S

T

Taka | Take | Te | Ten | Ter | Th | Ti | To | Top | Tr | Ts | Tw

Tadamasa (artist)
Kumedera Danjo in Kenuki  (oban print, cover note)   116: 1

 
Tadanobu (samurai)  see Sato Tadanobu

 
Taewang Title (Korea)  see Daewang

 
Tagami Peichin vs. Shunseki Inseki
1748 (3 stones)   21: 63-ibc, 60

 
Taisha (5-3 point joseki)
“New Joseki” (Abe Yoshiteru)   13: 58-59
problem   119: 59, 60
side, variations along the   16: 48
tewari analysis of variation of   59: 66-67
“Trick Moves, Three” (problems by Abe Yoshiteru)   48: 42, 44-45

 
Taiwan-Japan Goodwill Tour  see Japan-Taiwan Goodwill Tour

 
Taiwan-Japan New Stars Tournament  see Japan-Taiwan Young Stars Tournament

 
Taiwan-Japan Young Stars Tournament  see Japan-Taiwan Young Stars Tournament

 
Taiwan Qiyuan Cup
see also successor title Wangzuo
2004-05 (4th): Zhou Junxun wins (+ results)   104: 12

 
Taiwanese go
1978 report on local scene (Potter)   6: 23, 56
“Professional Go Begins in Taiwan”   14: 37-40

 
Taiwanese professionals
see also individual professionals
first encounter with Chinese mainland professional   53: 6
first three players become professional (1979)   14: 37
Japanese tournaments dominated in 2000/2001 by   92: 8

 
Taiwanese rules of go  see Ing rules

 
Taiwanese tournaments
discontinued  see Taiwan Qiyuan Cup
lightning  see Aixin Cup
major  see Mingren , Tianyuan
minor  see 10-dan , Donggang Cup , Guoshou , Haifeng Cup , Lizhao Cup ,
     Mojie Cup , Qisheng , Qiwang Cup , Siyuan Cup , Wangzuo , Zhonghuan Cup
TV  see CMC Cup

 
Takabe Dohei (1882–1951)
biographical details   47: 35-36
China visit (1912)   29: 59

 
Takabe Dohei vs. Chang Lo-san
1912 (2 stones)   29: 59-60, 61

 
Takadanobaba Go Club
“The Takadanobaba Go Club” (Wood)   32: 7*

 
Takagawa Kaku (22nd Honinbo)  (1915–86)
career data   41: 13
“A Champion for All Seasons: Takagawa Kaku” (Terry)   41: 12-27*
death of   46: 5*
film about, wins prize (1977)   5: 6-7
on Honinbo Title Match 1961   52: 70
“How Many Moves Ahead Is It Possible to Read?” (essay)   41: 30-33
“Improvement: Random Notes” (essay)   42: 22-25*
“Pincer, All about the”. Parts 1-7   5 – 11:  ...
retires   34: 4
on Sakata Eio   52: 70-71
Sakata Eio about   52: 45
Sakata Eio, rivalry with   41: 24-25
“Takagawa’s Artistry with Thickness” (essay by Ishida Yoshio)   41: 27-30
“Tewari: How to Analyse the Efficiency of Your Stones”   59: 59-68
thickness (game analysis), value of   41: 21-23

 
Takagawa Kaku vs. Fujisawa Hosai
Honinbo Title Match 1957 (Game 3)   41: 19
Judan Title Match 1965 (Game 4)   41: 25

 
Takagawa Kaku vs. Go Seigen
three-game match 1955 (Game 1)   36: 13-14
three-game match 1959 (Game 2 & fuseki of Game 3)   41: 20;  87: 64

 
Takagawa Kaku vs. Hashimoto Utaro
Honinbo Title Match 1952 (Game 3)   41: 16

 
Takagawa Kaku vs. Kato Masao
Honinbo League 1969-70 (fuseki analysis)   8: 36-37
Meijin Preliminary Tournament 1974 (fuseki analysis)   10: 40-41

 
Takagawa Kaku vs. Kobayashi Reiko
Pro Best Ten Tournament 1970-71   77: 7-8

 
Takagawa Kaku vs. Rin Kaiho
Meijin Title Match 1968 (Game 3)   41: 26

 
Takagawa Kaku vs. Sakata Eio
Honinbo League 1952 (play-off)   41: 15
Honinbo Title Match 1961 (Game 5)   52: 45-46
Honinbo Title Match 1963 (fuseki position of Game 2)   52: 72
Honinbo Title Match 1963 (fuseki analysis of Game 6)   6: 38-40
Honinbo Title Match 1964 (fuseki position of Game 1)   52: 71-72
Japan’s Strongest Player League 1958-59 (fuseki and middle game, no komi)
     41: 21-23
Pro Best Ten Title Match 1964 (Game 1)   52: 56-57

 
Takagawa Kaku vs. Shimamura Toshihiro
Honinbo Title Match 1956 (endgame analysis of Game 5)   41: 31-33

 
Takagawa Kaku vs. Shusai
1925 (9 stones, fuseki & final position only)   41: 12-13

 
Takagawa Kaku vs. Sugiuchi Masao
Honinbo Title Match 1954 (Game 5)   41: 17-18

 
Takagi Shoichi
brilliant attacking move by   24: 5, 6
contact fight, three basic patterns of   72: 58
hallucinates in ladder sequence   24: 5
“Important Stones and Useless Stones” [4 parts]   72 – 75:  ...
“Life and Death Problem”   40: 33, 55
world’s top ten players, discussion about   45: 37-39*

 
Takagi Shoichi vs. Cho Chikun
Honinbo Preliminary Tournament 1978   11: 40

 
Takahashi Hideo vs. Han Zenki
Shinjin-O Tournament 1999 (?) (tesuji analysis)   123: 62-63;  128: 64

 
Takahashi Hideo vs. Weon Seong-chin
1998 (joseki analysis)   101: 46

 
Takahashi Yukiko vs. Ito Shigeko
date unknown   64: 43

 
Takama ? vs. Ota Seido
endgame exercise   10: 45-48

 
Takamoku joseki  see 5-4 point joseki

 
Takao Shinji
see also Honinbo Shushin
9-dan promotion   105: 6
The 21st Century Dictionary of Basic Joseki (announcement)   123: 10
600 wins, reaches   107: 8
700 wins, reaches   118: 9
800 wins, reaches   128: 9
2003 performance   97: 9-10
2007 performance   112: 25
age and performance   109: 12*
Cho U, rivalry with   128: 41
Daiwa Securities Cup Net Igo Open 2006, wins   109: 8
Daiwa Securities Cup Net Igo Open 2007, wins   114: 7
Daiwa Securities Grand Champion Tournament 2010, wins   122: 8
disciple of Fujisawa Shuko   106: 50*;  119: 10-11
“The Gateway to a Professional Career” (game)   63: 46-47*, 48-51
Honinbo League 2004-05, wins   104: 7-8*
Honinbo League 2008-09, wins   118: 7
Honinbo League 2010-11, wins   123: 5
Honinbo Title Match 2005, defeats Cho U in   104: 8;  105: 5-6*
Honinbo Title Match 2006, defeats Yamada Kimio in   108: 5-6*
Honinbo Title Match 2007, defeats Yoda Norimoto in   112: 5*
Honinbo Title Match 2008, loses to Hane Naoki in   115: 6-7*;  116: 4-5* c;
     117: 49-50*
Honinbo Title Match 2009, loses to Hane Naoki in   119: 6;  120: 3-4
Judan Title Match 2003, loses to O Rissei in   98: 7-8*
Judan Title Match 2008, wins   115: 6*
Judan Tournament 2002-03, wins   97: 10
Judan Tournament 2007-08, wins   114: 5
Kisei Leagues 2011 play-off, wins   127: 4, 5
Kisei Title Match 2012, loses to Cho U in   128: 6, 63*
Meijin League 2005-06, wins   109: 5-6*
Meijin Title Match 2006, defeats Cho U in   109: 6*
Meijin Title Match 2007, loses to Cho U in   113: 6*
Meijin Title Match 2010, loses to Iyama Yuta in   123: 6*;  126: 55
NEC Cup 2012, wins   128: 7
rivalries  see subentry Cho U
Ryusei Tournament 2004, wins   103: 7
Shin’ei Tournament 2003, wins   97: 10;  98: 10
Shusai Prize 2005, wins   107: 10
Shusai Prize 2006, wins   111: 6
on Yoda Norimoto   112: 25

 
Takao Shinji vs. Cho Chikun
Judan Title Match 2008 (Game 2)   115: 6*, 46-47

 
Takao Shinji vs. Cho U
Honinbo Title Match 2005 (Games 1-5)   106: 40-59*
Kisei Title Match 2012 (Games 1-7)   128: 41-63*
Meijin Title Match 2006 (Games 1-6)   110: 11-49*
Meijin Title Match 2007 (Games 1-7)   114: 12-33*;  115: 10, 12-30*

