Fukuoka Kotaro
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silviu22
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Fukuoka Kotaro
I believe Fukuoka Kotaro will be the next dominant Japanese player. In Ryusei he won 14 games in a row: won all 11 games in his block and 3 games in main tournament. So he is now in the final against Iyama Yuta.
And he keeps doing well in the other major tournaments as well.
And he keeps doing well in the other major tournaments as well.
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kvasir
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Re: Fukuoka Kotaro
Almost everyone above him on mamumamu list for Japan at 19 year already went on to win lots of big titles.
http://mamumamu0413.web.fc2.com/rating/ ... 01900.html
http://mamumamu0413.web.fc2.com/rating/ ... 01900.html
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silviu22
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Re: Fukuoka Kotaro
Fukuoka Kotaro will represent Japan at a new international tournament (Supreme player). It will be a round robin tournament and he will get to play against top 8 players in the world. I'm not sure he's at that level though: https://gotoeveryone.k2ss.info/news/wr/ ... -player/1/
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kvasir
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Re: Fukuoka Kotaro
He got the first place in the National team practice tournament in October/November. Two wins against Iyama, one against Ichiriki, and so on
It will be great for his development to play in this new round robin tournament against such strong players. Hopefully this is a tournament with regular time controls, not fast Go 
BTW the Japanese national team plays really good practice games.
BTW the Japanese national team plays really good practice games.
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John Fairbairn
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Re: Fukuoka Kotaro
It seems to have been overlooked here that Fukuoka set a new record in winning the Ryusei, his first title.
He won every game from his sole A Preliminary game (beating Cho Chikun; he was able to skip the B Preliminary) to Games 1 to 11 of the win & continue block preliminaries, meaning also he was one of the very lowest ranked initially) and then won all four games from Round 1 up to and including the Final (beating Iyama, having earlier disposed of Ichiriki) in the main tournament - the first time this has been done.
Incidentally, it is not the first time all 11 games in the block preliminary have been won - Kono Rin and Kyo Kagen did it, but they lost during the main tournaments.
19-year-old Fukuoka's good form in the Ryusei was attributed to playing somewhat more thickly then usual (even though he is adept at sabaki and shinogi) because the Ryusei is a quickplay, i.e. he was avoiding tactical melees to guard against byoyomi pressures.
He won every game from his sole A Preliminary game (beating Cho Chikun; he was able to skip the B Preliminary) to Games 1 to 11 of the win & continue block preliminaries, meaning also he was one of the very lowest ranked initially) and then won all four games from Round 1 up to and including the Final (beating Iyama, having earlier disposed of Ichiriki) in the main tournament - the first time this has been done.
Incidentally, it is not the first time all 11 games in the block preliminary have been won - Kono Rin and Kyo Kagen did it, but they lost during the main tournaments.
19-year-old Fukuoka's good form in the Ryusei was attributed to playing somewhat more thickly then usual (even though he is adept at sabaki and shinogi) because the Ryusei is a quickplay, i.e. he was avoiding tactical melees to guard against byoyomi pressures.
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silviu22
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Re: Fukuoka Kotaro
Fukuoka Kotaro is doing really well in Meijin: he is 5-0 in the group, but he still has 3 hard games left: Shibano Toramaru (who seems in very good form), Iyama Yuta and Yamashita Keigo.
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pajaro
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Re: Fukuoka Kotaro
Fukuoka is doing really really well in the Honinbo.
He made it to the final match against Ichiriki, beating Iyama (amongst others) in the tournament. Then, he won Ichiriki in the first game.
Now the match is 1-1. He is no longer a promise, he is aiming for the top.
It's a pity that the tournament has been downgraded.
He made it to the final match against Ichiriki, beating Iyama (amongst others) in the tournament. Then, he won Ichiriki in the first game.
Now the match is 1-1. He is no longer a promise, he is aiming for the top.
It's a pity that the tournament has been downgraded.
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Shenoute
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Re: Fukuoka Kotaro
I think pajaro alludes to the Honinbo becoming a best-of-5 title and games not being played over two days anymore. Also, the league was done away with. If I remember correctly, this happened 2/3 years ago.
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pajaro
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Re: Fukuoka Kotaro
Yes, right.
Current edition is #81. The league was last played in edition #78, when Iyama lost. Ichiriki has been Honinbo since then, but the system has changed. The main event is now a knock-out tournament, like the Oza. And the match is best of 5 games, not 7, played in one day.
It is sad, because it's the oldest title, with a lot of history behind. But money is money, and the sponsor(s) decided that...
Current edition is #81. The league was last played in edition #78, when Iyama lost. Ichiriki has been Honinbo since then, but the system has changed. The main event is now a knock-out tournament, like the Oza. And the match is best of 5 games, not 7, played in one day.
It is sad, because it's the oldest title, with a lot of history behind. But money is money, and the sponsor(s) decided that...