Joanne Missingham
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tapir
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Joanne Missingham
It should be big news that Australia is the first country from outside Asia, which sent a participant to the semi-finals of an international go competition. I would like to read some insights and game comments from more competent participants about the recent feats of JoanneMissingham.
Please!
Please!
Last edited by tapir on Mon Sep 13, 2010 2:35 am, edited 1 time in total.
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xed_over
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Re: China, Australia and Korea - the big three in women's go
link for those who don't know what tapir is talking about
http://senseis.xmp.net/?BingshengCup
http://senseis.xmp.net/?BingshengCup
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Re: China, Australia and Korea - the big three in women's go
Australia? Go? Eh what? Does not compute! 
19/02/2011: this grumpy person takes a voluntary holiday from L19.
Re: China, Australia and Korea - the big three in women's go
Park JiEun and Joanne Missingham advanced to final.
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tapir
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Re: China, Australia and Korea - the big three in women's go
schilds wrote:Australia? Go? Eh what? Does not compute!
Basically, it is about Joanne Missingham being finalist in the mentioned women's world championship. Shouldn't this be big news?
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Re: Joanne Missingham
Hope she can win.
I heard that she was about to decide whether to keep on as a Go pro or go back to study in one year. Personally i think she should go back study even thought she's really talented in Go. But women pro's career life isn't as easy as men's. Very few tournaments are for women, and it seems people has less interests on it.
I heard that she was about to decide whether to keep on as a Go pro or go back to study in one year. Personally i think she should go back study even thought she's really talented in Go. But women pro's career life isn't as easy as men's. Very few tournaments are for women, and it seems people has less interests on it.
长考出臭棋.
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Re: Joanne Missingham
OMG, a Westerner in a final
.
According to Senseis, she'll earn 70,000 RMB (around 7,000 euros) already even if she loses the final... And if she wins, that'll be a total prize of 200,000 RMB (20,000 euros). Not bad when you're 16! Let's see how the game will be - it's scheduled for tomorrow. I believe her opponent Park JiEun is one of the absolute top female players, but we'll see how it goes!
According to Senseis, she'll earn 70,000 RMB (around 7,000 euros) already even if she loses the final... And if she wins, that'll be a total prize of 200,000 RMB (20,000 euros). Not bad when you're 16! Let's see how the game will be - it's scheduled for tomorrow. I believe her opponent Park JiEun is one of the absolute top female players, but we'll see how it goes!
My name is Gijs, from Utrecht, NL.
When in doubt, play the most aggressive move
When in doubt, play the most aggressive move
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hyperpape
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Re: Joanne Missingham
Kokomi: women can play in men's tournaments, so maybe your point is better rephrased as "only playing in women's tournaments makes it hard to make a living"
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Re: Joanne Missingham
Yes, women can. But we are talking about the prize or income here. So far it's not very easy for female pros to win the prize against top male pros.
Only Rui Naiwei 9p was able to compete with top male pros as far as i know.
Only Rui Naiwei 9p was able to compete with top male pros as far as i know.
长考出臭棋.
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Re: Joanne Missingham
I saw her games on WMSG. It seems that she improved a lot during 2 years.
Anyway, Park, 9p is too hard to beat. I don't think that Joanne's chances are bigger than 5-10%.
They met each other on WMSG 2 years ago. Park won that game easily
Anyway, Park, 9p is too hard to beat. I don't think that Joanne's chances are bigger than 5-10%.
They met each other on WMSG 2 years ago. Park won that game easily
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Re: Joanne Missingham
breakfast wrote:I don't think that Joanne's chances are bigger than 5-10%.
They met each other on WMSG 2 years ago. Park won that game easily
I agree it will be hard for Joanne to win. If you look at the way Park won her games, it was mostly +resigned !
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Re: Joanne Missingham
On another note, Missingham is, or could be, an interesting aspect of the way that national pride works for go players. She moved to Taiwan at 4, learned to play at 6, then moved to the US while already quite strong, where she continued to study, then returned to China to take the professional exam. Did she ever live in Australia while playing go?
I'm not saying Australians shouldn't feel pride, in the same way that someone from the US might feel pride about Michael Redmond (though I don't know exactly how good he'd gotten before leaving for Japan). Or again, the Japanese are proud of Cho Chikun (though he is occasionally treated poorly because of his Korean origin).