 
Takao Shinji vs. Hane Naoki
Honinbo Title Match 2008 (Games 1-7)   115: 7*;  116: 5*, 30-36, 38-47;
     117: 25-49*
Honinbo Title Match 2009 (Games 1-6)   120: 12-45*

 
Takao Shinji vs. Iyama Yuta
Meijin Title Match 2010 (Games 1-4)   124: 37-60* c

 
Takao Shinji vs. Kino Kazuma
Professional Qualifying Tournament 1990   63: 46-47, 48-51

 
Takao Shinji vs. Ogata Masaki
Fujisawa Shuko’s Winter Training Camp 1991   66: 48

 
Takao Shinji vs. Pak Yeong-hun
Nong Shim Cup 2006-07 (Pusan Round)   111: 30-32

 
Takao Shinji vs. Yamada Kimio
Honinbo Title Match 2006 (Games 1-6)   109: 12-45* c
Honinbo Title Match 2006 (Game 2, sacrifice analysis)   118: 62-63

 
Takao Shinji vs. Yoda Norimoto
Honinbo Title Match 2007 (Games 1-5)   112: 24-45*;  113: 12-18*

 
Takeda Itsuko (1875–1935)
biography   64: 46

 
Takeda Itsuko vs. Tsuzuki Yoneko
Onna Kikaku Oteai 1907   64: 47

 
Takehara Kintaro
“Encounter with a Go Devil” (essay by Nakayama Noriyuki)   50: 39-40

 
Takehara Kintaro vs. Nakayama Noriyuki
1950s (3 stones, fuseki only)   50: 39

 
Takemiya Masaki
9-dan promotion   5: 40
1,000 wins, reaches   107: 8
“Advanced Tesuji Problems”   11: 61-62
backgammon tournament (2005), wins   106: 6
biographical details   21: 15*;  40: 9
calligraphy by   46: 37*
Cho Chikun, rivalry with   40: 9;  57: 20
“Cosmic Go, Takemiya’s” (game)   28: 48-49
forfeits Game 1 of Oza Title Match 1988   54: 4
forgetfulness of   121: 46
Fujitsu Cup Final 1988, defeats Rin Kaiho in   53: 2, 5*;  54: 7*
Fujitsu Cup Final 1989, defeats Rin Kaiho in   56: 1 c, 3-4*, 10
fuseki strategy  see subentries yonrensei
Gosei League 1977, wins   2: 2
hallucinates ladder   29: 61
Haya-go Championship 1978, wins   10: 44
Honinbo League 1979-80, wins   19: 2
Honinbo League 1984-85, wins   39: 5
Honinbo Title Match 1980, defeats Kato Masao in   19: 2;  20: ifc*, 2*
Honinbo Title Match 1985, defeats Rin Kaiho in   39: 5;  42: 45*
Honinbo Title Match 1986, defeats Yamashiro Hiroshi in   44: 2*;  45: 26;
     46: 22, 36-38*
Honinbo Title Match 1987, defeats Yamashiro Hiroshi in   48: 2;  49: 2*;  51: 47*
Honinbo Title Match 1988, defeats Otake Hideo in   52: 2*;  54: 37*
Honinbo Title Match 1989, loses to Cho Chikun in   55: 4-6*;  57: 20*
Ing Champion vs. Fujitsu Champion Match 1990, wins   58: 3;  60: 1*
Judan Title Match 1986, loses to Kobayashi Koichi in   42: 3;  43: 3;  45: 18*
Judan Title Match 1990, defeats Cho Chikun in   58: 5-6;  59: 4-5*
Judan Title Match 1991, defeats Cho Chikun in   63: 6;  65: 16
Judan Title Match 1992, defeats Kobayashi Koichi in   67: 5-6
Judan Title Match 2002, loses to O Rissei in   94: 9;  95: 8, 9*
Judan Tournament 1986, wins   42: 3;  45: 6*
Judan Tournament 2001-02, wins   94: 9
Kakusei Title 1991, wins   63: 8
Kisei Title Match 1985, loses to Cho Chikun in   38: 2;  40: 6*, 29-30*
Kisei Title Match 1987, loses to Kobayashi Koichi in   47: 2;  49: 8, 33*
Kisei Title Match 1989, loses to Kobayashi Koichi in   55: 4*;  56: 1*, 30*
Kisei Tournament 1988 play-off, defeats Cho Chikun in   54: 4
“Kitani trio” (1988), as one of   53: 20*
Kobayashi Koichi, rivalry with   45: 6;  49: 9;  54: 4;  56: 30-32*
Meijin League 1994-95, wins   74: 2-3*
Meijin Title Match 1995, defeats Kobayashi Koichi in   75: 11, 38*
Meijin Title Match 1996, loses to Cho Chikun in   78: 23*
Otake Hideo, rivalry with   54: 37*
Oza Title Match 1988, loses to Kato Masao in   54: 3-4
Oza Tournament 1988, wins   53: 4
rivalries  see subentries Cho , Kobayashi , Otake
slowest-move record in Honinbo Title Match 1988 (Game 5)   52: 2;  54: 54
style of   54: 37*;  see also cosmic
“Takemiya: A Player with Heart” (games)   91: 40-42
TV Asia Tournament 1989, wins   56: 4
TV Asia Tournament 1990, wins   61: 3
TV Asia Tournament 1991, wins   67: 38
TV Asia Tournament 1992, wins   68: 3-4*
TV titles (1989), wins three   57: 3
winning streak (2005)   106: 6
yonrensei strategy of (examples)   11: 35-36
“Yonren-sei, This is the Takemiya”   51: 48-53 c

 
Takemiya Masaki vs. Cao Dayuan
TV Asia Tournament Final 1991   67: 38-39

 
Takemiya Masaki vs. Chang Hao
Nong Shim Cup 2000-01 (Seoul Round)   91: 41-42

 
Takemiya Masaki vs. Cho Chikun
Honinbo Title Match 1981 (Games 1-6)   25: 48-59*;  26: 6-12
Honinbo Title Match 1989 (Games 1-4)   57: 21-31* c
Judan Title Match 1990 (Games 1 & 2)   59: 42;  60: 61, 67
Judan Title Match 1991 (Games 1-5)   65: 16-17;  68: 8-17*
Judan Title Match 1991 (tesuji problem of Game 3)   98: 44, 46
Kisei Title Match 1985 (Games 1-7)   40: 6-30*
Meijin Title Match 1996 (Games 1-6)   78: 24-35*;  79: 29-40

 
Takemiya Masaki vs. Cho Hun-hyeon
Ing Champion vs. Fujitsu Champion Match 1990 (Games 1 & 2)   60: 20-29 c, 67
Jinro Cup 1992-93   69: 38-39*
Jinro Cup 1993-94 (joseki analysis)   76: 41-42

 
Takemiya Masaki vs. Fujisawa Shuko
Kisei Tournament 1976 (tesuji problem)   99: 45, 47
Meijin League 1990-91   67: 35-38 c

 
Takemiya Masaki vs. Honda Kunihisa
Meijin League 1981-82   28: 48-49

 
Takemiya Masaki vs. Ishida Yoshio
Honinbo Title Match 1974 (fuseki analysis of Game 2)   12: 39-40
IBM Haya-go Open Tournament 1988 (final)   54: 25-27
Meijin League 1988-89 (analysis of timing mistake)   58: 67-68

 
Takemiya Masaki vs. Iwamoto Kaoru
Oza Tournament 1977   2: 19-23

 
Takemiya Masaki vs. Jiang Zhujiu
Ing Cup 1988 (Round 1)   53: 26-27

 
Takemiya Masaki vs. Kato Masao
Gosei Title Match 1977 (Games 1-3)   3: 23-27*;  4: 6-11
Honinbo Title Match 1977 (Games 1-5)   3: 19-22*;  4: 11-35*
Honinbo Title Match 1980 (Games 1-5)   21: ifc*, 16-28*

 
Takemiya Masaki vs. Kobayashi Koichi
Fujitsu Cup 1988 (semifinal)   53: 13-15
Judan Title Match 1992 (proper move analysis of Game 3)   126: 60
Kisei Title Match 1987 (Games 1-5)   49: 9*, 10-34*;  100: 83
Kisei Title Match 1989 (Games 1-5)   56: 32-55*
Meijin Title Match 1995 (Games 1-5)   75: 11-40*

 
Takemiya Masaki vs. Kono Takashi
? (proper move analysis)   120: 63-64;  126: 55

 
Takemiya Masaki vs. Ma Xiaochun
Fujitsu Cup 1988 (Round 2)   52: 7-9
Fujitsu Cup 1991 (Round 1)   64: 8-11*

