Cho U is one of the strongest players in the world right now.Magicwand wrote:best player i think is
l. lee sehdol
2. kong jae
3. guli
lee changho is not strong as before. but i think he can be #4...
cho-u? how can he be in top 20??
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Cho U is one of the strongest players in the world right now.Magicwand wrote:best player i think is
l. lee sehdol
2. kong jae
3. guli
lee changho is not strong as before. but i think he can be #4...
cho-u? how can he be in top 20??
...who is 9-7 vs Gu Li.cdybeijing wrote:...
Chen Yaoye...
IIRC from looking into prize funds, this gives a rather large advantage to Japanese professionals doesn't it?kokomi wrote:I would use how much they earned last year as a benchmark. When you rank Business School, the first year graduate's salary is an important factor. Same here, when a pro decide between two tournaments which one he wants to put more energy in, 'international' or 'domestic' is not an issue, how much he will win from the tournament is more important.
I don't have the data, so I'm not sure. I think it was true, but considering one win game pocketed Lee sedol 10,000 euro in the Chinese Go League, I can not really tell if Japanese professionals still have the advantage.topazg wrote:IIRC from looking into prize funds, this gives a rather large advantage to Japanese professionals doesn't it?kokomi wrote:I would use how much they earned last year as a benchmark. When you rank Business School, the first year graduate's salary is an important factor. Same here, when a pro decide between two tournaments which one he wants to put more energy in, 'international' or 'domestic' is not an issue, how much he will win from the tournament is more important.
True, but usually money knows where it should go. Let me put it as an important factor then, taking into consideration of other factors e.g. domestic/international tournaments, quality of kifu, ratio of minority ethnic and women (oops, there isn't heretopazg wrote:Sorry, IIRC = "If I Recall Correctly"
True, that's a lot for a single game - My memory was that Japanese national tournaments have by a long way the biggest prize fund compared to national Chinese and Korean titles. Not that it's not still a reasonable enough metric, but it obviously has it flaws. To draw a rather ridiculous example: if the UK started offering 2 million euro prizes for each of the local tournaments, some amateur 3 dans could claim to be the best players in the world
I would still like to see an international collaborative rating system - I don't mind ELO, WHR, whatever fits, but something would still be nice. It's good to see China and Korea doing this sort of thing internally, but international would be better.
The European one is difficult. Well over 95% of most countries play their games internally, so ranks can drift quite a bit - KGS works much better in that respect because all of the KGS games are at least internationally internally consistent.kokomi wrote:An interntional collaborative rating system is interesting, is it like European Go Database? is a 3d/10k in UK the same strength as say...russia?
Yes, it does seem plausible that an international ratings system could work. For top Korean and Chinese professionals, they each play 10-30 games a year internationally. Japan might be a bit of an island, as it seems most Japanese professionals play a bit less in international play.topazg wrote:The European one is difficult. Well over 95% of most countries play their games internally, so ranks can drift quite a bit - KGS works much better in that respect because all of the KGS games are at least internationally internally consistent.kokomi wrote:An interntional collaborative rating system is interesting, is it like European Go Database? is a 3d/10k in UK the same strength as say...russia?
However, for go professionals, there are enough international games now between the big go countries, that it starts to feel viable.