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Re: To 5 kyu in 5 months! (We'll see about that)

Posted: Thu Dec 19, 2013 8:32 pm
by moyoaji
Boidhre wrote:On the first one:

Click Here To Show Diagram Code
[go]$$B This?
$$ ----------------+
$$ . . . . . . . . |
$$ . O . O O O X b |
$$ . O O . X X X . |
$$ . . . X X a O 1 |
$$ . . O X . O O . |
$$ . . O O X 2 X X |
$$ . . . . 3 X O . |
$$ . . O O . X O . |
$$ . . . . O O . . |
$$ . . . . , O . . |[/go]


a and b miai for life? Or am I missing something?



Click Here To Show Diagram Code
[go]$$B Atari
$$ ----------------+
$$ . . . . . . . . |
$$ . O . O O O X b |
$$ . O O . X X X . |
$$ . . . X X a O 1 |
$$ . . O X . O O 4 |
$$ . . O O X 2 X X |
$$ . . . . 3 X O C |
$$ . . O O . X O . |
$$ . . . . O O . . |
$$ . . . . , O . . |[/go]

Re: To 5 kyu in 5 months! (We'll see about that)

Posted: Thu Dec 19, 2013 11:20 pm
by Bill Spight
Some comments on the opening. :)


Re: To 5 kyu in 5 months! (We'll see about that)

Posted: Fri Dec 20, 2013 9:19 am
by Boidhre
moyoaji wrote:
Boidhre wrote:On the first one:

Click Here To Show Diagram Code
[go]$$B This?
$$ ----------------+
$$ . . . . . . . . |
$$ . O . O O O X b |
$$ . O O . X X X . |
$$ . . . X X a O 1 |
$$ . . O X . O O . |
$$ . . O O X 2 X X |
$$ . . . . 3 X O . |
$$ . . O O . X O . |
$$ . . . . O O . . |
$$ . . . . , O . . |[/go]


a and b miai for life? Or am I missing something?



Click Here To Show Diagram Code
[go]$$B Atari
$$ ----------------+
$$ . . . . . . . . |
$$ . O . O O O X b |
$$ . O O . X X X . |
$$ . . . X X a O 1 |
$$ . . O X . O O 4 |
$$ . . O O X 2 X X |
$$ . . . . 3 X O C |
$$ . . O O . X O . |
$$ . . . . O O . . |
$$ . . . . , O . . |[/go]


Yup, sorry, had to edit, put up the wrong bloody variation! :D

Edit: Sorry, submitted edit after your post and didn't notice due to be a tired idiot. :)

Re: To 5 kyu in 5 months! (We'll see about that)

Posted: Fri Dec 20, 2013 11:37 am
by moyoaji
Boidhre wrote:Yup, sorry, had to edit, put up the wrong bloody variation! :D

Edit: Sorry, submitted edit after your post and didn't notice due to be a tired idiot. :)

Yeah, your other variation was better. (It's alright, Boidhre. I trust you when you say you were just tired. The reason I don't trust moyo is that he always claims he was just tired. And he's always an idiot. ;-))

So I got right back on the horse and played another game. I was worried about another loss, but instead I got a hard fought win. In my mind that is the best kind of win, and it got me back to 3k. My opponent and I reviewed afterwards and we saw some places where we both misread. The biggest misread was that white should play atari at G8 on move 182 to net my stones and win the game. (And another free win to get you back to 3k... will you ever win a legitimate game where your opponent doesn't blunder his way to a victory for you? :ugeek:)



With a couple more wins at 3k I can make it official. Maybe I won't get it by the end of December? That would throw off my schedule of getting 1 dan, but I suppose I can't rush my way through ranks. I need to take things 1 day and 1 game at a time regardless of what my rank says. (That's good advice for a number of reasons. For one thing, your rank will never say anything that great about your playing ability. Because it will never be above the kyu student levels. :lol:)

Re: To 5 kyu in 5 months! (We'll see about that)

Posted: Fri Dec 20, 2013 4:19 pm
by Shenoute
Hi,

Just a couple of thoughts (which could be totally wrong of course) :
:b29: why not Q7 (I know this is not always the best move but I think Kageyama is adamant B should not cut himself in two)?
:b43: seems to lose sente for nothing
:b59: isn't atari from the other side more interesting ?
:b75: :b77: I would get out instead of making eyes locally.

