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A

Ag | Am | An | Ap | At | Au | Aw

Abe Yoshiteru (1941–2009)
9-dan promotion   46: 5
“Abe Makes 9-dan” (game)   48: 50
death of   120: 9-10*
“Joseki Amateurs Don’t Know” [3 parts]   14: 54-55;  15: 44-46;  16: 52-53
“New Joseki” [13 parts]   1 – 13:  ...
“New Moves and New Josekis”   75: 41-45;  76: 41-46;  77: 30, 55;  78: 62-64
“Special Game Commentary”. Parts 1-3   17: 12-15;  18: 9-12*;  20: 14-16
“Trick Moves, Three” [12 parts] (problems)   36 – 41 ;  43 – 48:  ...

 
Abe Yoshiteru vs. Kitamura Hiroshi
Oza Tournament 1977 (joseki analysis)   15: 45

 
Abe Yoshiteru vs. Nakamura Yutaro
All-Japan First Place Tournament 1973 (joseki analysis)   15: 45-46

 
Abe Yoshiteru vs. Sanno Hirotaka
Oteai 1978 (?) (joseki analysis)   9: 49-50

 
Abe Yoshiteru vs. Shirae Haruhiko
Oteai 1986   48: 50

 
Abe Yumiko
see also her later name Okada Yumiko
beats 9-dan   59: 57*

 
Accidents  see Traffic accidents

 
Accomplishments  see Four Accomplishments

 
ACOM Cup  see Agon Kiriyama Cup

 
Acornsoft Computer Go Tournament
1984 announcement and note   32: 6;  34: 4
“1984 Acornsoft Computer Go Tournament” (Fairbairn)   35: 8-11*

 
Actors
Actor Playing Go  (cover story)   92: 54
Actors at Play  (cover note)   86: 1
Bando Hikosaboro V in Shinkoki  (triptych, cover note)   124: 1
Ichikawa Danjuro VII (cover note)   108: 1
Ichikawa Sandaji (cover note)   80: 1
Iwai Hanshiro VI in Chapter 15, Yomogiu (oban print, cover note)   127: 1
Iwai Kumesaburo III  (cover note)   107: 1
Kumedera Danjo in Kenuki  (cover note)   116: 1
Matsumoto Koshiro V and Nakamura Utaemon III as Ikyu  (cover note)   111: 1
Nakamura Fukusuke  (cover note)   107: 1
Nakamura Kichiemon II in The Temple of the Golden Pavilion (cover story &
      notes)   55: 7;  126: 1

 
“Advantage of Playing Last, The” (James Davies)
(endgame counting)   12: 56-57

 
“After the Joseki”
(problem and analysis by Kato Masao)   92: 40, 42

 
“After the Joseki: Early Middle Game Strategy” (Miyashita Shuyo)
[3 parts]   30: 43-45;  31: 58-59;  32: 46-48

 
AGA  see American Go Association

 
Age
see also Oldest ... , Young players , Youngest ...
50s, performance in one’s   80: 55
Japanese, traditional calculating of   32: 64
Kisei Leagues 2011, average age in   126: 8
Takao’s, and performance   109: 12*

 
Age-gap record
Kato Masao and Cho U in Honinbo Title Match 2003   98: 8
Sugiuchi Masao and Xie Yimin   117: 10

 
Aggressiveness
see also Attacking , Fighting games
Schlemper’s view on   57: 34, 36

 
Agon Kiriyama Cup (China)
1999 (1st): Ma Xiaochun wins   88: 13
2003 (5th): Gu Li wins   100: 11
2004 (6th): Zhou Heyang wins   103: 11
2005 (7th): Gu Li wins   106: 8
2006 (8th): Liu Xing wins   110: 9
2007 (9th): Liu Xing wins   114: 9
2008 (10th): Gu Li wins   117: 13
2009 (11th): Sun Tengyu wins   120: 56;  126: 55
2010 (12th): Qiu Jun wins   123: 10
2011 (13th): Piao Wenyao wins   127: 9

