The following position arises after a variation of a relatively well known Japanese joseki. The marked black stone is to my knowledge a simplifying play that finishes the position temporarily.
I have two questions about the position: 1) What potential exists for white should he or she wish to play at a? 2) If black returns to the position in sente and takes b or c, how might white handle him or herself locally?
5-4 approach to 3-4 stone, variation of one space low pincer
- cdybeijing
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Re: 5-4 approach to 3-4 stone, variation of one space low pi
This is a normal joseki I believe ("a" and "b" after
), so Black has opted for something different but it must be joseki for White.
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Re: 5-4 approach to 3-4 stone, variation of one space low pi
A commented pro game from my study group 
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Re: 5-4 approach to 3-4 stone, variation of one space low pi
You are of course right that the main move is 6 for black. Pros presumably don't play the marked black stone because they feel they can do better. The move was apparently suggested by Guo Juan as a simple way to settle the position (check Josekipedia for reference.)topazg wrote: This is a normal joseki I believe ("a" and "b" after), so Black has opted for something different but it must be joseki for White.