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All Stars Opening
Keywords: Opening
This opening appeared as an experiment in 1934, the heyday of shinfuseki. At that time, in games without komi, it seems to have been accepted that this is good for Black after Black 9. So White normally deviated, for example playing 8 at a. This pattern plays a hidden role, for example when sanrensei is used against manego (mirror Go), and the pros were thinking about it, without a doubt, over 40 years when it wasn't being played. There was a flurry of activity again in 1988, with White applying White 10 at b. Uwe: Rin Kaiho has in 1977 invented White 10 at c against Takemiya Masaki (1977-11-10) . This move was later played by Fujisawa Shuko in some (at least 4) games against Takemiya Masaki. On the nomenclature: 'All Stars' occurs in katakana in a Kido Yearbook - presumably a baseball reference or simply that all plays are on all the star points (hoshi). Uwe: Another name of this fuseki is kyurensei. The position up to 9 in the diagram above occurred in a classic shinfuseki game Shinohara Masami-Kitani Minoru 1934-10-24. There were other experiments then in which all of the first nine plays were on star points.
Suzuki Kensho-Takagawa Kaku 1934-01-21. This game started at tengen. Black's box formation in the upper left is characteristic of the early theories of shinfuseki. Also in the Spring Oteai 1934 game Tanaka Fujio-Kosugi Tei, and again in the Autumn Oteai that year by Sometani Kazuo-Nakamura Yutaro.
Izutani Minoru-Takagawa Kaku 1934-02-14.
Maeda Nobuaki-Kitani Minoru 1936-04-22. The All Stars opening can evolve from paired San-ren-sei and the Yon-ren-sei. This is a copy of the living page "All Stars Opening" at Sensei's Library. ![]() |