Team Japan leading China Weiqi C-League
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wolfking
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Re: Team Japan leading China Weiqi C-League
Team Japan won the last round 3-1 and will play in the B-league next year! Organizer of team Japan Ko Reibun said he would try to get Iyama to play if the schedule allows. Since Lee Sedol's team is only in 5th position with one round to go we might see an Iyama - Lee showdown next year.
Re: Team Japan leading China Weiqi C-League
Has the level of Japanese Go declined this much? I'm beginning to get the feeling that even if Japan had sent Iyama, Takao, and Yamashita, they still wouldn't make it into the A-League.
By the way, how did GoRatings.org rank Iyama as high as number two in the world?!
By the way, how did GoRatings.org rank Iyama as high as number two in the world?!
Re: Team Japan leading China Weiqi C-League
C-League is the weakest of the three and has the shortest time controls. It's basically used to qualify for the B-League, and B-League serves as a qualification league to get into the A-League. The A-League is where all the players aspire to play in and where only the strongest are admitted.hyperpape wrote:How strong are teams in the C league?
And the fact that Japan has been toiling in the C-League is kind of humbling to say the least. That said, the Chinese League system is no walk in the park because it's open to the very best players regardless of their countries of origin. Lee Sedol has been playing in the Chinese League for years. Park Yeong-hun, Lee Changho, Choi Cheol-han, Park Junghwan, and other top Korean players have all participated. Because of this, the Chinese A-League is possibly the most competitive gathering in the world outside of major international tournaments.
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hyperpape
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Re: Team Japan leading China Weiqi C-League
Simple model: his average Japanese opponent has a rating of X, and he beats them something like 80% of the time. According to the ELO system, that implies he is 200-250 ELO points higher than his average opponent, which puts him in the top five or so players.by78 wrote:By the way, how did GoRatings.org rank Iyama as high as number two in the world?!
There are definitely ways this model could fail to be accurate, but that's the gist of it, and it makes decent sense. See also: http://lifein19x19.com/forum/viewtopic. ... 91#p204691.
Re: Team Japan leading China Weiqi C-League
I'm sure Team Japan will not be promoted to A-League. A-League is too competitive for these players (except Iyama). For example, Team Shandong has three very strong players Zhou Ruiyang, Jiang Weijie and Fan Tingyu, but their performances as captain are Zhou 2-4, Jiang 0-2, Fan 0-1. Another example is Tang Weixing, whose career performance in A-League is only 76-71.by78 wrote:Has the level of Japanese Go declined this much? I'm beginning to get the feeling that even if Japan had sent Iyama, Takao, and Yamashita, they still wouldn't make it into the A-League.
By the way, how did GoRatings.org rank Iyama as high as number two in the world?!
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hyperpape
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Re: Team Japan leading China Weiqi C-League
Yeah, it seems like there's only one team they might be equally matched against:
Hebei Xinao with
Li Ming, Xie Ke, Xia Jiankun, Liu Xing
Hebei Xinao with
Li Ming, Xie Ke, Xia Jiankun, Liu Xing
Re: Team Japan leading China Weiqi C-League
lambdacdm wrote:I'm sure Team Japan will not be promoted to A-League. A-League is too competitive for these players (except Iyama).by78 wrote:Has the level of Japanese Go declined this much? I'm beginning to get the feeling that even if Japan had sent Iyama, Takao, and Yamashita, they still wouldn't make it into the A-League.
By the way, how did GoRatings.org rank Iyama as high as number two in the world?!
No, Iyama wouldn't be competitive if he were in the A-League. If those names you mentioned couldn't get a wining record, then Iyama would be lucky to win 30-35% of his games.
B-League is more likely Iyama's level.
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wolfking
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Re: Team Japan leading China Weiqi C-League
I think it is simply too difficult to predict how Iyama would fair in A-league. I still believe he should at least be in world top 20 if not top 10 or even top 5. There are just not enough data to gauge his strength against other top players. If he could play in B-league at least that would provide a few more data points. And his schedule makes it very difficult to play in A-league which is a weekly fair, so B-league might be the best we could hope for.by78 wrote: No, Iyama wouldn't be competitive if he were in the A-League. If those names you mentioned couldn't get a wining record, then Iyama would be lucky to win 30-35% of his games.
