Tsumego from Games 66

   

Table of contents Table of diagrams
Position at move 43
Usual tsuke
In any book
Kikashi
Counter var1
Counter var2

The Life & death problem

[Diagram]

Position at move 43

Honinbo final 2006, game 1. It is White to play.

  1. Can the top right be killed if White turns elsewhere?
  2. Can you predict the next White plays?

HolIgor: I think black can kill.

[Diagram]

Usual tsuke

[Diagram]

In any book

A throw in after white captures and no eyes.


The next move

HolIgor: If that analysis is right then answering the second part of the problem is far more difficult. Living is about 20 points. It does not seem to be sente. A move around tengen would help other white stones in the top right. The choice is difficult.

[Diagram]

Kikashi

Dieter: The life & death analysis was correct. White has to come back and live. However, first he plays a kikashi at W1. Now this move interests me a lot, and I like to use it as a discussion object in the ongoing thoughts about forcing moves and kikashi.

Bill: Well, I got it wrong. I would have played the clamp at a. Pretty bad, when you think about it. :-(

Dieter: Here's how I see it (strategically).

White has decided living in the corner is urgent. Doing so will lose the initiative. Before taking gote, she wants to squeeze all she can out of the position. W1 commits Black to confirming he will kill the corner if White does nothing. Else, Black will ignore this move and White can live big by playing at B2. After B2, W3 goes back to live and W1 has become a disposable stone that produces an outside effect. The work of W1 is twofold: past work to commit Black to a choice, future work is the influence in central debates.

Now the tactical question: how about other answers for B2?

[Diagram]

Counter var1

If Black wants to counter the central influence, he'll play B2. W3 and W5 give even more influence. B6 is ugly.

[Diagram]

Counter var2

White can play W1 here more agressively than the previous diagram. Seems easy to handle for Black.


This is a copy of the living page "Tsumego from Games 66" at Sensei's Library.
(OC) 2007 the Authors, published under the OpenContent License V1.0.
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