PS. I like your inner-voice commentary :)

Re: To 5 kyu in 5 months! (We'll see about that)

Posted: Sat Dec 21, 2013 12:46 am
by moyoaji
Shenoute wrote: :b29: why not Q7 (I know this is not always the best move but I think Kageyama is adamant B should not cut himself in two)?

My word. This position is virtually identical to page 48, Dia. 21. And your move is correct. "When white plays 1 we try to maintain the continuity with the contact play at 2. This is naturally a good move. What can those who fail to play it be thinking?" (Dang son, calling the man out using the advice of his favorite go author? That cuts deep - like, mega-deep. :-| This guy adores that Kageyama guy and his little book. Did you see his signature? Although, his signature does directly request such comments. They should call you "The Waiter," because you served this guy exactly what he asked for. ;-) I like you!)

And here I thought I did a good job defending my corner while attacking. And Kageyama knows this - "Perhaps they covet the upper side as territory... To make matters worse, they think they are doing well because they are attacking White." Thankfully, I will not be so foolish as to demand that my way was right or okay. I will not forget this. Forgetting fundamentals like this is why I want to re-read the book. (He's a bad student. He'll forget your advice and Kageyama's in the next week and do it again. You'll need to be patient with the poor guy.)

Shenoute wrote: :b43: seems to lose sente for nothing

Yep, I thought I was in danger of losing an important stone, but that stone wasn't cutting anything and it wasn't giving much central influence anyway. I played that move in 6 seconds, so I should have taken more time to evaluate its importance before saving the stone. (Didn't you just give this advice in a teaching game 2 weeks ago? I think I remember you doing a KGS Teaching Ladder game with a 20k or something and you told them to evaluate the value of stones before working to save them. What's that word we use for people that don't take their own advice? Oh right, a hypocrite. :ugeek:)

Shenoute wrote: :b59: isn't atari from the other side more interesting ?

Wow. Totally missed that. I didn't read out all the possibilities in the 9 seconds I thought about that move. I thought I couldn't cut white off, but I clearly could have. If white saved his stone the other way I can cut through the resultant net shape and capture 4 stones, saving my group and winning me a big corner. Since white can't save his 1 stone I get stronger and prepare to attack from a position of strength that is all but out in the center already. (His name should be moyo-"auto-atari"-aji-"remover" and I'm glad you're doing this because he thought he was getting better at reading after that win a couple nights ago. :roll:)


Shenoute wrote: :b75: :b77: I would get out instead of making eyes locally.

It's a habit of mine. Whenever I see the chance to settle a group locally I prefer it over running. In this case I did debate about running, but decided I preferred life in the hopes of attacking the two white groups on either side. However, both groups were already out so it was less useful than I'd hoped. (It's great to have someone call him out on the important but obvious mistakes he makes. He thinks he's getting better but he still makes the same classic mistakes he did when he started this journal months ago.)

Shenoute wrote:PS. I like your inner-voice commentary :)

(Like I said, you're alright. :tmbup:)

Re: To 5 kyu in 5 months! (We'll see about that)

Posted: Sat Dec 21, 2013 1:43 am
by Shenoute
Glad I could help. Of course these are just my take on things and it may need correction. Here are some second thoughts and an inner voice comentary :)
:b59: and taking the corner lets W cut at G3 which may be too easy for him (but still I think that not having a floating group while taking 10 points in the corner is worth it for b especially since he keeps sente if w cuts).
:b77: l6 might be better (but getting out could be dangerous since there isn't much room in the center).

