Japan4

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I play as Gostone on KGS.

Currently just a KGS 12?kyu. I am working for more.

I am the current president of the Cranes Nest Go club In New Orleans. We meet regularly, Wednesday and Friday nights. Wednesday at 7 p.m. at Rue De La Course at the corner of Carrollton Ave and Oak St. uptown New Orleans. Friday Nights we meet at 8 p.m. at The Coffee Bean at the corner of Severn Ave and 17th St. in Metairie. All are welcome...

GO BLOG:

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12/30/04: Last entry of the new year...

Last club meeting of the year was last night. I had my best game in a long time. I played David, 1kyu, our resident expert and took 6 stones and won by 19 points. I have had a bad time against Dave in the past... he's really strong and something psychologically intimidates me when I play him. He's a nice guy but playing someone who is alot stronger than me has that effect. I think he's probably stronger than 1kyu. I have in the past taken 7 and 8 stones from him and had to resign. Not this time. It feels good to give someone stronger a decent game. I noticed during the game that I recognized a Joseki and some tennuki opportunities that gave me the bigger point on the board. I also felt like I was able to attack and make territory at the same time pretty well in the game. I counted twice during the game too. These are big steps for me. Studyuing is paying off I think.

I broke down and bought Yilun Yang's Fundamentals book. I can't wait for it to come in. The excerpt looked like the kind of information that I could really use. I will be sure and post opinion when I get it. I have been slowly working my way through the first Enlgish volume of the Fujisawa Shuko Tesuji book. I totally recommend this book. I can't wait for the other volumes to be released. (Way to go Slate and Shell!) Each page contains one tesuji with a problem and description at the top and then three diagrams down the page. The first diagram is usually what a kyu player like me would doand the second usually the tesuji followed by the third diagram of followup. All the diagrams have good explanations to tell you what is going on. If you cover up all but the top portion the book becomes like a problem book. Interspersed between the tesuji are segments of games using some of the demonstarted tesuji. The book is organized well into sections like shape or enclosing tesuji. I read a big portion of it while on vacation which may be why I played so well against Dave. (Not to harp on that Dave but I am proud of the game...if you even read this)

The club has been lite lately but I think that's because of the holiday's at least I hope it is. As a New Year's resolution, this year will be the year of our first tournament if I have to run it by myself. Hopefully I won't but we'll see.

OK, well happy New Year to all. I hope all your Go wishes come true in 05. Till Next year.

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12/9/04 : Lose your second 500 games: 3 down, 497 to go...

Ok, so two club meetings have gone by since my last entry. At the first meeting I won 3 out of 4 but last night I lost 3 of 3. In all three games I lost big pieces of chain while attacking. All 3 groups I was attacking were dead to rights except for them capturing to get out. I guess I got too focused on the kill and lost sight of my own group's safety.

I am already off the wagon as far as my KGS training. I am resolved to log back on and play. I have been keeping up with my reading but I feel like playing is where the real learning is at.

I've also taken to writing short articles about what I think about Go for our club newsletter. Right now I am just introducing the new guys to some common Japanese terms and concepts, i.e. atsui, atsumi, movement of stones. My take is that if I can elevate some of the younger guys to at least my level than maybe they can help me grow further. I'll get caught up in the momentum.

I don't know about the rest of you but I am really digging all the new English Go books released just recently. I love a new Go book. I don't have a lot of the current selection yet but I am working to change that. (Any donations would be appreciated. ;) ) I picked up the 1st Fujisawa Tesuji book and am loving it. I figure being exposed to the tesuji cannot hurt. I use it like a problem book in that I cover up the bottom portion of the pages and try to figure out the tesuji on my own. I am currently coveting the Yilun Yang's Fundamental Principles of Go. It looks like a great book.

I know ... I know stop reading so much and play more... that's the way to get strong.


12/1/04 : Focus, focus, focus!

