For a fifth-ranked player in the world (according to Goratings), Iyama seems to lose a lot of games to players ranked lower than he is.Uberdude wrote:Iyama, playing as the Japanese NHK cup winner, lost to Lee Sedol (Korean KBS Cup winner) in the 1st round of the Asian TV cup. NHK runner-up Ichiriki Ryo did beat the surprise (beat Ke Jie in semi-final shortly after winning EGC) Chinese CCTV cup winner Zhang Tao though.
P.S. oren, in some of those pictures there are coloured percentages above the board. Are these predicted win rates from a bot like Zen, viewer voting/betting, or something else?
Iyama's world ranking
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TheCannyOnion
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Re: Following Iyama Yuta (no world ranking discussions)
- HermanHiddema
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Re: Following Iyama Yuta (no world ranking discussions)
Why do you think game length should be related to playing strength, or strength difference?TheCannyOnion wrote:The game lasted only 118 moves. Hardly a performance I'd expect from a world #5 on Goratings. Of course, Shin is ranked higher than Iyama, but the their ELO ratings are separated by merely 35 points.
It is entirely possible to get into a large complex fight, lose it, and resign, at pretty much any playing level.
EDIT: Oh, sorry, I didn't realize you were just trolling. Please feel free to shut up now.
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Uberdude
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Re: Iyama's world ranking
> Admin hat on
TheCannyOnion, these 2 posts were made in a topic "Following Iyama Yuta (no world ranking discussions)" and are therefore not allowed there. I have moved them here.
> Admin hat off
TheCannyOnion, these 2 posts were made in a topic "Following Iyama Yuta (no world ranking discussions)" and are therefore not allowed there. I have moved them here.
> Admin hat off
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jeromie
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Re: Following Iyama Yuta (no world ranking discussions)
That's nothing! Every game that Ke Jie has lost has been to a player ranked lower than he is!TheCannyOnion wrote:For a fifth-ranked player in the world (according to Goratings), Iyama seems to lose a lot of games to players ranked lower than he is.Uberdude wrote:Iyama, playing as the Japanese NHK cup winner, lost to Lee Sedol (Korean KBS Cup winner) in the 1st round of the Asian TV cup. NHK runner-up Ichiriki Ryo did beat the surprise (beat Ke Jie in semi-final shortly after winning EGC) Chinese CCTV cup winner Zhang Tao though.
P.S. oren, in some of those pictures there are coloured percentages above the board. Are these predicted win rates from a bot like Zen, viewer voting/betting, or something else?
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pookpooi
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Re: Following Iyama Yuta (no world ranking discussions)
Not every game thoughjeromie wrote:That's nothing! Every game that Ke Jie has lost has been to a player ranked lower than he is!

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jeromie
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Re: Iyama's world ranking
I thought about specifying every human player, but thought that might be placing accuracy above the joke. 
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pookpooi
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Re: Iyama's world ranking
I've a hunch that it might be a joke, actually I'm quite sure it's a joke, but AlphaGo force me to do this!jeromie wrote:I thought about specifying every human player, but thought that might be placing accuracy above the joke.
Anyway, this is a must read discussion regarding goratings.org
https://www.reddit.com/r/baduk/comments ... _rankings/
Go-AI celebrity Remi Coulom made a rare appearance and actually answer some questions on 'regional bias'
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jeromie
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Re: Iyama's world ranking
To be fair, it's only partially a joke. It's just making the observation that saying a very high ranked player has lost to players with a lower ranking doesn't really tell us anything useful. For instance, at the peak of his rating Lee Changho, one of the most dominant players of any era, won about 83% of his games. Lee was the undisputed top player in the world at that time, so by definition he lost nearly 20% of the games he played to lower ranked players.
In 2015, the last year with data on Sensei's Library, Iyama won about 79% of his games (where can I get current win rate data?). People who feel Iyama is over ranked like to point out that most of these wins were against significantly weaker domestic competition, which is a valid point, but simply saying Iyama lost to a lower ranked opponent doesn't really tell us whether or not he's living up to expectations. That requires a statistical analysis of his wins and losses which is, of course, what a site like gorankings tries to provide. I think that there's a valid argument that it doesn't properly handle regional variations in strength and thus gives Iyama an inflated rank, but the proper way to argue that (in my mind) is with math, not insults.