 
Takemiya Masaki vs. Miyamoto Naoki
Tengen Preliminary Tournament 1980   25: 16-25

 
Takemiya Masaki vs. Mok Chin-seok
Nong Shim Cup 2000-01 (Seoul Round)   91: 40-41

 
Takemiya Masaki vs. Nakazono Seizo
Professional-Amateur Honinbo Play-off 1985 (reverse komi)   44: 39-40

 
Takemiya Masaki vs. Nie Weiping
1979 (TV game)   17: 15-18
NEC Japan-China Super Go Series 1986-87   50: 13-15*

 
Takemiya Masaki vs. O Rissei
Judan Title Match 2002 (Games 1-5)   96: 18-40*
Oza Tournament 1982 (ladder analysis)   29: 61

 
Takemiya Masaki vs. Otake Hideo
Honinbo Title Match 1988 (Games 1-7)   54: 38-64* c;  55: 64

 
Takemiya Masaki vs. Redmond, Michael
Gosei Tournament 1988   55: 44-45*, 47-49

 
Takemiya Masaki vs. Rin Kaiho
Fujitsu Cup Final 1988   54: 7-12*
Fujitsu Cup Final 1989   56: 13-18*
Honinbo League 1979-80   21: 14-15
Honinbo Title Match 1985 (Games 1-5)   42: 26-45*
Meijin League 1990-91   67: 22-24 c

 
Takemiya Masaki vs. Yamashiro Hiroshi
Honinbo Title Match 1986 (Games 1-5)   45: 26-35*;  46: 22-37*
Honinbo Title Match 1987 (Games 1-4)   51: 53-66*

 
Takemiya Masaki vs. Yang Hui
Fujitsu Cup 1993 (Round 1)   71: 35-37*

 
Takemiya Masaki vs. Yi Ch’ang-ho
Fujitsu Cup 1990 (Round 2)   60: 8-13*
Japan-China-Korea Meijin Tournament 1996   76: 5-6*

 
Tale of a Noble Guardman, The (theater play)
cover note   108: 1

 
Tale of Genji, The  see Genji Monogatari

 
“Tales of Men Crazy about Go” (Nakayama Noriyuki)
(essays)   50: 32-40* c;  51: 66

 
Tale of the Grand Minister Kibi in China, The (kabuki theater play)
cover note   122: 1

 
Tamura Hoju  see also his later name Shusai

 
Tamura Hoju vs. Iwasaki Kenzo
1889 & 1890 (2 stones, two games)   32: 64
1896   32: 63-64

 
Tan Xiao
Qiwang Title Match 2011, wins   127: 9

 
Tang dynasty (618–907)
Four Accomplishments in   53: 60
game from   71: 10-11
legend from Illustrated Narrative of Grand Minister Kibi’s Entrance into Tang
     47: 6-7
poem by Du Fu   61: 43
poem by Du Mu and its interpretation   65: 61-62
poem by Po Chü-i   64: 1
woman playing go (cover note)   29: 1

 
Tang Yi
All-China Women’s Elite Tournament 2007, wins   112: 9
Queen of the New Stars Title Match 2009, wins   119: 9

 
Tang Yi + Liu Xing
Ricoh Cup 2009, win   119: 9

 
Tanida Harumi vs. Tanigawa ?
endgame exercise   8: 57-61

 
Tanida Harumi vs. Yamazaki Yoshihiro
endgame exercise   8: 57-61

 
Tanigawa ? vs. Tanida Harumi
endgame exercise   8: 57-61

 
Tanimiya Ayako vs. Shinkai Hiroko
Oteai 1983   34: 11

 
Tanimiya Teiji
tesuji problem by   35: 46, 50-51

 
Taranu, Catalin
5-dan promotion   92: 8
professional (1997), becomes   79: 9

 
“Taste for Thickness, A” (Kudo Norio)
Parts 1-6   69: 53-57;  70: 38-43;  71: 57-62

 
Tasuki-komoku fuseki
introduction to   7: 44-45

 
Te-domari (last big move)
“The Advantage of Playing Last” (Davies)   12: 56-57

 
Teaching
see also Institutes , Workshops and camps and Disciples as well as Studying
Cho Chikun’s, of Japanese inseis   63: 64
Fujisawa Shuko’s study groups   119: 10
Kiseido Go Server feature for   98: 42
Smart Go Board program as teaching application   42: 64
Yang Yilun’s activities in the U.S.   51: 16*, 17, 21-22*, 23*
Yi Se-tol on, in Korea, China and Japan   124: 34-35

 
Team matches
see Australia-New Zealand Team Match ,
Austria-Yugoslavia Team Match ,
Big Three vs. promising three women team match (Korea) ,
Britain-USSR Telephone Match ,
China-Korea Team Match ,
Chinese women’s team match ,
Copenhagen-Stockholm Team Match ,
East-West Team Match (Osaka vs. Tokyo) ,
GG Auction Cup ,
IBM Cup ,
Japan-Britain Telex Match ,
Japan-China Cyberspace “5x5” Team Match ,
Japan-China Go Exchange ,
Japan-China School Team Match ,
Japan-China TV Match ,
Japan-Korea mini-tour ,
Japan-Korea New Stars Goodwill Series ,
NEC Japan-China Super Go Series ,
Nihon Ki-in vs. Kiseisha Team Match ,
Shaoshang Real Estate China-Korea Match

 
Team tournaments
see also British Schools Team Ch’ship ,
Cheongkwanjang Cup (from 3rd Cup),
Chinese Team Leagues ,
Cologne Team Tournament ,
CSK Cup ,
Donau Cup ,
European Team Ch’ship ,
Huading Tea Industries Cup ,
Huang Longshi Jiayuan/Shuangdeng Cup ,
Igo Asia Cup ,
International German Team Championship ,
International New Stars Tournament ,
Jinro Cup ,
Kirin Cup ,
Nong Shim Cup ,
North–South Team Tournament ,
SBS Cup ,
Yugoslav Team Championship
most team titles won  see International tournaments
Asian Games 2010 team competitions (results)   124: 2-4

 
Technique  see Shape and technique

 
Techron Cup  see Tekron Cup

 
Teda Cup 2004
Yi Ch’ang-ho wins   102: 3;  103: 11
final game   102: 36-37

 
Tei Meiki
“From Amateur to Professional” (Tomita Tadao)   21: 50-55

 
Tei Meiki vs. Anonymous
Professional Qualifying Tournament 1980 (preliminary tournament)   21: 55

 
Tei Meiki vs. Tomita Tadao
1978 (4 stones)   21: 50-52
1979 (3 stones)   21: 52-55

 
Tei Meiko
“From Amateur to Professional” (Tomita Tadao)   20: 42-46
“Life-and-Death Problems, Three”   72: 11, 24

 
Tei Meiko vs. Anonymous
Kisei Tournament 1979-80 (Stage One)   20: 46

 
Tei Meiko vs. Tomita Tadao
1977 (3 stones)   20: 42-44
1978 (2 stones)   20: 44-45

 
Tekron Cup
see also later name LG Petroleum Cup
format, prize money, 1996 winner   80: 5, 11
1997 (2nd): Wu Songshen vs. Yu Ch’ang-hyeok (Round 1, middle-game analysis)
     80: 8, 12-13
1997 (2nd): semifinal winners   80: 4

 
Tekron Cup Final
1997 (2nd): Yi Ch’ang-ho defeats Ch’oe Myeong-hun (+ Game 3)   81: 5, 38-39

 
Telephone tournaments  see Britain-USSR Telephone Match

 
Television tournaments  see TV tournaments

 
Telex tournaments  see Japan-Britain Telex Match

 
“Temple of the Golden Pavilion, The” (kabuki theater play)
cover notes   118: 1;  126: 1
cover story by Pinckard   55: 7

 
“Tempo Top Four” group  see Ito Showa , Ota Yuzo , Sanchi (Yasui)

 
Ten-dan (title)
Japanese  see Judan
Korean  see 10-dan
Taiwanese  see 10-dan

 
Ten-game matches  see Jubango

 
Ten Strongest Players Tournament (China)
1989 (3rd): Nie Weiping wins   58: 8
1991 (5th): Nie Weiping wins   67: 49, 64

 
Ten-thousand-year ko  see Thousand-year ko

 
Tengen (center point)
see also Center
Go Seigen’s mimic go (game)   35: 17-19
Hashimoto U. vs. Yamabe (East-West Team Match 1950, no komi)   4: 61-62

 
Tengen (Chinese title)  see Tianyuan

 
Tengen (Japanese title)
see also Tengen Preliminary Tournament , (Main) Tournament , Title Match
as well as predecessor title Nihon Ki-in Championship
change in tournament system   16: 2-3;  18: 14
title-holders and challengers 1975...82   18: 14;  27: 23;  31: 7
title-holders and challengers 2003-06   113: 7

