04. Professional, Unprofessional, and Fundamentals.pdf
(
31 KB
)
Pobierz
The Game of Go
http://www.361points.com/articles/4/1/
Professional, Unprofessional, and Fundamentals
by Sorin Gherman
White to play next.
The fuseki stage has just ended - this game is about to enter the middle game.
Think for yourself where you want to play next with white, and why. As usually, think for a few moves in
advance, not just the following move.
Dia 1
First of all, the hot area is on the middle of the lower side. If you missed that area and considered playing
somewhere else, think about this really hard: the black stone on the middle of the lower side and the white
stone close to it, on the 3rd line, are almost touching each other: from White's perspective, letting black
play in contact, on the 3rd line, is unbearable: his group in the lower left would be isolated and weak, and
the lower right corner stars to look vulnerable to an invasion or deep reduction.
I could also argue based on the order of moves (Black's move on the middle of the lower side was played
last) but while that is easy, it is also pointless: the sequence of moves that led to the current position
doesn't really matter when we are to choose the next move.
The sequence showed in Dia 2 is one standard approach... and I played this mechanically in the game. In
this case it is really bad: White's move at 3 has no impact on black whatsoever on the left hand side, since
black is very thick there.
1 von 2
2008-03-10 21:44
The Game of Go
http://www.361points.com/articles/4/1/
Dia 2
What white should actually do was to simply crawl on the third line, making territory in the process. This
thought didn't occur to me at all during the game: it looks so "unprofessional" to just crawl, right?
Actually it's just the natural thing to do: white connects his positions on the lower side and makes
territory, while black builds some thickness into the center which is of little value in this game. Black's
pressing move on the middle of the lower side was questionable to start with, it's way too easy on white.
Only if white knew
the fundamentals
and played the most natural moves...
Dia 3
Conclusion
Judge each position from scratch: don't just apply blind patterns.
Forget about "unprofessional" moves: just play what makes sense in each position. That's what
professionals do best.
Don't fall prey to your own bad habits: "reflex moves" have to pass the thinking test before actually
being played.
Further study
Lessons in the Fundamentals of Go
by Toshiro Kageyama
2 von 2
2008-03-10 21:44
Plik z chomika:
FilozofiaUW2010
Inne pliki z tego folderu:
01. How to Estimate a Position by Changing the Order of Moves (Tewari).pdf
(29 KB)
02. Sometimes It's Better Not to Know Joseki.pdf
(67 KB)
03. Direction of Play... and Bad Habits (1).pdf
(42 KB)
04. Professional, Unprofessional, and Fundamentals.pdf
(31 KB)
05. An Ounce of Prevention is Worth a Pound of Cure.pdf
(38 KB)
Inne foldery tego chomika:
Ang-Yue Go School Study Guide
Baduk Made Fun And Easy
BramGo Joseki
Common Fuseki
Counting Lessons
Zgłoś jeśli
naruszono regulamin