 
Agon Kiriyama Cup (Japan)
1999 (6th): Kobayashi Koichi wins   87: 4
2000 (7th): Cho Sonjin wins   90: 9
2001 (8th): Cho Sonjin wins   93: 8-9
2003 (10th): Kato Masao wins   99: 8
2004 (11th): Hane Naoki wins   103: 7-8
2005 (12th): Iyama Yuta wins   105: 9*
2006 (13th): Cho U wins   109: 8
2007 (14th): Cho U wins   113: 6-7*
2008 (15th): Cho U wins   117: 8
2009 (16th): Hane Naoki wins   120: 5
2010 (17th): Yamashita Keigo wins   123: 7;  124: 12
2010 (17th): Redmond vs. Cho U   123: 6, 7;  124: 28-33
2011 (18th): amateurs reaching main tournament   126: 9
2011 (18th): Iyama Yuta wins   127: 6
2012 (19th): Cho U wins   129: 5

 
Agon Kiriyama Cup Play-off  see Japan-China Agon Kiriyama Cup Play-off

 
Aguilar, Fernando
“Toyota Cup Triumph, Aguilar’s” (game)   97: 42-44*

 
Aguilar, Fernando vs. Kim Kyung
WAGC 1980 (Round 1)   20: 12-13

 
Aguilar, Fernando vs. Kobashigawa, Sydney
WAGC 1982 (play-off for 5th place)   28: 36-37

 
Aguilar, Fernando vs. Liang Weitang
Fujitsu Cup 1989 (Round 1)   55: 17-18

 
Aguilar, Fernando vs. Lopez Herrero, Eduardo
South American Championship 1979   18: 34-36

 
Aguilar, Fernando vs. Yo Kagen
Toyota & Denso Cup 2002-03 (Round 2)   97: 42-44*

 
Ahan Tongshan Cup  see Agon Kiriyama Cup (China)

 
Ahn Cho-young  see An Cho-yeong

 
Aihara Kaseki (1698–17??)
biography   20: 63

 
Aihara Kaseki vs. Yara no Satonoshi
1710   20: 63-ibc

 
Aisin Cup  see Aixin Cup

 
Aixin Cup (Taiwan)
2009 (3rd): Chen Shiyuan wins (+ results)   120: 56
2010 (4th): Lin Zhihan wins (+ results)   124: 12
2011 (5th): Xiao Zhenghao wins   127: 21

 
Aji
see also Defects , Troublesome stones
“Go Proverbs That Are Always True. Part 4: Don’t Play Forcing Moves
     Unnecessarily” (Furuyama Kazunari)   77: 48-54
“Important Stones and Useless Stones” (Takagi Shoichi)   75: 57, 61-63
“Preserving Aji” (joseki analysis by Yo Kagen)   92: 44-45

 
Aji-keshi
“Aji-keshi: Erasing Potential” [4 parts] (Honda Kunihisa)   7 ;  8 ;  26 ;  27:  ...

 
Akagi Kazuo (1921–99)
center enclosure used as two-stone handicap strategy   5: 75-77
center enclosure used in even games   20: 41

 
Akagi Kazuo vs. Miyamoto Naoki
Kansai Ki-in Number One Position Tournament 1977   20: 41

 
Akiyama Jiro
NEC Shun’ei Tournament 2003, wins   98: 10

 
Akiyama Kenji
Cho U, interview with, after winning Meijin Title Match 2004   105: 47
Cho U, interview with, after winning Meijin Title Match 2005   107: 39
“Time is the Enemy” (essay)   13: 39*, 61
“A Twofold Victory” (essay)   10: 37, 63
“The World Her Stage: The Rui Naiwei Story”   90: 10-27*

 
Alberta Open
1978 report   7: 5

 
“All about the Pincer” (Takagawa Kaku)
Parts 1-7   5 – 11:  ...

 
“All About the Two-Step Hane” (Cho Chikun)
Parts 1-3   60: 55-60;  61: 53-59;  63: 56-63