 
Tengen (Korean title)  see Bacchus Cup Chunweon

 
Tengen Main Tournament  see Tengen Tournament

 
Tengen Play-offs  see China-Korea , Japan-China Tengen Play-off

 
Tengen Preliminary Tournament
1979 (6th): Ishida A. vs. Fujisawa H.   18: 9-12*
1980 (7th): Miyamoto vs. Takemiya   25: 16-25
1981 (8th): Redmond vs. Yoshida   25: 42-44
1981 (8th): Shiratori vs. Redmond   25: 44-47

 
Tengen Title Match 1975-76 (1st)
tesuji problem of Game 1 (Fujisawa S. vs. Ohira)   99: 45, 46-47

 
Tengen Title Match 1977 (3rd)
Shimamura Toshihiro wins (+ results)   5: 6;  6: ifc*, 2
Games 1-4   6: 24-34*;  7: 6-8

 
Tengen Title Match 1978 (4th)
Kato Masao wins   11: 2;  12: 29*
results   11: 2
Games 1-4   11: ifc*;  12: 17-29*

 
Tengen Title Match 1979 (5th)
Kato Masao wins (+ results)   16: 2
Games 1-3   16: 3*;  18: 14-23*

 
Tengen Title Match 1980 (6th)
Kato Masao wins (+ results)   22: 2
Games 1-3   24: 18-27

 
Tengen Title Match 1981 (7th)
Kato Masao wins (+ results)   26: 2
pize money   27: 31
Games 1-5   27: 21-33*

 
Tengen Title Match 1982 (8th)
Kataoka Satoshi wins   29: 3, 4;  30: 2
pize money   31: 7
results   30: 2
Games 1-5   31: 7-20

 
Tengen Title Match 1983 (9th)
Kataoka Satoshi wins (+ results)   33: 2
Games 1-4   35: 38-41;  36: 21-30* c

 
Tengen Title Match 1984 (10th)
Ishida Yoshio wins   37: 4*, 5;  38: 2
results   38: 2
Games 1-4   40: 56-64*

 
Tengen Title Match 1985 (11th)
Kobayashi Koichi defeats Ishida Yoshio   41: 2;  44: 58
results   41: 2
Games 1-3   44: 58-64*

 
Tengen Title Match 1986 (12th)
Kobayashi Koichi defeats Sonoda Yuichi   47: 2*;  48: 27, 37*
results   46: 3;  47: 2
Games 1-4   47: 62-64;  48: 27-37*

 
Tengen Title Match 1987 (13th)
Cho Chikun defeats Kobayashi Koichi   50: 4;  51: 2
results   51: 2-3

 
Tengen Title Match 1988 (14th)
Cho Chikun defeats Sonoda Yuichi (+ results)   54: 4

 
Tengen Title Match 1989 (15th)
Rin Kaiho wins (+ results)   58: 5

 
Tengen Title Match 1990 (16th)
Rin Kaiho defeats Kobayashi Koichi   62: 6-7;  63: 37
prize money   63: 40
results   62: 6-7
Game 4   63: 38-40*

 
Tengen Title Match 1991 (17th)
Rin Kaiho defeats Kato Masao (+ results)   66: 5 c

 
Tengen Title Match 1992 (18th)
Rin Kaiho wins (+ results)   69: 8

 
Tengen Title Match 1993 (19th)
Rin Kaiho defeats Kataoka Satoshi (+ results)   70: 6-7

 
Tengen Title Match 1994 (20th)
Ryu Shikun defeats Rin Kaiho (+ results)   72: 2*;  73: 13
Game 4   73: 13-16

 
Tengen Title Match 1995 (21st)
Ryu Shikun defeats Kobayashi Koichi (+ results)   75: 2-3*
Game 4   76: 15-18

 
Tengen Title Match 1996 (22nd)
Ryu Shikun defeats Rin Kaiho (+ results)   78: 4*

 
Tengen Title Match 1997 (23rd)
Kudo Norio defeats Ryu Shikun (+ results)   81: 4-5

 
Tengen Title Match 1998 (24th)
Kobayashi Koichi defeats Kudo Norio (+ results)   84: 3*

 
Tengen Title Match 1999 (25th)
Kobayashi Koichi defeats Kudo Norio (+ results)   87: 4-5*

 
Tengen Title Match 2000 (26th)
Ryu Shikun defeats Kobayashi Koichi (+ results)   91: 6*

 
Tengen Title Match 2001 (27th)
Hane Naoki wins (+ results)   94: 6*

 
Tengen Title Match 2002 (28th)
Hane Naoki wins (+ results)   97: 7*

 
Tengen Title Match 2003 (29th)
Hane Naoki defeats Yamashita Keigo (+ results)   100: 6-7*

 
Tengen Title Match 2004 (30th)
Yamashita Keigo wins (+ results)   103: 6*

 
Tengen Title Match 2005 (31st)
Kono Rin wins (+ results)   106: 5*
joseki analysis of Game 5   111: 64

 
Tengen Title Match 2006 (32nd)
Kono Rin wins (+ results)   109: 7;  110: 5, 6*

 
Tengen Title Match 2007 (33rd)
Kono Rin wins (+ results)   113: 7;  114: 4-5* c

 
Tengen Title Match 2008 (34th)
Cho U wins (+ results)   117: 7

 
Tengen Title Match 2009 (35th)
Yamashita Keigo wins (+ results)   120: 7;  121: 4-5*

 
Tengen Title Match 2010 (36th)
Yuki Satoshi wins (+ results)   124: 6, 7*

 
Tengen Title Match 2011 (37th)
Iyama Yuta wins (+ results)   127: 6

 
Tengen Title Match 2012 (38th)
Iyama Yuta wins (+ results)   129: 7
Game 3   129: 63-64

 
Tengen Tournament 1977 (3rd)
Kuroda vs. Rin (ladder problem)   1: 23, 24
Tono vs. Sakai (joseki analysis)   7: 54-55

 
Tengen Tournament 1978 (4th)
Fujisawa Shuko and Kato Masao reach final   10: 3

 
Tengen Tournament 1979 (5th)
semifinal players   15: 5

 
Tengen Tournament 1983 (9th)
Hikosaka vs. Awaji (play-off)   35: 38

 
Tengen Tournament 1985 (11th)
semifinal players   40: 4

 
Tengen Tournament 1987 (13th)
Sonoda vs. Cho Chikun (problem and game)   100: 75, 83-85*

 
Tengen Tournament 1988 (14th)
multiple forfeits in   58: 68

 
Tengen Tournament 1989 (15th)
Rin Kaiho wins   57: 3-4

 
Tengen Tournament 1989-90 (16th)
Kobayashi Koichi wins   61: 4
Otake vs. Redmond   60: 62-64
both players lose game in   59: 57

 
Tengen Tournament 1991 (17th)
Kato Masao wins   65: 6
semifinal winner   64: 7

 
Tengen Tournament 1992 (18th)
semifinal winners   68: 5

 
Tengen Tournament 2000 (26th)
Ryu Shikun wins   90: 8

 
Tengen Tournament 2001 (27th)
Hane Naoki wins   93: 8*

 
Tengen Tournament 2002 (28th)
Cho Sonjin wins   96: 8

 
Tengen Tournament 2003 (29th)
Yamashita Keigo wins   99: 8

 
Tengen Tournament 2004 (30th)
Yamashita Keigo wins   102: 8

 
Tengen Tournament 2005 (31st)
Kono Rin wins   105: 8

 
Tengen Tournament 2006 (32nd)
Yamashita Keigo wins   109: 6, 7*
Mizokami Tomochika vs. Cho U   125: 55-61

 
Tengen Tournament 2007 (33rd)
Yamashita Keigo wins   113: 7

 
Tengen Tournament 2008 (34th)
Cho U wins   117: 7
semifinal winners   116: 7

 
Tengen Tournament 2009 (35th)
Yamashita Keigo wins   120: 7
semifinal winner   119: 8

 
Tengen Tournament 2010 (36th)
Yuki Satoshi wins   123: 7
Redmond loses in quarterfinals   122: 9

 
Tengen Tournament 2011 (37th)
Iyama Yuta wins   126: 9

 
Tengen Tournament 2012 (38th)
Kono Rin wins   129: 7

 
Tengu no hana-zuke  see Nose attachment

 
Terayama Rei
Hiroshima Aluminium Cup Young Carp Tournament 2010, wins   124: 8
Insei League 2007, wins   112: 8

 
Terms  see Go terms

 
Territorial framework  see Moyo

 
Territory
comparison of Ing and Japanese rules   5: 31-32
definitions in Chinese Go history, various   72: 11
“Go Proverbs That Are Always True. Part 2: Don’t Use Thickness to Make
     Territory!” (Furuyama Kazunari)   75: 52-56

 
Terry, Bob
“A Champion for All Seasons: Takagawa Kaku”   41: 12-27*
“Chen, Alan: The Shape of Things to Come”   51: 23-25*, 10
“Chen, James and the American Go Institute”   51: 16-22*
“The Kisei Title in Los Angeles”   49: 8-16*
“The Magnificent Obsession: Sakata Eio and Go”. Parts 1 & 2   50: 54-77* c;
     52: 43-68*
“When Is a Ko Not a Ko?”   45: 58-60

 
Terschelling (European Go Congress 1985)
announcement   38: 4
Ronald Schlemper wins European Championship (+ top results)   40: 3-4

 
“Test Your Ingenuity”
(life-and-death problems)   110: 55-59

 
“Test Your Rating”
[2 parts] (problems)   37: 6-16;  39: 8-16
[4 parts] (problems)   2 ... 27:  ...