Just making the point that there's lots of different categories here. Compare, e.g. Jie Li and Eric Lui, one of whom became strong then moved to the US, and one of whom learned Go in the US.
I'm not saying Australians shouldn't feel pride, in the same way that someone from the US might feel pride about Michael Redmond (though I don't know exactly how good he'd gotten before leaving for Japan). Or again, the Japanese are proud of Cho Chikun (though he is occasionally treated poorly because of his Korean origin).
Just making the point that there's lots of different categories here. Compare, e.g. Jie Li and Eric Lui, one of whom became strong then moved to the US, and one of whom learned Go in the US.
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Re: Joanne Missingham
hyperpape wrote:On another note, Missingham is, or could be, an interesting aspect of the way that national pride works for go players. She moved to Taiwan at 4, learned to play at 6, then moved to the US while already quite strong, where she continued to study, then returned to China to take the professional exam. Did she ever live in Australia while playing go?
I'm not saying Australians shouldn't feel pride, in the same way that someone from the US might feel pride about Michael Redmond (though I don't know exactly how good he'd gotten before leaving for Japan). Or again, the Japanese are proud of Cho Chikun (though he is occasionally treated poorly because of his Korean origin).
Just making the point that there's lots of different categories here. Compare, e.g. Jie Li and Eric Lui, one of whom became strong then moved to the US, and one of whom learned Go in the US.
I think she could represent Chinese Taipei to play in Asian Games, so I wonder if she hold dual nationality? Traditionally, players are rather looked at by go associations than nationalities. I always feel Cho U's Japanese player. Now as people look at Go more like a sport, it becomes quite common for players to represent nations rather than go associations.
btw, thanks for rephrasing my sentence, i did not make it very clear in my first post.
长考出臭棋.
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gowan
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Re: Joanne Missingham
Michael Redmond left the USA to live in Japan at age 13 I believe. At that time he was around amateur 5d in playing strength. Back then 5d was stronger than now for what it's worth.
Nationality is a matter of citizenship mostly but sometimes residence is also required. Rin Kaiho, O Rissei and O Meien have all represented Taiwan at times in international events but mostly Japan where they qualified as pros. Cho Chikun has represented Korea at least once but I could be wrong.
Personally I think nationalism is abhorent. I'd far rather see international go played by teams which are recruited openly, sort of the way pro soccer/football is done. That would be better for the pros who could get more money than having to depend so much on prizes.
Nationality is a matter of citizenship mostly but sometimes residence is also required. Rin Kaiho, O Rissei and O Meien have all represented Taiwan at times in international events but mostly Japan where they qualified as pros. Cho Chikun has represented Korea at least once but I could be wrong.
Personally I think nationalism is abhorent. I'd far rather see international go played by teams which are recruited openly, sort of the way pro soccer/football is done. That would be better for the pros who could get more money than having to depend so much on prizes.
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Re: Joanne Missingham
kokomi wrote:hyperpape wrote:On another note, Missingham is, or could be, an interesting aspect of the way that national pride works for go players. She moved to Taiwan at 4, learned to play at 6, then moved to the US while already quite strong, where she continued to study, then returned to China to take the professional exam. Did she ever live in Australia while playing go?
I'm not saying Australians shouldn't feel pride, in the same way that someone from the US might feel pride about Michael Redmond (though I don't know exactly how good he'd gotten before leaving for Japan). Or again, the Japanese are proud of Cho Chikun (though he is occasionally treated poorly because of his Korean origin).
Just making the point that there's lots of different categories here. Compare, e.g. Jie Li and Eric Lui, one of whom became strong then moved to the US, and one of whom learned Go in the US.
I think she could represent Chinese Taipei to play in Asian Games, so I wonder if she hold dual nationality? Traditionally, players are rather looked at by go associations than nationalities. I always feel Cho U's Japanese player. Now as people look at Go more like a sport, it becomes quite common for players to represent nations rather than go associations.
btw, thanks for rephrasing my sentence, i did not make it very clear in my first post.
i know for fact that she holds duel citizenship.
"The more we think we know about
The greater the unknown"
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The greater the unknown"
Words by neil peart, music by geddy lee and alex lifeson