 
All-China Amateur Championship
2000 report   88: 13
2002 report   95: 14

 
All-China Individual Championship
1979: note   16: 4
1981: Nie Weiping wins (+ report)   25: 4
1985: report   41: 3
1988: top place-getters in Men’s and Women’s Divisions   53: 63;  55: 64
1989: Wang Jianhong wins Men’s Division   56: 61
1989: Rui Naiwei wins Women’s Division   64: 50
1989: Rui vs. Hua Xueming   64: 50-51
1991: Ma Xiaochun wins Men’s Division   65: 7
1991: Yang Hui wins Women’s Division   65: 7
1995: Chang Hao defeats Yu Bin (final of Men’s Division)   75: 7-8
1998: Qiu Jun wins Men’s Division   84: 39;  85: 20
1998: Qiu Jun vs. Kong Jie   85: 20-21
1998: Zhou vs. Qiu Jun   84: 39-40
2002: Xie He wins Men’s Division   96: 74
2003: Kong Jie wins Men’s Division   100: 11
2005: Chen Yaoye wins Men’s Division   105: 11
2005: Wang Xiangyun wins Women’s Division   105: 11
2006: Wang Xi wins Men’s Division   109: 9
2006: Song Yonghui wins Women’s Division   109: 9-10
2007: top place-getters in Men’s and Women’s Divisions   113: 11
2008: top place-getters in Men’s Division   117: 12
2010: top place-getters in Men’s and Women’s Division   124: 11
2011: top place-getters in Men’s and Women’s Division   127: 9

 
All-China Intellectual Olympics
2009 (1st): report and go winners   121: 11
2011 (2nd): report and go winners   127: 10

 
All-China Ranking/Rating Tournament  see Chinese Rating Tournament

 
All-China Women’s Championship  see All-China Individual Championship

 
All-China Women’s Elite Tournament
2007 (3rd): Tang Yi wins   112: 9

 
All-Japan First Place Tournament
see also successor title Gosei
1973: Nakamura vs. Abe (joseki analysis)   15: 45-46
1975: Sakata vs. Kudo (fuseki only)   13: 46

 
All-Japan Tournament 1933
Go Seigen wins   35: 14-15

 
All-Japan Women’s Amateur Championship
1978 (20th): note   8: 3-4*

 
Almanacs  see The Go Player’s Almanac 2001

 
Alvarez, Juan Del Rio  see Rio Alvarez, Juan Del

 
Amari-gatachi  see Failed attack

 
Amashi (strategy)
explanation   27: 59

 
Amateur 8-dan diplomas
Nihon Ki-in institutes   89: 57

 
Amateur Best Ten Tournament (Japan)
1980 (20th): Kikuchi Yasuro wins (+ top places)   20: 4

 
Amateur Chinese Championship  see All-China Amateur Championship

 
Amateur Honinbo Tournament
2010 (56th): Honorary Amateur Honinbo titles awarded   123: 8

 
Amateur Honinbo vs. Professional Honinbo  see Profess.-Amateur Honinbo Play-off

 
Amateur-professional endgame  see Professional-amateur vs. pro-pro endgame

 
Amateur-professional post-game analysis
differences observed between   20: 43-44

 
Amateur-professional team matches  see Professional-amateur team matches

 
Amateur-professional tournaments  see Professional-amateur tournaments

 
Amateur tournaments  see non-East Asian tournaments as well as under Chinese ,
International , Japanese tournaments

 
Ambassadors  see Van Braam Houckgeest

 
American Go Association
“Calhoun, Barbara: America’s Ambassador of Go” (Wood)   53: 55-58*
“Ing Rules, The AGA and the” (letter to the editor by Straus and Laird)   75: 8-9

 
American Go Institute
“Chen, James and the American Go Institute” (Terry)   51: 16-22*
classes conducted by   48: 6

 
American professionals
see also individual professionals
Calhoun on (1988)   53: 57
first match (1988) between   52: 4

 
American tournaments  see U.S. Championship , U.S. Go Congress

 
Amsterdam Tournament
1978 note   8: 4
1979 report   14: 3
1980 announcement and report   17: 4;  20: 5*
1984 report (van Grieken)   35: 7
1987 report   49: 6

 
An Cho-yeong
10-dan Title Match 2007, wins   111: 8
BC Card Cup Title Match 2004, wins   101: 10
Chaigowi Title Match 1999, loses to Yi Ch’ang-ho in   85: 7
Myeongin Title Match 2002, loses to Yi Ch’ang-ho in   96: 40

 
An Cho-yeong vs. Yi Ch’ang-ho
Chaigowi Title Match 1999 (Game 2)   85: 7-8

 
Analects, The  (classic text)
Confucius’ passage on go (discussion)   37: 17-18*;  70: 57

 
Analysis
see also Counting , Reading , Tewari as well as Post-game analysis
“Correcting the Mistake” (Kato Masao)   16: 54-55

