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Ten Kyu Nadare
  Difficulty: Advanced   Keywords: Joseki

[Diagram]
How two 10 kyus might play (Black 10 connects, White 11 at 'a')

This is a reaction to Morten Pahle in Plays Against Low Chinese Opening. There he proposes this line of play.


[Diagram]
The resulting position

This is the resulting position. Although this apparently may seem like a reasonable result for White, I do not agree. White's shape here is bad, especially because of the possibility of the cut at a. Black might even cut there directly, but can also punish White for bad shape by playing the moves in the following variant.


[Diagram]
A double hane causes problems for White

Black's influence is already comparable to White's, while Black has over 10 points of certain territory, and White still has bad shape and the cut at a to worry about.


[Diagram]
Another worrying possibility

Furthermore, Black can also play Black 6 at 1 in this diagram, which again shows a good result for Black. White could try playing White 2 at 3, but then Black plays at 2, and White will have trouble looking after the two White stones in the center, because White still needs another move to live in the corner.


[Diagram]
Joseki

Joseki here is to play White 5 as in this diagram. This leads to the Nadare Joseki, which is rather complicated.

-- Andre Engels



This is a copy of the living page "Ten Kyu Nadare" at Sensei's Library.
(OC) 2004 the Authors, published under the OpenContent License V1.0.