Here's my top 5:
1. Lee Sedol
2. Lee Changho
3. Gu Li
4. Kong Jie
5. Chang Hao
Here's my top 24:
So, what's wrong with my list? Who do you think are the best?
That's an interesting idea. I have GoGoD, although it's a few years old. Is there a way to do this with Kombilo maybe?SoDesuNe wrote:I'd take a general win/loss-ratio of all games played and by that (as John Fairbairn pointed out somewhere) Yi Chang'ho is pretty much outstanding.
I don't see anything on that page that I missed. Here are the results I have for those four from Japan:hyperpape wrote:A four way tie for best in Japan?
No, this is not right. See http://senseis.xmp.net/?ChoU, if you're confused.
So do you have a top 5 or top 10 worldwide? I can understand taking national tournaments to compare players within those countries, but I hesitate to use those results to move someone up or down the ranking. Maybe some sort of elo-type approach, estimating a "real rank" of the players?hyperpape wrote: ...
For the Japanese, I think the top two tiers are probably five players:
Cho, Iyama, Yamashita, Takao, Hane (the last three are not necessarily in any order).
More generally, I think it doesn't make sense to ignore each nation's tournaments. International titles are very prestigious, but if a player has a lot of wins in his nation's competition, that tends to suggest he's better than his countrymen. That's not to deny that international titles are more impressive wins than single-nation titles, but ignoring one gives you perverse rankings.
this looks like a nice top 2-4.emeraldemon wrote: 1. Lee Sedol
2. Lee Changho
3. Gu Li
It's very easy if you use GoLibrary on the disc (Windows only, of course). You can, for example, first search on a tournament, or even a round, then search further on a player. You can do the player search on Black, White or both. You can limit the year range. There are other filters. Win-loss totals and ratios come up automatically. I expect several other programs such as Drago allow similar and better procedures. Remember that we don't hide GoGoD behind cyphers or passwords, so that quite a few people have made use of the data in creative ways. Outside the 64,000 sgf files, GoGoD will also give you much data, background or gossip on the tournaments, as well as biographical data on, currently, 3,900 people.Maybe I could find some clever way to parse the sgfs in GoGoD looking for tournament results, but that also sounds like work.
No clue: http://igo-kisen.hp.infoseek.co.jp/world06.html; http://senseis.xmp.net/?LGCupMagicwand wrote:cho-u? how can he be in top 20??
one of these days I'm gonna have to try that Windows thingJohn Fairbairn wrote:It's very easy if ... (Windows only, of course).
Yes, in the sense that you can first search for Samsung, and then add the results to that a search for LG Cup, and so on.John: can you do a search for games by a player just in international competition?