 
Ancient games
Carefree and Innocent Pleasures Collection, rengo game (1094) from
     67: 63-64;  71: 8
Japanese, oldest (1253)   7: ibc, 53
Tang and Sung Dynasties, from   71: 8-12

 
Ancient masters
“Go Grades and Early Masters” (Fairbairn)   65: 58-64, 56

 
Ancient Phoenix City World Summit  see World Summit Play-off

 
Ando Akio vs. Kerwin, James
Oteai 1978   8: 32-33, 44

 
Ando Kazushige
marries Nakajima Mieko   115: 8

 
Ando Takeo
retires   90: 27

 
“Annals of Handicap Go: Sekiyama vs. Miki” (Miki Masa)
Parts 1-3   11: 45-50;  12: 50-55;  13: 49-54

 
Annual promotions  see Promotions

 
Annual reviews
see also Chronologies , Korean prizes
1964, Sakata Eio’s outstanding performance in   52: 54-56
1978 prizes and statistics   12: 2-4*
1979 prizes and statistics   18: 3-5*
1980 prizes and statistics   23: 4-5
1981 prizes and statistics   27: 4-5*
“1982 Tournament Go”   32: 2-3*
“1983 Tournament Go”   35: 2-4*
“1984 Tournament Go”   39: 2-3*
“1985 Tournament Go”   43: 2-3*
1986 Kido Prizes   47: 5
1986 Oteai prize winners   50: 51
“1989 in Statistics”   58: 66-67 c
“1990: Prizes and Statistics”   63: 29-30*
“1990, Tournament Go”   63: 31-40*
“1991 in Review”   67: 7-9 c
1996 prizes and statistics   79: 10-11
“1996-97, A Year of Korean Go: Results of the Major Tournaments”   80: 5-7
1999 prizes and statistics   88: 14, 54
2001 prizes and statistics   94: 10-12
2002 prizes and statistics   97: 48, 55-56
2003 prizes and statistics   100: 11, 13
2004 prizes and statistics   103: 10
2005 prizes and statistics   107: 10-11*
2006 prizes and statistics   110: 10
2007 prizes and statistics   114: 10-11
2008 prizes and statistics   118: 11, 63
2009 prizes and statistics   121: 8-9
2010 most wins   122: 9;  123: 8;  124: 9;  125: 9
2010 prizes and statistics   125: 9-10
2011 prizes and statistics   128: 10-11

 
Answers to problems  see individual problems

 
Anthologies  see Carefree and Innocent Pleasures Collection

 
Aoki Kikuyo
8-dan promotion   90: 9
“Promotion Game, Aoki Kikuyo’s”   93: 45
Shinjin-O Title Match 1997, loses to Yamada Kimio in   81: 4
Women’s Kakusei Tournament 1991, wins   65: 7
Women’s Kakusei Tournament 2000, wins   90: 9
Women’s Kisei Title Match 2012, wins   128: 6*, 7
Women’s Kisei Tournament 2011, wins   127: 7
Women’s Meijin Title Match 2000, defeats Kobayashi Izumi in   88: 8
Women’s Meijin Title Match 2001, loses to Kobayashi Izumi in   91: 9*
Women’s Meijin Title Match 2002, defeats Kobayashi Izumi in   94: 9
Women’s Meijin Title Match 2006, wins   107: 7*
Women’s Meijin Tournament 1989-90, wins   58: 7
Women’s Strongest Player Title 2001, wins   94: 8

 
Aoki Kikuyo vs. Koyama Hideo
Oteai 2000   93: 45

 
Aoki Kikuyo + Mimura Tomoyasu
Ricoh Cup 2005, win   104: 8

 
Aoki Kikuyo and Nakamura Chikako
“Joseki Selection and Whole-Board Judgement”. Parts 1-3 (problems)   119: 59-62;
     120: 57-60;  122: 58-60

 
Aoki Shinichi
appointed as Cultural Exchange Ambassador   120: 9

 
Apprentice professionals  see Inseis

 
Approach moves
see also 3-3 point , 3-4 point , 4-4 point , 5-3 point , 5-4 point joseki
as well as Double-approach moves
Chinese fuseki, unorthodox variations in   14: 33-34
“Efficiency”. Part 4 (Ishida Yoshio)   67: 42-46
sanrensei, unorthodox variations in   12: 38-39
“Simple Fuseki Theory” (Honda Sachiko)   49: 41-45*

