by resign.
Final;
Gu Li vs Zhou Ruiyang

Gu Li defeated Kim Jiseok by resign. (Only 118 moves)

Zhou Ruiyang defeated Chen Yaoye by resign.
Final;
Gu Li vs Zhou Ruiyang
Last edited by trout on Sat Dec 27, 2014 12:40 am, edited 2 times in total.
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macelee
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Re: 2014 Chunlan Cup
cdybeijing wrote:Krama wrote:He didn't want to try out new things with someone as strong as Gu Li
I think it had more to do with playing in the quarter-finals of a world championship than it did with playing against Gu Li.
I agree with Krama that the decision was more about facing a strong opponent. There might be an impression that Gu Li has long passed his peak, particularly after beaten comprehensibly by Lee Sedol in the jubango. But he is still very strong, as shown by his official rank - he is No. 4 in China and holding his score well.
- cdybeijing
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Re: 2014 Chunlan Cup
macelee wrote:cdybeijing wrote:Krama wrote:He didn't want to try out new things with someone as strong as Gu Li
I think it had more to do with playing in the quarter-finals of a world championship than it did with playing against Gu Li.
I agree with Krama that the decision was more about facing a strong opponent. There might be an impression that Gu Li has long passed his peak, particularly after beaten comprehensibly by Lee Sedol in the jubango. But he is still very strong, as shown by his official rank - he is No. 4 in China and holding his score well.
I am quite aware of Gu Li's status as China's 4th ranking player, and certainly he is still elite. I still think the decision had everything to do with the opportunity to potentially challenge for a world championship. We'll have to agree to disagree.
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Mike Novack
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Re: 2014 Chunlan Cup
Also important to consider, it might be as invalid with go as it is in chess to consider "stronger than" to always be strictly transitive. Perhaps somebody would care to look at statistics to determine this?
Does A usually can defeat B in a match and B can usually defeat C in a match necessarily mean that A can usually defeat C in a match? For all the top player triplets A, B, and C.
Or do we sometimes find, for some A, B, and C, that this isn't true (the reason can be difference in playing styles; some players can do better against some playing styles than other playing styles.
Thus possibly Gu Li has more trouble with Lee Sedol than he does with other top players. Again, somebody might want to do the work of comparing statistics.
Does A usually can defeat B in a match and B can usually defeat C in a match necessarily mean that A can usually defeat C in a match? For all the top player triplets A, B, and C.
Or do we sometimes find, for some A, B, and C, that this isn't true (the reason can be difference in playing styles; some players can do better against some playing styles than other playing styles.
Thus possibly Gu Li has more trouble with Lee Sedol than he does with other top players. Again, somebody might want to do the work of comparing statistics.
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Jingliu
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Re: 2014 Chunlan Cup
Interesting statistics between 3 Chinese players here:
Gu Li 22-8 Zhou Ruiyang (quite a gap)
Zhou Ruiyang 14-3 Chen Yaoye (dominant)
Chen Yaoye 15-10 Gu Li (upper hand)
Gu Li 22-8 Zhou Ruiyang (quite a gap)
Zhou Ruiyang 14-3 Chen Yaoye (dominant)
Chen Yaoye 15-10 Gu Li (upper hand)
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hyperpape
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Re: 2014 Chunlan Cup
Prior to the jubango, Gu and Lee were tied. Even now, Lee has a small margin. I actually think Gu looks better compared to Lee directly, than looking at their records overall (16 international titles for Lee, 7 for Gu).
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Uberdude
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Re: 2014 Chunlan Cup
When collecting such statistics one should be mindful of over what time period the games were and whether the players were in their prime then. Gu Li is somewhat older than the other two, so perhaps he got a lot of wins beating up a young and not yet full strength Zhou Ruiyang.
The players I was thinking might be part of a good example would be Chen Yaoye and Choi Cheolhan as Chen used to have a very good record against Choi (9-1 in their first 10 games) but Choi seems to have learnt how to deal with Chen's style better now and has won 7 of their 8 games since.
The players I was thinking might be part of a good example would be Chen Yaoye and Choi Cheolhan as Chen used to have a very good record against Choi (9-1 in their first 10 games) but Choi seems to have learnt how to deal with Chen's style better now and has won 7 of their 8 games since.
Re: 2014 Chunlan Cup
Final game 2,
Gu Li defeated Zhou Ruiyang by 1.5.

Gu Li is Chunlan cup Champion..........
Gu Li defeated Zhou Ruiyang by 1.5.

Gu Li is Chunlan cup Champion..........
