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3-4, One-Space High Approach, Two-Space High Pincer
Path: PincerPath · Prev: OneSpaceLowPincer · Next: ThreeFourIkkenKakariLowSmallPincer
We will currently study the following variations:
Some other variations. White at f is light and quite well-known. White g was tried a long time ago, but isn't a worked-out joseki. White h was tried in a title game (Judan match game 1, 1971-01-06) Otake Hideo-Hashimoto Utaro. White i is a rare move; White j is not so rare. This is quite an old pincer (from the 1930s) but relatively unexplored until about 1970. An early reference is the Go Super Series book by Hasegawa Akira. The book Essential Joseki is perhaps a better introduction than Ishida, but gets the history of the main line play b a little wrong. It was introduced 1952-03-11 by Fujisawa Kuranosuke, as he then was, in a jubango game against Go Seigen. Go Seigen was (is) a great innovator, but in this case his opponent deserves the credit. A problem with studying this joseki is that some of the books emphasise old lines from the 1950s, or trick plays. Path: PincerPath · Prev: OneSpaceLowPincer · Next: ThreeFourIkkenKakariLowSmallPincer This is a copy of the living page "3-4, One-Space High Approach, Two-Space High Pincer" at Sensei's Library. (C) the Authors, published under the OpenContent License V1.0. |