 
Aragaki Takeshi
“Fuseki Problems”   68: 58-59, 60-64

 
Argentine Championship
1980 report   22: 4

 
Aroutcheff, Pierre vs. Choi Gun-ho
WAGC 1983 (play-off for 11th place)   33: 45-46

 
“Art of Sacrifice, The”
[2 parts] (fighting games)   11: 40;  16: 12-16

 
“Art of Shinogi, The”
(problems)   89: 47-51

 
Arts
see also individual artists and topics
and Calligraphy , Music
as well as Four Accomplishments
go designs in various   54: 16-17*

 
Asada Shizuo (1910–96)
death of   78: 4

 
Asakura Shugo (Edo-period rebel)
untitled print (cover note)   35: 1

 
Asia Air Lines Cup (Japanese title)
1979: Sakata Eio wins   12: 6

 
Asian Games 2010 (16th)
Chinese go representatives   123: 10
report (+ results)   124: 2-4
top performances   125: 14
acupuncture   125: 16
Malaysian team   125: 24
Round 5: Gu Li vs. Yamashita Keigo   125: 19-24*
Round 6: Yi Se-tol vs. Iyama Yuta   125: 14-16;  126: 55
Round 6: Yamashita Keigo vs. Yi Ch’ang-ho   125: 16-19
Gold Medal play-off: Gu Li vs. Yi Ch’ang-ho   125: 25-29

 
Associations
historic  see Hoensha , Igo Shinsha
international (lists of 1977-78)   1 ... 9:  ...
modern  see American Go Association , British Go Association ,
     Canadian Go Association , Chinese Weiqi Association , Hanguk Kiweon ,
     Kansai Ki-in , Nihon Ki-in , Philippine Weiqi Association ,
     Yugoslav Go Association

 
Astronomers  see Shibukawa Harumi

 
Atari
“Forcing Moves” (problems and examples by Sakai and Davies)   20: 58-61
“Go Proverbs That Are Always True. Part 3: Don’t Atari Unnecessarily!”
     (problems by Furuyama Kazunari)   76: 46-56
hints for knowing when to   76: 47
problem   100: 65, 67
“Tesuji Problems”. Part 1   96: 77-78, 80

 
Atekomi
“Basic Fighting Techniques” (problems and example by Miyazawa Goro)
     34: 47, 50-52
“Tesuji Problems”. Part 2   97: 61-64
“Tesujis for a Brighter Future”. Part 6 (problems and examples)   109: 61-64

 
Atomic-bomb game
history of   49: 20-21*
Iwamoto Kaoru reminisces about   74: 32

 
Atsumi  see Thickness

 
Attach-and-block (4-4 point joseki)
atari problem   76: 47, 48-49
“An Introduction to Basic Josekis”. Part 7   88: 44-47
“Original Handicap Strategy” (Miyamoto Naoki)   4: 48-50
stepping back to defend corner (example)   69: 53-54

 
Attach-and-cut (3-4 point joseki)
problem   122: 58, 59

 
Attach-and-cut (4-4 point joseki)
“Match the Joseki to the Fuseki” (Sekiyama Toshio)   5: 51-57

 
Attach-and-draw back (3-4 point joseki)
“The Great Joseki Debate” (Honda Kunihisa)   20: 49-53
“An Introduction to Basic Josekis”. Part 1   82: 50-52
peep, role of   66: 54-55
playing twice on one side (discussion)   64: 59
relation to fuseki (discussion)   64: 56
sacrifice variation   112: 54
shicho problem of invasion after joseki   65: 44, 46-47

 
Attach-and-extend (4-4 point joseki)
calculation of bad follow-up moves (problem)   48: 42, 46-47
calculation of bad variation (problem)   45: 41, 47-48
inefficiency as even-game joseki (explanation)   63: 53
“An Introduction to Basic Josekis”. Part 7   88: 44-45
“Match the Joseki to the Fuseki” (Sekiyama Toshio)   4: 39-44
“Practical Tactics and Tesuji” (Rin Kaiho)   14: 42-43
pushing through and cutting (problem)   61: 53, 59
tewari analysis   59: 60-61, 65-66
trick moves (problems)   21: 39, 40;  36: 63, 64