I was looking back at the opening and thought about :w22:, it seems to spoil black Chinese opening a bit. I'm not up-to-date on opening theory but I remember reading/being told that when playing the Chinese the two extensions around K4 and K16 were kind of miai. So I wonder if black may have used :b9: to play K4. But maybe this is too gentle on w lonely stone...

Re: To 5 kyu in 5 months! (We'll see about that)

Posted: Sun Dec 22, 2013 9:09 am
by Ember
moyoaji wrote:Thanks for the encouragement, Ember. I agree, we should get in a game. You can let me know when you're available. We are 6-7 hours different in time I believe, so if you'd prefer we can do correspondence on OGS or a Malkovich game here. That being said, I have worked around my sleep schedule to get in games and I am on break from classes. (I look forward to seeing you beat him. :salute:)


I'm so sorry I wasn't able to answer until now but this week was another really busy one, this time even with night shifts to meet a deadline..

I don't think that getting in a game at the weekend should be a problem. For me, it would be absolutely fine to start a game at 10pm my time, which should be about... 2pm your time? The next few weekends might be tricky, though. :scratch: But since I'm on vacation right now playing a game until the 30th at most of the evenings until then would be ok. Maybe we can arrange something in advance? Or you can hit me on OGS, I'm online quite often. Or you can send me a pm here, of course.

Anyways, congrats for making it to 3k!! Although your rank might not be really stable right now, it takes some strength to reach every next level. So, no matter what your inner critic says, its congrats indeed! :)

Re: To 5 kyu in 5 months! (We'll see about that)

Posted: Tue Dec 24, 2013 3:03 am
by moyoaji
Got in another win against Fuego today. (Good for you. That's old news. It's Christmas Eve. Let these people get back to their families and get back to yours. I should be taking the day off... :-|) This is actually the first time I've played the AI since my win in November. I didn't feel up to getting in a KGS game, but I'm not going to be going to my go club today - since it's Christmas Eve - so I figured I should play something.

As usual Fuego let me live everywhere and tried to win the center. I was able to get a group out there and had it live with a couple of eyes. At move 136 I was a bit concerned about how I was going to reduce the center. When I went for the capturing race toward the end move 214 was also disconcerting. That move was my last hope to seriously reduce white. With how calmly Fuego was handling my interior moves I thought I may have made a serious miscalculation, but I kept going. By 219 I thought I had the capturing race already won, but in case I was wrong I figured I should reduce white some before I lost all chances. By 243 I knew I had him.

It was a close game until Fuego let me win the capturing race. I saw that I could have started something for a while, but I didn't want to try it for no reason. Fuego should not have ignored me. (No duh...)



This is likely all the go I will do for the next couple of days. I probably won't be on the forums much until the 26th, so have a good Christmas Eve and a merry Christmas! (And happy New Year and all that jazz. :salute:)

Re: To 5 kyu in 5 months! (We'll see about that)

Posted: Sun Jan 19, 2014 12:42 pm
by moyoaji
I'm back in school again for my final semester and I've been focusing on my classes rather than go. (Seems reasonable, to be honest. But then why are you bothering to post here? Shouldn't you be working on assignments? :scratch:) I have a long weekend with Martin Luther King Day tomorrow, so I decided I would take the chance to post here and study some go again.

I took a look at a Tan Xiao game yesterday - http://www.go4go.net/go/games/sgfview/40065. It was an interesting game as Zhong Wenjing treated his :w8: stone lightly in the beginning to make black's opening over-concentrated. I feel like :b31: was a bit too agressive. I was afraid of playing the hane there when I was reviewing the game and when I saw black play it I was surprised - the cut by white did not surprise me. (Thinking you know better than a pro? Seriously?)