 
“Testing the Undefeatable Five-Stone Strategy” (Miki Masa)
(handicap game)   14: 48-52

 
Tesuji Encyclopedia  (Nihon Ki-in, ed.)
sample problems from   96: 77-78, 80;  97: 61-64

 
Tesuji problems
see also under individual tesujis and techniques
as well as Shape and technique
“36 Tesuji Patterns” [12 parts] (Sakata Eio)   49 ;  52 – 62:  ...
“Advanced Tesuji Problems”   18: 37-40
“Advanced Tesuji Problems” (by various professionals)   38: 52-58
“Advanced Tesuji Problems” (Takemiya Masaki)   11: 61-62
award-winning moves from O Meien’s games   45: 18-19, 21*, 23
“Basic Fighting Techniques” [24 parts] (Miyazawa Goro)   13 ... 42:  ...
“Cho Chikun’s Brilliant Tesujis”   98: 44-49
“Clever Moves, Stylish Tesujis” (Kojima Takaho)   103: 59-63
“Commonsense Tesuji Problems”   17: 27-30
“Eight Tesuji Problems”   58: 51-52, 54-55;  95: 61-64;  102: 43-47
endgame tesuji (1705), most famous in go history   14: ibc
“Find the Defects”   94: 53-54, 56-57
“Find the Tesuji”   66: 49, 50-51
“Find the Best Move”   48: 41, 43
“Four Tesuji Problems”   60: 49, 52-53
“Fujisawa Shuko’s Brilliant Tesujis”   99: 45-47
“game recorder’s tesuji” (analysis) by Shiori Itsuzo (1951)   36: 11-12
“Honinbo Dosaku’s Brilliant Tesujis”   97: 57-60
“An Introduction to Tesuji”. Parts 1-8 (Kataoka Satoshi)   72 – 79:  ...
by Kano Yoshinori   45: 19-20
by Masubuchi Tatsuko   126: 54, 57
Meijin Title Match 1978, deciding tesuji of   10: 3;  11: 34, 39
“Nine Endgame-Tesuji Problems”   101: 59-64
“One-Minute Tesuji Problems”   118: 56-59;  126: 53-54, 55-57
oversight by both players (1787), famous   22: 63-64
“Practical Tactics and Tesuji(s)” [9 parts] (Rin Kaiho)   11 ... 17 ;  38 – 40:  ...
rating test, as part of   2 ... 27:  ... ;  37: 7, 12-14;  39: 9, 13-15
“Six Tesuji Problems”   93: 51-53, 64
“Spot the Tesuji: Improve Your Knowledge of Shape” (Kosugi Kiyoshi)
     69: 60-64, 57
“Ten Easy Problems”   75: 10, 64
“Tesuji Flash”   1: 37
“Tesuji Flash: Rely on your intuition”   113: 57-59
“Tesuji Magic” [12 parts] (Yamabe Toshiro)   37 – 48:  ...
“Tesuji Problems”   26: 21-22, 31-34;  34: 61-62;  107: 63-64
“Tesuji Problems” (by various professionals)   35: 45-46, 49-51
“Tesuji Problems”. Parts 1 & 2   96: 77-78, 80;  97: 61-64
“Tesujis for a Brighter Future”. Parts 1-6   104 – 109:  ...
“Tesujis for Making Good Shape”   89: 53-56
“The Top Ten Tesujis: As selected by 40 professional go players” (Murakami Akira)
     100: 65-71
“Two Tesuji Problems”   59: 47, 68;  114: 52, 64
various   1: 55, 61;  123: 60, 64
“Whole-Board Tesuji Problems”   121: 56-63

 
Tewari
small avalanche joseki   34: 58-59
“Tewari: How to Analyse the Efficiency of Your Stones” (Takagawa Kaku)
     59: 59-68

 
Thayer, David W.
Five-In-A-Row (Renju)  (book review)   25: 59

 
Theater plays
see also Kabuki , No theater plays as well as Dramas , Actors
children (cover note)   94: 1
The Tale of a Noble Guardman (cover note)   108: 1

 
Thickness
see also Influence
“Don’t approach thickness” (proverb)   73: 58, 60
“Don’t play close to thickness” (proverb), principles of   74: 38
examples from professional games   71: 60-62
“Go Proverbs That Are Always True. Part 1: Don’t Play Close to Thickness!”
     (Furuyama Kazunari)   74: 37-43
“Go Proverbs That Are Always True. Part 2: Don’t Use Thickness to Make
     Territory!” (Furuyama Kazunari)   75: 52-56
sealing in (problem)   100: 65, 67-68
“Takagawa’s Artistry with Thickness” (essay by Ishida Yoshio)   41: 27-30
“A Taste for Thickness”. Parts 1-6 (Kudo Norio)   69: 53-57;  70: 38-43;
     71: 57-62
value of (game analysis by Takagawa Kaku)   41: 21-23

 
Third line
watari problem on   75: 57, 59

 
Thirty-game matches  see Sanjubango

 
Thousand-year ko
Honinbo Title Match 1985 (Game 1, variation)   42: 29

 
Three concurrent titles  see Triple crown

 
Three-game match 1952 (Go Seigen vs. Takagawa)
note on   36: 8-9

 
Three-game match 1955 (Go Seigen vs. Takagawa)
Game 1   36: 13-14

 
Three-game match 1959 (Go Seigen vs. Takagawa)
Game 2   41: 20
Go Seigen’s rule dispute with Nihon Ki-in (end of Game 2)   41: 20-21;  45: 58-59;
     72: 12-13
Game 3 (fuseki only)   87: 64

 
Three points without capturing  see Torazu sanmoku

 
Three-space extension
see also Three-space high extension
“The Korean Style: Korean Joseki Innovations”. Part 9 (Oya Koichi)
     105: 63-64

 
Three-space extension after 3-4 approach (5-3 point joseki)
“New Joseki” (Abe Yoshiteru)   11: 53-54

 
Three-space high extension
invading   121: 52-54

 
Three-space high pincer against knight approach (4-4 point joseki)
attaching to stronger stone after double approach (discussion)   64: 52-53
“The Great Joseki Debate” (Honda Kunihisa)   37: 61-64
trick move (problem)   41: 48, 52
troublesome stone after 3-3 point invasion, how to take control of   69: 56

 
Three-space low pincer against knight approach (3-4 point joseki)
“The Great Joseki Debate” (Honda Kunihisa)   28: 55-59

 
Three-space low pincer against knight approach (4-4 point joseki)
trick moves (problems)   41: 48, 51-52

 
Three star-point stones fuseki  see Sanrensei

 
Three-stone handicap games
Cho Chikun vs. Harada (Pro-Amateur Honinbo Play-off 1997)   81: 54-56
middle-game problem   15: 41, 43-44
proper move analysis (examples)   119: 63-64;  124: 63-64;  126: 58-60
Sekiyama R. vs. Miki (1949)   13: 49-54
Shunseki Inseki vs. Tagami Peichin (1748)   21: 63-ibc, 60
Takehara vs. Nakayama (1950s, fuseki only)   50: 39
Tomita vs. Ko Mosei (1973)   18: 48-51
Tomita vs. Tei Meiki (1979)   21: 52-55
Tomita vs. Tei Meiko (1977)   20: 42-44

 
Three-stone handicap strategy
“Original Handicap Strategy” (Miyamoto Naoki)   2: 46-48;  6: 54-56;  7: 56-58
triangular formations   82: 36-38

 
Throne (title)
Japanese  see Oza
Korean  see Wangwi
Taiwanese  see Wangzuo

 
Throw-in
“Good Style and Correct Shape” (problems by Cho Chikun)   59: 54-55, 57-58
“The Throw-in Tesuji” (problems)   84: 59-62