I have not been able to get myself onto KGS every night like I wanted. I have played about 5 games though since the last entry and have brought myself back up to 12?. I expect I will settle somewhere around 10-12 ... hopefully closer to 10 but we'll see. Of note, I played a friend of mine, Jezork, who's a 4k and really nice guy. He gave me 8 stones and I won by 16.5 points. At our club if you win 3 in a row with the same handicap then you drop a stone in the handicap. Two more to go... He gave me some pointers after the game which helped alot. So, I am gonna go back and review the 5 games I played on KGS. I almost think that would be better than reviewing the pro games. I blew it on the counting. I just flat out didn't do it. I did slow down a bit and made a point to read out a couple of moves ahead. One game I played I misread a ladder and had to resign. It is so easy to read a ladder on KGS and I botched it up. Oh well, chalk it up as a learning experience.

I have been reviewing commented games from Gobase. Jansteen's comments and the questioning he does during the reviews is very useful in guiding me through the games. I am finding that I am able to choose the next area of play sometimes. I don't get the move correct much but I'll work on that. It made me feel like I was at least grasping the direction of play.

600 seconds goes really fast... time to preview.

That's better.

Here's a question for anyone reading this(If anyone does): When you are playing do you actually know the value for a few moves before you make a move or do you just instinctually play the biggest move?

The Crane's Nest meeting is tonight. I am really looking forward to it. I do not think our tournament will get off the ground until Jan or Feb unless I find someone to take ownership of it and set it all up. We'll see.


11/24/04 : Happy Thanksgiving!

I am fighting to get stronger at this game taht I've been addicted to for about 3 years. Right now I would say I am about 12-11 kyu and plateaued. I have returned to KGS from a pretty long Hiatus online to find a "?" status. I played a 13 kyu and lost by .5 moku the other night. I think that was my first game in months on the system. It is really hard to get a game when you have a ? rank. Throw a guy a bone. I guess I'll have to remember that when I get a bit stronger ... sort of giving back to the Go community. Play ? ranked players too, they're people too.

Playing on the computer is very different for me. I have always been a little weaker on KGS than on a real goban. I have not figured out why but I have noticed it. Does anyone else have this sort of issue?

So to get back on track I am re-reading as many of my Go books as possible starting with In the Beginning, Making Good Shape and Dictionary of basic Tesuji: vol 1. I am also studying some commented pro games from Gobase. And finally, I am trying to get back into playing on KGS regularly. This is my plan for growth.

In thinking about what aspects of my game that need work I realize ... what aspects of my game do not need work, they all do. When I narrow it down to a few topics that I think would really make an immediate difference(so I guess at this point I'm just picking what really interests me) it would be: Counting, life and death and Joseki.

I tried learning to count during my games but I usually get too caught up and play by instinct totally forgetting to count or to think out sequences. So the score usually is a mystery for me until the end. I can tell if I am extremely down or up in points but if it is close I usually have no idea. This also goes for the size of moves. I feel like I have a basic knowledge of value as in move a is bigger than b and c but not down to the moku. So sometimes I am wrong. (Don't get me wrong move urgency is completely another layer to add that I am not very good at either but let's start with counting first.) So in studying the pro games I am trying to count the board and move values hopefully I form some kind of habit. I also want to slow down when I play I think my lack of counting is a side effect o fthis partially. Stop, survey the board, choose 3-4 big and urgent moves, play them out in my head, try to figure out their value and choose the best one. Seems easy but in fact is very difficult for me.

For my other two issues, life and death and joseki, I am working on some problems. The pro games are helping here as well. Seeing there openings and correlating them to what I know has helped a bit and I try to work out if a group is alive or dead before they settle it in the game record.

At the club, we are trying to get our first local tournament going. Getting everyone to agree on a day, coming up with prizes, a place to play and equipment has been hard. It is not off the ground yet. Trying to run a club with a full time job and a full life is tough but rewarding. With the help of a few of the earlier members we have resurrected our club to about 15 meeting-attending-members and about a 30 person roster. I am proud of what we have grown into so far but would like to get the club to the next level. Hopefully by the end of the month our website will be up and flourishing our tournament will scheduled or done and our membership will be up.

This is a huge update. If you made it this far, thank you. Also, while I am at it: Thanks to everyone who contributes to Sensei's library. This is possibly the best resource for Go players on the web. This site and Gobase can fight it out for top honors. Till next time...


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