gowan wrote:I don't think many people (if any) can accurately estimate the score after the opening and the beginning of the middle game. If pros could do this we'd see many games resigned after the opening. Another point is that there is no clear way to specify when the opening ends. Middlegame fights happen during the opening sometimes. And what about those games with no fuseki? Of course fuseki is not synonymous with opening.
I think there's a difference between estimating the score, and knowing the result. I'm sure there are board positions where pros would unanimously agree that one side, black or white, is ahead. But it doesn't mean that it's the end of the game - pros make mistakes, too.
In one of the other study journals, someone recently brought up an old game from 2010 where Lee Sedol died pretty big early in the game. He happened to go on and win it.
Around that time, Myungwan was giving a workshop in the bay area, which I attended. I remembered him commenting about that game. He said he took a look in the early middle game, and it looked like Lee Sedol had lost, so he stopped watching, and went on to do something else. When he came back to see that Lee Sedol had won, he was surprised.
I doubt that Myungwan's estimation that Lee Sedol was behind after dying was inaccurate. Probably Lee's chances of winning were pretty slim. Comebacks can still happen, though, which is why I think there's a difference between estimating the score and knowing the result.