 
Tianyuan Title Match (Chinese Tengen)
1987, created in   48: 58
1990 (4th): Liu Xiaoguang wins   60: 7
1991 (5th): Nie Weiping wins   63: 45
1995 (9th): Ma Xiaochun wins   74: 4
1997 (11th): Chang Hao defeats Ma Xiaochun (+ Game 4)   80: 47-48
1998 (12th): Chang Hao defeats Wang Lei   82: 6
1999 (13th): Chang Hao wins   85: 6
2000 (14th): Chang Hao defeats Dong Yan   88: 14
2001 (15th): Chang Hao wins   91: 14
2002 (16th): Huang Yizhong wins   95: 14
2003 (17th): Gu Li wins (+ results)   98: 12
2004 (18th): Gu Li wins (+ results)   101: 12
2005 (19th): Gu Li wins (+ results)   104: 12*
2006 (20th): Gu Li wins (+ results)   108: 10
2007 (21st): Gu Li wins (+ results)   111: 9
2008 (22nd): Gu Li wins (+ results)   115: 10
2009 (23rd): Chen Yaoye wins (+ results)   118: 10;  119: 9
2010 (24th): Chen Yaoye wins (+ results)   122: 11
2011 (25th): Chen Yaoye wins (+ results)   125: 13

 
Tianyuan Title Match (Taiwanese Tengen)
format and history   102: 11
2004 (3rd): Zhou Junxun wins (+ results)   102: 11*
2005 (4th): Zhou Junxun wins (+ results)   105: 11
2006 (5th): Zhou Junxun wins (+ results)   109: 10
2007 (6th): Chen Shiyuan wins (+ results)   112: 9
2008 (7th): Lin Zhihan wins (+ results)   116: 9
2009 (8th): Lin Zhihan wins (+ results)   119: 9;  120: 56
2011 (10th): Chen Shiyuan wins (+ results)   126: 55

 
Tianyuan Tournament (Chinese)
1990 (4th): Qian Yuping wins   58: 67
1997 (11th): Wang Lei vs. Zhou   79: 18-19
2006 (20th): Zhou Ruiyang wins   108: 10

 
Tibetan go
“Go in the Snow” (Shotwell)   69: 45-51;  web
“Go on the Roof of the World” (Fairbairn)   58: 10-15
philosophical meaning of peculiarities of   70: 52-53

 
Tibetan history of go
folk records and literary references   69: 45-47

 
Tibetan rules of go
description of   58: 10-11;  69: 47-49

 
Time allowance
see also Byo-yomi , Two-day games
as well as Playing-speed contrast , Slowest moves
Cho Chikun’s usage of   115: 30
Takagawa Kaku about reading and   41: 33
time taken  see individual games and tournaments
Yi Se-tol on short   124: 35

 
Time-extension rule (Ing rules)
discussion of   69: 13-14

 
“Time is the Enemy” (Akiyama Kenji)
(essay)   13: 39*, 61

 
Timing
mistake (analysis) in Meijin League game   58: 67-68
peeping moves (examples)   66: 53-57

 
Title games  see individual title games as well as Overseas title games

 
Title-holders
see also individual professionals and tournaments
and Honorary , Oldest , Youngest title-holders and Most titles won
and under Chinese , International , Japanese , Korean tournaments
as well as Double , Triple , Quadruple , Quintuple crown
and Chinese , International , Korean grand slam
promotions based on new system for   97: 12

 
Title matches
see also Best-of-seven, individual title matches
comparison with uchikomi system   50: 23-24

 
Title winners  see Title-holders

 
Titles  see Tournaments

 
Tobi  see Monkey jump , One-space jump

 
Tochika  see Pillbox formation

 
Toichi (artist)
various gods (print, cover note)   25: 1

 
Tokan (artist)  see Tsutsumi Torin

 
Tokichi (kabuki character)  see Toyotomi Hideyoshi

 
Tokimoto Hajime
tesuji problem by   38: 52, 56

 
Tokimoto Hajime vs. Kajiwara Takeo
Judan Tournament 1977 (?) (joseki analysis)   8: 50-51

 
Tokyo Precision Instruments Cup  see Women’s Strongest Player Title

 
Tombstone squeeze
problem   100: 65, 68

 
Tomes, Ray vs. Mattner, Lutz
WAGC 1982 (play-off for 7th place)   28: 38-39

 
Tomita Tadao (1910–2002)
death of   94: 12
“From Amateur to Professional” [4 parts]   17 ;  18 ;  20 ;  21:  ...

 
Tomita Tadao vs. Kaku Kyushin
1973 (4 stones)   17: 34-36

 
Tomita Tadao vs. Ko Mosei
1973 (3 stones)   18: 48-51

 
Tomita Tadao vs. Tei Meiki
1978 (4 stones)   21: 50-52
1979 (3 stones)   21: 52-55

 
Tomita Tadao vs. Tei Meiko
1977 (3 stones)   20: 42-44
1978 (2 stones)   20: 44-45

 
Tong Shu and Daniele Pecorini
“Count Pecorini’s The Game of Wei-chi” (review by Shotwell)   50: 78-80

 
Tong Yang Securities Cup (World Go Championship)
see also Tong Yang Securities Cup Final
international tournament, expands into full-scale   62: 4-5*
winners and place-getters 1990-95   74: 60

 
Tong Yang Securities Cup 1990-91 (3rd)
results of Rounds 1 & 2   62: 4
results of quarterfinals   63: 5
winners of semifinals   64: 3*
semifinal: Yi Ch’ang-ho vs. Cho Hun-hyeon (Game 3)   65: 33-34*

 
Tong Yang Securities Cup 1992-93 (4th)
results of Rounds 1 & 2   68: 4
results of quarter- and semifinals   69: 4

 
Tong Yang Securities Cup 1993-94 (5th)
highlights and results   70: 5
Round 2: Seo vs. Redmond   71: 31-34*

 
Tong Yang Securities Cup 1994-95 (6th)
results of quarterfinals   72: 6
semifinal winners   73: 5

 
Tong Yang Securities Cup 1995-96 (7th)
results of quarterfinals   75: 5
semifinal: Cho Chikun vs. Yi Ch’ang-ho (Game 2)   76: 7-8

 
Tong Yang Securities Cup 1996-97 (8th)
Kobayashi Koichi qualifies for main tournament   78: 19
Nihon Ki-in players’ performance   79: 23
results   79: 3
semifinal: Kobayashi S. vs. Yi Ch’ang-ho   79: 26-27

 
Tong Yang Securities Cup 1998 (9th)
Nihon Ki-in players’ performance   83: 12
results of quarter- and semifinals   82: 2

 
Tong Yang Securities Cup Final 1991-92 (3rd)
Yi Ch’ang-ho defeats Rin Kaiho (+ results)   65: 3;  66: 4*
Games 1 & 2   66: 14-19*

 
Tong Yang Securities Cup Final 1993 (4th)
Yi Ch’ang-ho defeats Cho Chikun   69: 4*;  71: 19, 30*
results   69: 4
Games 1-3   71: 19-30*

 
Tong Yang Securities Cup Final 1994 (5th)
Cho Hun-hyeon defeats Yoda Norimoto   71: 2*

 
Tong Yang Securities Cup Final 1995 (6th)
Ma Xiaochun wins   74: 4-5

 
Tong Yang Securities Cup Final 1996 (7th)
Yi Ch’ang-ho defeats Ma Xiaochun   76: 7-8, 10*
Game 4   76: 8-10

 
Tong Yang Securities Cup Final 1997 (8th)
Cho Hun-hyeon defeats Kobayashi Satoru   79: 3*;  80: 34
results   79: 3
Games 1-3   79: 23-26;  80: 34-39*

 
Tong Yang Securities Cup Final 1998 (9th)
Yi Ch’ang-ho defeats Yu Ch’ang-hyeok (+ results)   83: 3, 12
Game 4   83: 12-16

 
Tono Hiroaki
NHK Cup 1979, wins   12: 40*

 
Tono Hiroaki vs. Sakai Takeshi
Tengen Tournament 1977 (joseki analysis)   7: 54-55

 
Tono Hiroaki vs. Wimmer, Manfred
1978 (2 stones)   6: 37

 
Tono Hiroaki + Yoshida Mika
Ricoh Cup 2000, win   88: 8

 
Tono Masaharu (1942–2009)
death of   120: 9;  124: 10;  128: 64

 
Tono Masaharu vs. Hashimoto Shoji
Meijin Preliminary Tournament 1976 (?)   1: 38-45

 
Top players
see also Most popular players , Most Valuable Player as well as Top results
and Four Deva kings , Kitani school
Baduk magazine poll on top ten in 20th century   88: 12-13
Go Weekly poll on top ten in Japanese history   129: 9
Japanese annual  see Annual reviews
“The Top Dogs of Japanese Go”   74: 61-64*
“Who is the World’s Strongest Player?” (Power)   74: 58-60
“The World’s Top Ten” (discussion among three Japanese pros)   45: 37-39*
Yi Se-tol on being strongest player   124: 34