On Friday my university's club had an event where we distributed flyers to students on campus. We got some good interest including a Russian international student who is good a chess, but wants to learn how to play go. She actually managed to beat our best chess player in a 5 minute blitz game. (Great, another chess player with half-hearted go interest. You need more of those. :roll:) I hope she begins attending our meetings regularly. She didn't even want to play chess in the first place, it was only when she mentioned she had 15 years of chess experience that one of our players begged her for a game. (I see. This is interesting. :))

I did use some Christmas money to order Attack and Defense and The Chinese Opening from Kisedo. The books are expected to arrive next week. I really have been wanting to read more about attacking in go because I know that is currently one of my weaknesses. (More reading for you in the midst of your college education. :study: Is that really wise?)

And that is pretty much everything I've done with go in the last month. Other than a game I'm playing with skydyr on OGS I haven't been doing much with go as of late. I will put some effort into the forums when possible, but I expect to be much quieter over the next few months. (Good. We've been waiting for you to be quiet for a while now. Salut, mon ami! :salute:)

Re: To 5 kyu in 5 months! (We'll see about that)

Posted: Mon Jan 20, 2014 1:50 am
by moyoaji
Got in a KGS game after all today. It was a close match considering it was a free match with someone who simply said they would accept any challenger. I was going to do a ranked match, but automatch was taking a while so I just grabbed the match with this player. (Maybe if you didn't try to get in a game at 2 in the morning there would be more people on... :roll:) When I started I figured I wouldn't even post it. However, since the game was actually close I figured it would be good.

I did 2 things differently this match than usual:

1. Because I've been wanting to learn more about 3-4 joseki I decided to play two 3-4 stones. Sadly, every single corner got settled in some other fashion so that idea was useless. (Not your first useless idea and definitely not your last.)
2. After I saw my 3-4s were going nowhere, I decided I wanted to build insanely big and dare my opponent to invade and reduce me. I'm usually on the receiving end of this treatment, so it was nice to be the guy with a giant moyo for a change. (And did your framework have weaknesses in it? Like, say, aji? :lol:)

The game started out with a lot of aggression and weak groups. In the end, I managed to win in yose by 8.5 - I forgot to remove the 3 black stones in the center. (I'm going to say it was still only a half point win. Because that is what the record shows. :D)



Up to :w22: I felt like the game was going really well. I was concerned my opponent might be much weaker than me. I was feeling great by :w40: now that I had surrounded one of his groups and claimed a good corner for myself. Black's reply at :b53: was what made me go crazy. I decided to extend up to the 6th line and try to lay claim to 10th line territory on the left with an unorthodox enclosure. After black's initial invasion I played out to :w72: daring black to come in. He did and managed to reduce me somewhat. However, soon I realized that black was getting way too much in the lower right. I had a lot of difficulty choosing between an invasion and a reduction, so I did a bit of both. At 134 I realize I should have played N7 directly to get in a solid reduction and potentially even cut off black's top group depending on what I got. After living in the corner I went after black's group on the top, but it was able to survive with 2 points. Nothing died this game, which surprised me. I was able to make something of my invasion on the right by living in the corner and played a solid end-game for an 8.5 point win.

This technically makes for my first KGS game of 2014. I'm glad I could start off with a win, even if it was a free game against a guest opponent. (I don't know if I should be glad you're focusing enough on class that you haven't played a game in so long or mad at you that you have been neglecting your KGS playing... :scratch:)

Re: To 5 kyu in 5 months! (We'll see about that)

Posted: Mon Jan 20, 2014 4:56 am
by LarryHH
moyoaji, although I haven't viewed your posted games, your advancement is impressive. Reading Go books and studying problems is a good method to get stronger. However, playing weaker players is not a way to get stronger unless you have the proper handicap. I am skeptical of the on-line rating system where you advance on the basis of one game. Typically, a four game set is needed. win three out of four games and you adjust the handicap by one stone. This is equivalent to either a promotion or a demotion. Such a rapid promotion speaks of your dedication and intelligence.