For what it's worth, I think the thread you linked provides a good critique of the gorankings system, and I think mamumamu's rating system that puts Iyama at world 27 is reasonable. That doesn't mean he can't beat a top player on a good day (anyone in the top 50 is really strong!), but it does mean it's a bit of a remarkable result if he comes out on top in international competition.
In 2015, the last year with data on Sensei's Library, Iyama won about 79% of his games (where can I get current win rate data?). People who feel Iyama is over ranked like to point out that most of these wins were against significantly weaker domestic competition, which is a valid point, but simply saying Iyama lost to a lower ranked opponent doesn't really tell us whether or not he's living up to expectations. That requires a statistical analysis of his wins and losses which is, of course, what a site like gorankings tries to provide. I think that there's a valid argument that it doesn't properly handle regional variations in strength and thus gives Iyama an inflated rank, but the proper way to argue that (in my mind) is with math, not insults.
For what it's worth, I think the thread you linked provides a good critique of the gorankings system, and I think mamumamu's rating system that puts Iyama at world 27 is reasonable. That doesn't mean he can't beat a top player on a good day (anyone in the top 50 is really strong!), but it does mean it's a bit of a remarkable result if he comes out on top in international competition.
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macelee
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Re: Following Iyama Yuta (no world ranking discussions)
<admin> Moved from viewtopic.php?f=13&t=13751&start=260, discussion of Iyama losing the Gosei title 0-3 to Kyo Kagen </admin>
I know this thread is not about world ranking discussion, but one significant event is that Iyama has just dropped to 11th position in Goratings. A while ago, I suggested that to keep his high position he needed to maintain a winning rate of 80-90% against his Japanese opponents. Nobody can do that forever - the long term winning rate for those very top players (Lee Changho etc) is often at somewhere between 70%-75%.
I know this thread is not about world ranking discussion, but one significant event is that Iyama has just dropped to 11th position in Goratings. A while ago, I suggested that to keep his high position he needed to maintain a winning rate of 80-90% against his Japanese opponents. Nobody can do that forever - the long term winning rate for those very top players (Lee Changho etc) is often at somewhere between 70%-75%.
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hyperpape
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Re: Following Iyama Yuta (no world ranking discussions)
I disagree, though we've been through this before. What you're saying amounts to the rating system being broken. Perhaps it is, but my gut says that if you put Park Junghwan in Japan, he'd sustain that performance for many years. It's just that while Iyama is very good, he's not at the absolute top.
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Re: Iyama's world ranking
Just a bump to bring this thread back into prominence so that we do not derail the "non-rating" thread with ratings discussions. 
If an administrator could move the last couple of posts from that thread to here, that would be appreciated.
<admin> Done (see above as sorted by post date) </admin>
If an administrator could move the last couple of posts from that thread to here, that would be appreciated.
<admin> Done (see above as sorted by post date) </admin>
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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Re: Iyama's world ranking
Actually, although I agree that Park at his current strength would probably maintain 80-90% win in Japan, if he stayed there for many years and didn't keep playing top Korean/Chinese I suspect his level would fall as he would get sloppy and decline without the constant practice against similarly strong people.hyperpape wrote:Perhaps it is, but my gut says that if you put Park Junghwan in Japan, he'd sustain that performance for many years.
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TheCannyOnion
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Re: Iyama's world ranking
Anyone notice Iyama's ranking at Goratings has been dropping like a rock? In the three months, he's dropped from being top five to 16th as of today.
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Re: Iyama's world ranking
Perhaps it is the result of other players in Japan winning against him. They may have been slightly underrated until now.TheCannyOnion wrote:Anyone notice Iyama's ranking at Goratings has been dropping like a rock? In the three months, he's dropped from being top five to 16th as of today.
On Go proverbs:
"A fine Gotation is a diamond in the hand of a dan of wit and a pebble in the hand of a kyu" —Joseph Raux misquoted.
"A fine Gotation is a diamond in the hand of a dan of wit and a pebble in the hand of a kyu" —Joseph Raux misquoted.
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Re: Iyama's world ranking
5 straight losses will do that to you. And other top players are seeing their ratings improving due to consistently stronger competitions, so even if Iyama’s rating had stayed at his all-time high, he would still be only No. 10 on the list.