 
Top Position Title (Japan)
title-holders and challengers 1955-61   50: 69
1959-60 (5th): Title Match, Game 2 (Fujisawa S. vs. Sakata, no komi)   50: 73-74
1960-61 (6th): Title Match, G. 1 (Sakata vs. Fujisawa S., problem only)   50: 69-70

 
Top Position Title (Korea)  see Chaigowi

 
Top prize money  see top winners under Prize money

 
Top results
see also Most wins , Winning percentage , Winning streaks
Chinese top winners (2001)   94: 14, 19
Japanese all-time (as of 1995)   74: 61-62*
Japanese annual  see Annual reviews
Japanese top ten (1997)   81: 6
Korean top records (2002)   97: 56
Korean top ten (1997)   80: 7;  81: 6
Korean top ten (2001)   94: 13-14
Korean top winners (1989)   58: 8
Korean top winners (1999)   88: 54
Korean top winners (2005)   106: 7

 
Top-seven titles (Japan)  see Big-seven titles

 
Top-three titles (Japan)  see Big-three titles

 
Top title winners  see Title-holders

 
Torazu sanmoku
comparison of Ing and Japanese rules   5: 39

 
Toriki Hiroshi
tesuji problem by   35: 46, 51

 
Toriki Hisashi (1921–2011)
death of   125: 11

 
Toronto Open
1980 report   18: 5

 
Torres, Carlos vs. Parimbelli, Sergio
WAGC 1983 (play-off for 15th place)   33: 47-49

 
Toshimitsu Matsuo (1924–2004)
death of   103: 8

 
Toshinobu Yamazaki II (artist)
Go Board Tadanobu  (oban print, cover note)   73: 1

 
Toshusai Sharaku (artist)
sumo Daidosan Bungoro (oban print, cover note)   78: 1

 
Tournament contract fees
of Japanese big-seven tournaments   48: 40

 
Tournament rules  see Komi , Time allowance , Time-extension rule

 
Tournament statistics  see Annual reviews , Prize money , Title-holders , Top results ,
Winning percentage

 
Tournament systems  see under individual tournaments

 
Tournaments
see Australian , Chinese , European , International , Japanese , Korean ,
     New Zealand , North American , South American , Taiwanese tournaments
and Amateur , Computer , Lightning , Online , Pair-go , Professional-amateur ,
     Professional , Rating , Schools , Team , Telephone , Telex , TV , Veterans’ ,
     Women’s , Youth tournaments
as well as Invitational , Preliminary tournaments, Leagues , Matches
discontinued  see under Chinese , International , Japanese , Korean ,
     Taiwanese tournaments

 
Tours
see also under individual professionals
British group in China (1979)   14: 4*
team  see Team matches

 
Toyohara Chikanobu (artist)  see Yoshu Chikanobu

 
Toyohara Kunichika (artist)
Honest Pictures for All Ages  (oban diptych, cover note)   102: 1
kabuki play about Kibi no Makibi (oban triptych, cover note)   122: 1
Ryogoku Nakamuraro Kingoshoga no Zu  (oban triptych, cover note)   113: 1
Sato Tadanobu (triptych, cover note)   46: 1
Tsuchigumo Creating Monsters in Yorimitsu’s Residence  (oban triptych,
     cover story)   81: 56

 
Toyokuni (artist)  see Utagawa Toyokuni

 
Toyokuni III (artist)  see Utagawa Kunisada

 
Toyokuni IV (artist)  see Utagawa Kunisada II

 
Toyoshige (artist)  see Utagawa Toyoshige

 
Toyota & Denso Cup
main features of newly established   93: 5
discontinued   119: 5

 
Toyota & Denso Cup 2002-03 (1st)
Yi Ch’ang-ho wins   97: 2-3*
highlights and results of Round 1   95: 2-4*
highlights and results of Rounds 2 & 3 and semifinals   96: 3
Round 2: Yo Kagen vs. Aguilar   97: 42-44*
final: Chang Hao vs. Yi Ch’ang-ho   98: 21-27*

 
Toyota & Denso Cup 2004-05 (2nd)
Yi Se-tol wins (+ results)   103: 2
highlights and results of Rounds 1 & 2, quarter- and semifinals   102: 4-5*
final, Games 1-3: Chang Hao vs. Yi Se-tol   104: 13-19*

 
Toyota & Denso Cup 2006-07 (3rd)
Yi Se-tol wins (+ results)   110: 2*;  111: 27
highlights and results of Rounds 1 & 2, quarter- and semifinals   109: 2-3
Round 3: Pak Yeong-hun vs. Chang Hao   127: 53-61
quarterfinal: Hane Naoki vs. Yi Se-tol   110: 50-51*
semifinal: Pak Yeong-hun vs. Cho U   109: 50-54
final, Games 1-3: Cho U vs. Yi Se-tol   111: 12-27*
interview with Yi Se-tol   111: 27

 
Toyota & Denso Cup 2008-09 (4th)
Gu Li wins (+ results)   118: 2*
highlights and results of Rounds 1 & 2, quarter- and semifinals   116: 3
final, Games 1 & 2: Gu Li vs. Piao Wenyao   119: 12-18*

 
Toyotomi Hideyoshi (16th-century warlord)
as Tokichi in kabuki play   55: 7;  118: 1

 
Tozawa Akinobu
biographical details   53: 45*

 
Tozawa Akinobu vs. Cho Chikun
IBM Haya-go Open Tournament 1989 (Round 1)   56: 28-29*

 
Trade  see Furikawari

 
Traffic accidents
Cho Chikun suffers multiple injuries (1986)   42: 2*;  44: 6*

 
Training camps  see Workshops and camps

 
Training sessions  see under Studying

 
“Treasury of Life and Death, The” (Su Kaiseki)
(problems)   56: 56-57*, 58-59

 
Triangular formations
as three-stone handicap strategy   82: 36-38

 
Trick moves
2-2 point invasion   69: 52
attach-and-extend joseki, problem of pushing through and cutting in   61: 53, 59
one-space low pincer against one-space high approach (3-4 point joseki),
     variations of   49: 64-ibc;  92: 24, 52-53
“Some Popular Trick Moves” (problems by Kato Masao)   21: 39-41
“Three Trick Moves” [12 parts] (problems by Abe Yoshiteru)   36 – 41 ;
     43 – 48:  ...

 
“Tricks of Memory” (Kiyushi)
(of professional players)   121: 46

 
Triple attack
“Go Seigen’s Triple Attack” (game)   100: 61-64*

 
Triple crown (Japan)
Cho Chikun wins (1996)   79: 40
Xie Yimin wins (2010)   121: 5*, 6

 
Triple ko
1582 (Sansa vs. Kashio Rigen)   6: 45, 49
comparison of Ing and Japanese rules   5: 36-37
example   50: 17
Meijin Title Match 1998, Game 4 (Cho C. vs. O Rissei)   84: 2;  85: 23*, 29-30
Oteai 1971 (Fukui vs. Cho Chikun)   50: 18

 
Triple star-point fuseki  see Sanrensei

 
Triptychs  see under individual artists

 
Trivia
“Go Topics, Go Trivia”   57 – 59 ;  63:  ...

 
Troublesome stones
taking control (example) of   69: 56

 
Trucco, Terry
“Growing up with Go”   37: 19;  43: 14-16*;  journal

 
Tsang Ping-fai vs. Hahn Sang-Dae
WAGC 1983 (play-off for 17th place)   33: 49-50

 
Tsao Dayuan  see Cao Dayuan

 
Tsao Ta-yuan  see Cao Dayuan

 
Tso-chuan  (classic text)
“Go in the Classics”. Part 2: “The Tso-chuan” (Potter)   42: 19-21*;  book ;  web

 
Tsugi  see Connections

 
Tsuke  see Attachment

 
Tsukegiri  see Attach-and-cut

 
Tsukehiki  see Attach-and-draw back

 
Tsukekoshi  see Cutting across the knight’s move

 
Tsukenobi  see Attach-and-extend

 
Tsukeosae  see Attach-and-block

 
Tsukimaro (artist)  see Kitagawa Tsukimaro

 
Tsukioka Kogyo (artist)
no theatre play (print, cover note)   31: 1

 
Tsukioka Yoshitoshi (artist)
“Apparition of the Spider Princess” (oban diptych, cover story by Pinckard)   62: 2
A Burlesque of Grand Minister Kibi  (diptych, cover story by Pinckard)   88: 47
Motoharu and the Severed Head  (oban print, cover story by Pinckard)   82: 38
samurai Minamoto no Yoshiie (print, cover note)   37: 1

