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The Greed Factor
Posted: Wed May 12, 2010 11:31 am
by Kirby
I think that I'm sometimes greedy when I'm playing go. I see the opponent's territory, and I don't like it, so I sometimes do something crazy to try to get more points.
It's not an issue of counting, I think, because there have been a number of games where I've counted myself as being ahead -- but still try to do something crazy to take away the opponent's points. To me, if the game is within 10 or 15 points, I feel it is too close for comfort. I don't really feel at ease unless I feel that I'm maybe 20 or 30 points ahead.
Are any of you "greedy" players? What do you do to be more patient?
Re: The Greed Factor
Posted: Wed May 12, 2010 11:35 am
by Li Kao
You can't be as greedy as me. I want more and MORE even when I'm 100 points ahead.
Must crush, kill and destroy.
Re: The Greed Factor
Posted: Wed May 12, 2010 11:52 am
by kirkmc
Kirby wrote:I think that I'm sometimes greedy when I'm playing go. I see the opponent's territory, and I don't like it, so I sometimes do something crazy to try to get more points.
It's not an issue of counting, I think, because there have been a number of games where I've counted myself as being ahead -- but still try to do something crazy to take away the opponent's points. To me, if the game is within 10 or 15 points, I feel it is too close for comfort. I don't really feel at ease unless I feel that I'm maybe 20 or 30 points ahead.
Are any of you "greedy" players? What do you do to be more patient?
Yuan Zhou's book How Not to Play Go discusses this. It's a big problem for weak players, and I am guilty of it too. I try now to pay more attention to my territory, and, if I'm ahead, don't play ridiculous moves to try and reduce my opponent, but rather defend my territory.
Re: The Greed Factor
Posted: Wed May 12, 2010 11:58 am
by phrax
All I can think of is Gordon Gekko and "Greed, for lack of a better word, is good."
Reference (for the non-80s-financial-movies initiated):
Wall StreetI'm the opposite, as a conservative player I have a tendency to coast/protect my lead when I think I'm ahead. Which sadly costs me some games when I misjudge or coast too early... So I usually have to remind myself to keep the pressure on, even late in the game.
Probably the only real solution to both problems is to play for a resignation, so we don't have to worry about that cumbersome counting at the end

Re: The Greed Factor -
Posted: Wed May 12, 2010 12:15 pm
by HKA
Kirby wrote:It's not an issue of counting, I think, because there have been a number of games where I've counted myself as being ahead -- but still try to do something crazy to take away the opponent's points. To me, if the game is within 10 or 15 points, I feel it is too close for comfort. I don't really feel at ease unless I feel that I'm maybe 20 or 30 points ahead.
Are any of you "greedy" players? What do you do to be more patient?
Kirby, the issue you have, as you describe it above, does not strike me as greedy - I think it is a different problem.
Please don't be insulted, I think I suffer from it too, and I think it is quite common.
I think we are lazy.
We know we are ahead, and with a careful and calculating endgame, we should be content to simply slowly wrap up the game. Or perhaps wait for the unreasonable move by the opponent trying to catch up, and punish it. But that takes alot of thinking.
Instead, we try something we cannot be sure of to force an end of the game. Often it works, after all, there is a good chance we are stronger, since we have built a palpable lead, but when it fails, we are appalled with ourselves. To me, that is not greed, it is more, as you say in your post, but not in the title - a lack of patience.
So I would say no I am not a greedy player, I am a lazy player. Pick your sin, greed or sloth.
By the way, there is a difference between playing a proper attack or sequence that you know works when you are ahead, and being greedy. For me, greedy is taking a game you know is absolutley won and going for unecessary complications to get more, plunging a won game into one bubbling with aji.
Re: The Greed Factor -
Posted: Wed May 12, 2010 12:47 pm
by Kirby
HKA wrote:
Kirby, the issue you have, as you describe it above, does not strike me as greedy - I think it is a different problem.
Please don't be insulted, I think I suffer from it too, and I think it is quite common.
I think we are lazy.
...
OK, I'll call it lazy

At a workshop, Kim Myungwan said I was "jealous", but I picked the word "greedy" here. Lazy is another word to describe this situation, I think, but the difference in meaning actually seems beneficial for improvement. Thinking that I'm "greedy" or "jealous" is a lot easier to deal with than thinking that I'm "lazy". Thanks for this perspective. I think that it's something that I should think about a bit more.
By the way, do you think that I have issues other than "as I've described above"?