 
Attach-and-extend (technique)
problem from actual game   100: 75, 83-85*

 
Attachment
see also Attach-and ... , Kosumi-tsuke , Nose attachment
“Basic Fighting Techniques” (problems and examples by Miyazawa Goro)
     20: 37-40*
problem from actual game   100: 75, 80-82*
rescuing a group (problem)   103: 63, 64
stronger stone (discussion), towards   64: 52-53
“Tesujis for a Brighter Future”. Part 2 (problems and examples)   105: 58-61

 
Attacking
see also Leaning , Triple and Failed attack as well as Aggressiveness
“Attacking is the best means of defence” (proverb)   73: 58-59, 61
forestalling, by proper move (analysis)   122: 63-64
Takagi Shoichi plays brilliant move   24: 5, 6
a wall (example)   121: 55, 63-64

 
Auckland Eight Best League
1977 note   7: 5

 
Australia-New Zealand Team Match
1983 report   32: 6
1985 report   41: 4

 
Australian Championship
1979 report   15: 5
1980 report   21: 3
1981 note   25: 5
1982 report   29: 3-4
1983 report (Leveritt)   32: 6
1984 announcement and report   34: 4;  36: 4-5
1985 report   41: 4

 
Austria-Yugoslavia Team Match
1986 report   44: 5

 
Austrian Championship
1979 note   14: 4

 
Authors (professional)  see Ezaki Masanori , Kawabata Yasunari

 
Autobiographies
“A Go-Player’s Life”. Part 1 (Iwamoto Kaoru)   47: 32-36*
“Sakata Eio and Go, The Magnificent Obsession: ”. Parts 1 & 2 (Terry)
     50: 54-77* c;  52: 43-68*
“Takagawa Kaku, A Champion for All Seasons: ” (Terry)   41: 12-27*

 
Automated tournaments  see under Online tournaments

 
Avalanche (3-4 point joseki)
see also Large , Small avalanche
“The Great Joseki Debate” (Honda Kunihisa)   23: 47-52
“The Origin of the Avalanche Joseki” (Fujisawa Shuko)   34: 55-61

 
Awaji Shuzo
9-dan promotion   35: 6
900 wins, reaches   120: 8
1980s, performance in early   35: 38
biographical details   19: 19*;  34: 12, 17*
biography and personality   31: 4*, 5;  58: 39*, 41
Gosei Tournament 1983, wins   31: 4
Honinbo League 1983-84, wins   34: 2, 3
Honinbo Title Match 1984, loses to Rin Kaiho in   35: 5;  38: 32*
Meijin Title Match 1989, loses to Kobayashi Koichi in   56: 6-7*;  57: 3*;  59: 23*
Prime Minister’s Cup 1981, wins   25: 4
Prime Minister’s Cup award ceremony (1981)   34: 13*
Shin’ei Tournament 1980, wins   20: 4

 
Awaji Shuzo vs. Cao Dayuan
Japan-China Go Exchange 1985 (Round 5)   42: 17-18*

 
Awaji Shuzo vs. Cho Chikun
Meijin League 1993-94 (joseki analysis)   76: 43-45

 
Awaji Shuzo vs. Hikosaka Naoto
Tengen Tournament 1983 (play-off)   35: 38

 
Awaji Shuzo vs. Jiang Zhujiu
NEC Japan-China Super Go Series 1985   42: 6-10*

 
Awaji Shuzo vs. Kataoka Satoshi
Tengen Title Match 1983 (Games 1-4)   35: 38-41;  36: 21-30* c

 
Awaji Shuzo vs. Kiyonari Tetsuya
Kisei Tournament 1982-83 (Stage Two, final)   36: 33-34

 
Awaji Shuzo vs. Kobayashi Koichi
Meijin Title Match 1989 (Games 1-5)   58: 40-50*;  59: 23-38* c

 
Awaji Shuzo vs. Otake Hideo
Gosei Title Match 1983 (Games 1-5)   34: 12-30* c

 
Awaji Shuzo vs. Rin Kaiho
Honinbo Title Match 1984 (Games 1-5)   38: 15-32*
Meijin League 1990-91   67: 30-32 c

 
Awaji Shuzo vs. Sato Masaharu
Kisei Tournament 1978-79 (Stage One, 7-dan final)   19: 18-20

 
Awaji Shuzo vs. Shao Weigang
Nong Shim Cup 2001-02 (Beijing Round)   94: 28-29*

 
Awards  see Prizes

 
Axioms  see Principles

 B