3-4 point high approach, double contact, cut

    Keywords: Joseki
[Diagram]

Complex fight

This is a classic complex joseki, involving an important ladder. B7 has also been played at a in some games by top players.

[Diagram]

Complex fight

After these plays the ladder formed by B10 must be broken, that is the ladder must be good for White, of course. Otherwise W5 must be moved to the location of B8. Black must check that this ladder is good for him before cutting at B5 (here marked as BC) in the previous diagram; so that this sequence doesn't appear in games between players who know what they are doing.

[Diagram]

Ladder good for Black

When the ladder is good for Black, which we can therefore presume, W1 is best, when B2 and B4 set up miai: either we have Black a, White b, Black c which captures the corner, or Black makes the severe cut at d.

Therefore White is in some trouble. There are quite a number of variations in pro games, this being an example of an unexplored joseki. Recently it seems that Cho hun-hyeon is willing to play the white side of this position: perhaps White's loss in the corner can be compensated for by pace, in his style.

Charles Matthews


This is a copy of the living page "3-4 point high approach, double contact, cut" at Sensei's Library.
(OC) 2007 the Authors, published under the OpenContent License V1.0.
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