 
Tsumego  see Life-and-death problems

 
Tsunami  see Earthquake and tsunami (2011)

 
Tsuru no sugomori  see Crane’s nest

 
Tsuruya Kokei (artist)
untitled oban print (cover note)   126: 1
untitled work (cover notes and story by Pinckard)   55: 1, 7

 
Tsutsumi Torin (artist)
A Rainy Day at Home  (oban print, cover note)   30: 1

 
Tsuzuki Yoneko (1872–1937)
biography   64: 44

 
Tsuzuki Yoneko vs. Takeda Itsuko
Onna Kikaku Oteai 1907   64: 47

 
Tuo Jiaxi
Changqi Cup 2010, wins   124: 11
winning streak in Nong Shim Cup 2008-09   117: 4-5

 
Turning move  see Magari

 
TV Asia Tournament
winners and 2nd places 1989 to 1995   74: 60
1989 (1st): Takemiya Masaki wins (+ results)   56: 4
1990 (2nd): Takemiya Masaki wins (+ results)   61: 3
1991 (3rd): Takemiya Masaki wins (+ results and final game)   67: 38-39
1992 (4th): Takemiya Masaki wins (+ results)   68: 3-4*
1993 (5th): Yoda Norimoto wins (+ results)   70: 2
1994 (6th): Otake Hideo defeats Qian Yuping in final (+ results)   71: 2-3
1999 (11th): Yoda Norimoto defeats (final game)   86: 9-13
2000 (12th): Cho Hun-hyeon defeats Yi Ch’ang-ho in final (+ results)   89: 6
2001 (13th): Cho Hun-hyeon wins (+ results)   92: 2
2002 (14th): Yi Ch’ang-ho defeats Cho Hun-hyeon in final (+ results)   95: 6*
2003 (15th): Zhou Heyang wins (+ full results)   99: 3
2004 (16th): Yu Bin wins (+ full results)   101: 4*
2005 (17th): Cho U wins (+ full results)   105: 2-3*
2006 (18th): Wang Xi wins (+ full results)   109: 2*
2006 (18th): Luo Xihe vs. Hane Naoki (Round 1)   109: 48-49*
2006 (18th): Wang Xi vs. Yi Ch’ang-ho (final)   109: 46-48
2007 (19th): Yi Se-tol wins (+ full results)   112: 3-4*
2007 (19th): Cho Chikun vs. Chen Yaoye (Round 1)   113: 35-36*
2007 (19th): Chen Yaoye vs. Yi Se-tol (final)   113: 32-34*
2008 (20th): Yi Se-tol wins (+ full results)   115: 4
2008 (20th): donation to earthquake victims   116: 4
2009 (21st): Kong Jie wins (+ full results)   119: 3-4*
2010 (22nd): Kong Jie wins (+ full results)   122: 4
2011 (23rd): Kong Jie wins (+ full results)   126: 3
2012 (24th): Pak Hong-seok wins (+ full results)   129: 2

 
TV go channels
new Korean starts (2002)   95: 12

 
TV Igo Asia Championship  see TV Asia Tournament

 
TV tournaments
Chinese  see CCTV Cup , Four Strongest Players , Longxing Cup , NEC Cup ,
     Zhaoshang Bank Cup
international  see Japan-China TV Ch’ship , Japan-China TV Match ,
     Japan-Korea TV Match , TV Asia Tournament
Japanese  see also Asia Air Lines Cup , Gratitude Cup , Haya-go Championship ,
     Kakusei , NEC Cup , NEC Shun’ei , NHK Cup , Shin’ei
Japanese titles, most won (as of 1985)   38: 4
Japanese titles, popularity and prize money (as of 1980) of   19: 3
Japanese titles, winners of various (1980...1993)   23: 3-4;  24: 4;  26: 4;  27: 2;
     31: 5;  34: 2, 3;  38: 3-4;  42: 3-4;  47: 4;  51: 4;  56: 8-9*;  70: 10
Korean  see Ch’eongpung Cup , KBS Cup King of Baduk , KT Cup Masters ,
     Maxim Cup , Osram Korea Cup , SBS TV Tournament
Taiwanese  see CMC Cup

 
Twentieth century  see 20th century

 
Twenty-first century  see 21st century

 
Twenty-game matches  see Nijubango

 
Two concurrent titles  see Double crown

 
Two-day games
Yi Se-tol on   124: 36

 
Two-space extension
“Attack the Two-Space Extension, How to” (Kamimura Kunio)   57:1, 38-45* c
“Attacking the Two-Space Extension” (Kodama Kunio)   33: 42-44, 35
“Attacking the Two-Space Extension: Problems” (O Meien)   57: 45-57 c
“The Korean Style: Korean Joseki Innovations”. Parts 6-9 (Oya Koichi)
     102: 59-64;  103: 57-58;  104: 60-61;  105: 62-63
“Middle Game Problems” (Fujisawa Shuko)   42: 25, 47-48
opponent’s knight’s-move enclosure, in front of   16: 46-47
“Problem: How to Attack” (Nakamura Hidehito)   41: 48, 54

 
Two-space high pincer against knight approach (3-4 point joseki)
“After the Joseki: Early Middle Game Strategy” (Miyashita Shuyo)   30: 43-45
“Aji-keshi: Erasing Potential” (Honda Kunihisa)   7: 48, 53
bad examples   5: 63
“The Great Joseki Debate” (Honda Kunihisa)   18: 43-47;  21: 45-50;  22: 45-52;
     38: 59-63;  41: 57-63
“New Joseki” (Abe Yoshiteru)   8: 50-51;  9: 49-50
problem   122: 58

 
Two-space high pincer against knight approach (4-4 point joseki)
atari problem   76: 47, 51-53
Kato joseki   107: 60-61
“The Korean Style: Korean Joseki Innovations”. Parts 11-13 (Oya Koichi)
     107: 60-63;  108: 58-61;  109: 57-59
“Match the Joseki to the Fuseki” (Sekiyama Toshio)   2: 25-30
“New Moves and New Josekis” (Abe Yoshiteru)   75: 41-45;  76: 41-46
problem   119: 61-62
sanrensei, variations in   10: 39
tenuki, how to punish (problem)   59: 43, 44
urgent second-line move (example)   59: 48

 
Two-space high pincer against one-space high approach (3-4 point joseki)
discussion of   64: 60
“Exterminating the Magic Sword” (Han Zenki)   111: 52-64* c
“The Great Joseki Debate” (Honda Kunihisa)   32: 53-59
miai on second line (example)   59: 50-51
new variations (analysis)   2: 44-45;  4: 46-47;  5: 66...70
“Original Handicap Strategy” (Miyamoto Naoki)   7: 56-58
trick move (problem)   21: 39, 40

 
Two-space low pincer against 3-4 approach (5-3 point joseki)
problem   119: 59

 
Two-space low pincer against knight approach (3-4 point joseki)
“The Great Joseki Debate” (Honda Kunihisa)   45: 51-57
“Joseki Amateurs Don’t Know” (Abe Yoshiteru)   15: 44-46
new move (analysis)   3: 46-47;  5: 69
trick move (problem)   45: 40, 42-43

 
Two star-point stones fuseki  see Nirensei

 
Two-step hane
“All About the Two-Step Hane”. Parts 1-3 (Cho Chikun)   60: 55-60;  61: 53-59;
     63: 56-63
“Basic Fighting Techniques” (problems and example by Miyazawa Goro)
     33: 36, 39-40
“Good Style and Correct Shape” (problems by Cho Chikun)   56: 57, 59-60
“An Introduction to the Two-Step Hane”   123: 61-64

 
“Two-step Hane Game, The”
Yamada Kimio vs. Cho U (Meijin League 2006-07)   112: 47-49

 
Two-stone handicap games
Dosaku vs. Shunchi (1668, tesuji problem)   97: 57, 58
Go Seigen vs. Sakata (1934)   50: 57-58
Iwasaki Kenzo vs. Tamura Hoju (1889 & 1890) (two games)   32: 64
Kajiwara vs. Ishida A. (1966)   16: 12-13
middle-game problem   14: 59, 61-62
Nakagawa Kamesaburo vs. Hayashi Sano (1881)   64: 41
of sanrensei (example)   121: 49-51
Sakata vs. Redmond (Nihon Ki-in Summer Go Seminar 1981)   26: 22-24
Takabe Dohei vs. Chang Lo-san (1912)   29: 59-60, 61
Tomita vs. Tei Meiko (1978)   20: 44-45
Tono vs. Wimmer (1978)   6: 37
Yugen Monnyu vs. Senchi Senkaku (castle game 1780)   23: 61-63

 
Two-stone handicap strategy
“Original Handicap Strategy” (Miyamoto Naoki)   5: 75-77

 
“Twofold Victory, A: Akiyama Kenji”
(essay)   10: 37, 63

 U