B-League is more likely Iyama's level.
Unfortunately(well fortunately for his team) Lee Sedol won his last round game and his team (which finished in 3rd place) will play in A-league next year due to the expansion of A-league! So we will not see Iyama vs Lee in B-league.
Re: Team Japan leading China Weiqi C-League
Not even the Japanese themselves rank Iyama in the world top 20. GoRatings.org is the LTCM of Go player rankings; take it seriously at your own risk.wolfking wrote:I think it is simply too difficult to predict how Iyama would fair in A-league. I still believe he should at least be in world top 20 if not top 10 or even top 5. There are just not enough data to gauge his strength against other top players. If he could play in B-league at least that would provide a few more data points. And his schedule makes it very difficult to play in A-league which is a weekly fair, so B-league might be the best we could hope for.by78 wrote: No, Iyama wouldn't be competitive if he were in the A-League. If those names you mentioned couldn't get a wining record, then Iyama would be lucky to win 30-35% of his games.
B-League is more likely Iyama's level.
Unfortunately(well fortunately for his team) Lee Sedol won his last round game and his team (which finished in 3rd place) will play in A-league next year due to the expansion of A-league! So we will not see Iyama vs Lee in B-league.
GoRatings is run by a programmer, not by a trained statistician, and the ranking relies on incomplete data.
Other ranking lists (run by Asian organizations with access to games and data points not available to GoRatings.org) all have Iyama much, much lower.
The Japanese themselves rank Iyama at #23: http://sports.geocities.jp/mamumamu0413/total.html.
Dr. Bae's ranking is kinder as he has Iyama at #17 as of this April: https://www.baduk.or.kr/news/report_vie ... ws_no=1738
There really is no need to ask if Iyama is in the world top-10 because he's most definitely NOT strong enough to merit that question, unless you want to abandon all common sense and reason.
Instead, we should ask if Iyama is a world top-20 player. Again, the answer is probably NO.
I think Iyama would fare poorly if he were to participate in the Chinese A-league. But I think he is a good fit for the B-league, and there is no shame in that because these Chinese leagues are no walk in the park.
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hyperpape
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Re: Team Japan leading China Weiqi C-League
Saying things louder doesn't make them more convincing.
As far as arguments from authority go, let's call it a push.
The "programmer" is a Ph.D. in Computer Science, whose work covered machine learning and monte carlo methods, Dr. Bae Taeil is a Physicist.by78 wrote:GoRatings is run by a programmer, not by a trained statistician
As far as arguments from authority go, let's call it a push.
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Uberdude
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Re: Team Japan leading China Weiqi C-League
I wonder what qualifications and office mamumamu holds has that makes him the voice of "The Japanese".
- ez4u
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Re: Team Japan leading China Weiqi C-League
Simply the energy and enthusiasm to spend years doing what no one in the Nihon Kiin, Kansai Kiin or any other 'official' organization cares to do.Uberdude wrote:I wonder what qualifications and office mamumamu holds has that makes him the voice of "The Japanese".
Dave Sigaty
"Short-lived are both the praiser and the praised, and rememberer and the remembered..."
- Marcus Aurelius; Meditations, VIII 21
"Short-lived are both the praiser and the praised, and rememberer and the remembered..."
- Marcus Aurelius; Meditations, VIII 21
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Uberdude
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Re: Team Japan leading China Weiqi C-League
ez4u, my comment wasn't meant as a slight against mamumamu, I think he does a great job (and I've like your posts based on his information), but to highlight by78's double standards: he poo-poos Remi's goratings with the relatively high raking of Iyama as the work of a mere programmer not a statistician, but fails to apply the same ad hominem arguments to other sources of ratings which agree with his lower ranking of Iyama.
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hyperpape
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Re: Team Japan leading China Weiqi C-League
I just noticed that back in June 2014, Taeil's rankings had Iyama at 5th, Kono Rin at 20th and Yamashita at 31st (http://senseis.xmp.net/?WorldRanking).
I am eagerly awaiting by78's response.
I am eagerly awaiting by78's response.
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wolfking
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Re: Team Japan leading China Weiqi C-League
Regardless of Iyama's ranking, I think we all want to see him play in B-league against Chinese and Korean opponents. Hopefully Ko Reibun can make it happen.