My heuristic for a 5 kyu player is being able to readout bulky five in the corners, i.e., living or killing, the plan to squeeze him from the outside into bulky five and then kill him.

Has your rank improved at the go club relative to other ranked players? Can you beat an amateur Shodan taking a five stone handicap??? That would be confirmation of rank.

Re: To 5 kyu in 5 months! (We'll see about that)

Posted: Mon Jan 20, 2014 5:16 am
by RBerenguel
LarryHH wrote:moyoaji, although I haven't viewed your posted games, your advancement is impressive. Reading Go books and studying problems is a good method to get stronger. However, playing weaker players is not a way to get stronger unless you have the proper handicap. I am skeptical of the on-line rating system where you advance on the basis of one game. Typically, a four game set is needed. win three out of four games and you adjust the handicap by one stone. This is equivalent to either a promotion or a demotion. Such a rapid promotion speaks of your dedication and intelligence.

My heuristic for a 5 kyu player is being able to readout bulky five in the corners, i.e., living or killing, the plan to squeeze him from the outside into bulky five and then kill him.

Has your rank improved at the go club relative to other ranked players? Can you beat an amateur Shodan taking a five stone handicap??? That would be confirmation of rank.
It depends on whether his club rankings are AGA/EGF based or KGS based. I don't remember how big the AGA-KGS rankings shift is, but at 4-5k KGS beating a EGF shodan with 4/5 stones wouldn't be easy (since it is equivalent to around 7-10k EGF, depending on country)

Re: To 5 kyu in 5 months! (We'll see about that)

Posted: Mon Jan 20, 2014 8:31 am
by moyoaji
LarryHH wrote:moyoaji, although I haven't viewed your posted games, your advancement is impressive. Reading Go books and studying problems is a good method to get stronger. However, playing weaker players is not a way to get stronger unless you have the proper handicap. I am skeptical of the on-line rating system where you advance on the basis of one game. Typically, a four game set is needed. win three out of four games and you adjust the handicap by one stone. This is equivalent to either a promotion or a demotion. Such a rapid promotion speaks of your dedication and intelligence.

My heuristic for a 5 kyu player is being able to readout bulky five in the corners, i.e., living or killing, the plan to squeeze him from the outside into bulky five and then kill him.

Has your rank improved at the go club relative to other ranked players? Can you beat an amateur Shodan taking a five stone handicap??? That would be confirmation of rank.
Well, I could answer that if I attended clubs with ranked players. Sadly, West Michigan is not a hub of go playing talent. The go clubs I attend do not have AGA ranked players that attend regularly. That being said, I can evidently beat an AGA 5k, so I would assume I am at least 5k.

The only ranked player I have played many times is an AGA 5k, who I have beaten in even games multiple times. Several months ago I bested him in a best of 3 series and then went on to win a few more games against him. I also was able to best his son, an out of practice AGA 2k, in a single game over the Christmas holiday, however, I don't call myself a 1k because that was just that, a single game.

I don't really have the option of viewing my rank from the perspective of the AGA or EGF. Such players just don't exist in my area and West Michigan is lucky to host one tournament a year.

As for playing weaker players, I have risen to be the strongest regularly attending player at both of my clubs. Due to my progress, I don't have the option of playing against stronger players in person. The best players I get a chance to play are the ones I play online. At the West Michigan Go Club I give a 5 stone handicap to the next strongest player. We adjust the handicaps only when it is clearly demonstrated a new one is needed. At the Grand Valley Go and Chess Club the next strongest player needs a 3 stone handicap against me, but he prefers to play even games and lose.

Re: To 5 kyu in 5 months! (We'll see about that)

Posted: Mon Jan 20, 2014 4:57 pm
by LarryHH
moyoaji, give the 2 kyu player an incentive to play more. Two stone handicap. Practice building and reducing moyos. Run groups into the center for marvelous middle game fighting. Yes, winning a single game doesn't mean you are one rank stronger than that player. Kyu players make lots of mistakes.