We now enter the world of Hogwarts Castle with O Meien's second highlight in Game 2 of the AG-YST match. The group that O and his fellow groups thought was a duff heavy group turns out to be an even stranger shape - Harry on his broom-stick hovering on the edge of the quidditch field? Where is the Golden Snitch about to appear?
(;AB[pd][ic][cd][op][po][nq][mp][dq][bq][dr][cp][bp][do][cn][jp]AW[qp][qn][qo][pq]
[oq][co][bo][bn][cm][cq][dp][ep][fq][dj]TR[jp]LB[iq:A][jq:B][gp:C][dn:D]SZ[19])
O said that (at the time of writing, of course - early 2017) many commentaries on the game had appeared but with only little on this position. Yet, before this game, he felt that hardly any pro would ever sanction the last move at the triangled point. In a comment that brings a smile to my face given what we have just been talking about in another thread - shape - he says that "if you are wedded to good shape you will think about venturing forth to A or even treading carefully to B. But Black's actual move [the triangle stone] will certainly not come into the reckoning as a candidate move. Even I, considered a bit of an eccentric, would probably never even cast a glance at this move."
As to why, he says the game move feels too narrow and is more careless of territory than A or B. In this position, he adds, there is no good reason to be careless of territory, according to "standard theory." And playing that in addition to the strange peep on the right only makes it seem even stranger.
We now know that AG does not 'gang the same gate' [go the same way] as the standard theory of the Muggles, but I think we can still sense O's incredulity as this game unfolded. And it was about to get much stranger!
But being a pro, O still kept a careful eye on all aspects of the position, and he noted that if Black got a stone at C, Black D would be a powerful move, and the triangled stone would be in a good position.
(;AB[pd][ic][cd][op][po][nq][mp][dq][bq][dr][cp][bp][do][cn][jp][oj][nd][qe][ed]
AW[bo][bn][cm][cq][dp][ep][fq][dj][qp][pi][qn][qo][pq][oq][co][qf][pf][cg]TR[oj]]SZ[19])
The besom-making move on the lower side probably did not get as much attention as it deserved because it was a Black move very soon after - the triangled one the Snitch darting to the other side of the field - that really made the pros' eyes goggle. It was the nozomi kind of shoulder hit - gazing from afar. I prefer to think of it as fake shoulder hit because (as O explains) it is not the usual kind meant for erasing, accepting a possibly weak/heavy group that ends up being harassed. And we all know how that kind of game ends up proverbially - "there is no territory in the centre." "Oh yeah," says AG.
If we assume a normal defence by White on the right side, O hypothesises the following resulting position, and he says the majority of pros would have then played something like this (territory on the fourth line - no-brainer!):
(;AB[pd][ic][cd][op][po][nq][mp][dq][bq][dr][cp][bp][do][cn][jp][nd][qe][ed][oj]
[ol]AW[cm][cq][dp][ep][fq][dj][qp][pi][qn][qo][pq][oq][co][bo][pf][cg][qf][bn][pj]
[io]TR[io]SZ[19])
Apart from noting the fact that the strange peep appears to have ended up in a rather good position, O obviously still felt perplexed as he could find nothing else that "in concrete terms" was especially good about Black's position. After all, even we can see that Black has not really erased White. But he does note that the centre was taking on a blackish hue. I think that's worth mulling over, because we have to assume that AG could not possibly predict that White would have played his hittable stone on the fourth line on the right side. AG's creativity, therefore, may not be so much in choosing the shoulder hit as in creating the conditions - the hue - where it could become an option. (I recall the comment passed on Shuei, that his skill with miai was no so much in making them but in creating the positions where they work.)
Yi Se-tol, however, smelled a rat and chose to go the other way with his response to the (real) shoulder hit.
(;AB[pd][ic][cd][op][po][nq][mp][dq][bq][dr][cp][bp][do][cn][jp][nd][qe][ed][oj]
[nj]AW[cq][dp][ep][fq][dj][qp][pi][qn][qo][pq][oq][co][bo][pf][cg][qf][bn][oi][mh]
[cm]TR[mh]LB[gp:A]SZ[19])
O now spends some time on a tewari analysis of this position, comparing it also to the position where White had instead originally played on the third line on the right side and Black had made a shoulder hit on the fourth line. I'll omit all of that except to note that Yi's choice of fourth line kakoi seems to come out better than the third line choice in tewari terms.
We cut to the chase instead and note simply that for Black's next move the Golden Snitch darted across to A. The position in the left corner that O had envisaged did thus become an important factor. All of a sudden, what was just a blackish hue becomes a dark cloud forming in the empyrean. It is instructive to look at the final position of this game. Black got a huge lake of territory on the sides but also a massive cloud in the centre. AG dominated this game in more than one sense.
O's summary of this portion of the game was that the peep and the fake shoulder hit were the highlights, but he still clearly felt reluctant to say that AG's centre strategy was actually correct. It was more that AG had showed it was
possible to play that way, and that AG was choosing such moves because it liked to play shapes such that they inhibited confused fighting. In other words, he seems to have had a feeling that AG's move were not so much superior as "not bad moves", and further the power of this approach was less to do with avoiding confusion and more to do with avoiding exploitable weaknesses (an interesting distinction?). Of course having the calculating power to evaluate what is and what is not exploitable is what makes that approach pay off, especially in the latter half of the game.
I wonder whether O still cleaves to that view, now that AG Master and the Zeroes have altered the complexion of the whole game, not just the centre. And we also have yet to hear what Dobbie can tell us

. Maybe AG still had too much Muggle DNA after all.