Thanks for the responses from everyone else, too.
Re: The Greed Factor
Posted: Wed May 12, 2010 12:59 pm
by Laman
i also use to play greedy moves, but i see a different reason than those mentioned here so far. i am not enough self-confident. when i look at the board i just feel i am behind, oponent's teritory look terribly big compared to mine, so i start some desperate fight to counter that, sometimes succesfully, sometimes to make things even worse in the end. but, when i later analyse the positions, i often find out, that my estimation was wrong, that i was not behind at all.
so for me, the solution is to properly count the score during the game, then i am able to play normally
PS: it was funny on my last tournament, in one game both I and my oponent thought most of time that we were losing and shortly after i started to think that i was not losing so badly, my oponent resigned, because i was actually winning
Re: The Greed Factor
Posted: Wed May 12, 2010 1:13 pm
by Magicwand
remember!!
some situation calls for greed.
you might think you will lose the fight but still have to fight.
everyone will see me playing greedy when i play Kerby 3 stone.

Re: The Greed Factor
Posted: Wed May 12, 2010 1:18 pm
by Kirby
Magicwand wrote:remember!!
some situation calls for greed.
you might think you will lose the fight but still have to fight.
everyone will see me playing greedy when i play Kerby 3 stone.

I just hope that I can stop you before 9 stones. :-S
Re: The Greed Factor
Posted: Thu May 13, 2010 7:37 am
by Phelan
I'm greedy, but not for territory, for influence. Doesn't help me that much either. A lot of my games end in resignation, mine or my opponent's.
Re: The Greed Factor
Posted: Fri May 14, 2010 1:51 am
by TMark
There is also another aspect of this factor, knowing when to stop pushing. Too many times I have seen the chance to play sente pushes to gain a point or two, before I need to go back to connect a weakness, only to find that the last push is not sente and I lose the lot. I can remember doing it to others a couple of times but it is painful to remember the times I did it wrong. In this case greed is a capital offence, punishible by death (of your stones).
Best wishes.
Re: The Greed Factor
Posted: Fri May 14, 2010 9:39 am
by Solomon
I'm not greedy, I'm just curious.
Re: The Greed Factor
Posted: Fri May 14, 2010 12:37 pm
by Fedya
I'm not very good at estimating the score, so if I play a "greedy" move, it's probably because I think I'm behind.
I've had games where I thought I was behind by 5 or 10 points but lost by 40, and games where my opponent questions why I resigned.

Re: The Greed Factor
Posted: Fri May 14, 2010 12:58 pm
by HKA
Fedya wrote:I'm not very good at estimating the score, so if I play a "greedy" move, it's probably because I think I'm behind.
I've had games where I thought I was behind by 5 or 10 points but lost by 40, and games where my opponent questions why I resigned.

If you think you are behind - an objectively "greedy" move is not "greedy". I think this is what Magicwand was driving at, if you are behind, then you must be greedy.
You can only be greedy if you know you are going for more than you need - at least in the context of how Kirby started the thread.
"Overplay" is more objective - it is too much regardless of your motivation, and whether it succeeds or not.
Now, at your level your count should not be off by that much, so I might chide you "lazy" on that basis, as I do with myself. With a reasonable amount of effort, judgment errors of more than 20 pts should disapear.
By the way - u have to explain your avatar - I am hoping it is a shot from "Lady Eve" but...
Re: The Greed Factor
Posted: Fri May 14, 2010 1:11 pm
by daniel_the_smith
Last night in a game I counted. I could protect my side territory and let him live and win by 10-15 points. Or I could try and kill. Trying to kill would be a bad idea, I knew, because I couldn't read it out all the way and I didn't need a kill.
So of course, I did the sensible thing and tried to kill.
This happens in lots of my games and I can't understand why I keep playing moves I *know* are wrong.
I lost that game horribly; my side territory died and took another group with it.