Aji Example 1

    Keywords: Tactics
[Diagram]

Aji

W2 increases White's liberties and thereby creates more aji. White's stones are lost, but their potential can be fully exploited.

In this case, the aji will be exploited almost immediately, and as such this is not the best example of its lingering quality.

Barthoze it's an application of add a second stone and sacrifice both

[Diagram]

Aji

It is almost painful how Black has to answer White's moves if he is determined to capture the two white stones. B2 and especially BC are almost superfluous stones.

Here Black is forced to capture two stones that were dead already; White has used the aji of those two stones to form thickness on the outside (with no bad aji).

W1, making the opponent answer in one particular and expected way, oneself gaining something in the process, is called kikashi.


-BillSpight: B6 is comparatively small. At the time of W1 - W5, Black will often play elsewhere.

xela: B6 isn't on the diagram! It should be at a?

Bill: It was at a. See version 11. After my comment, the diagram was changed, but not the text ("forced to capture").

Skelley: White could even consider not playing W5 to take sente; the aji of atari on the two black stones remains in case of a black peep or push out.

W3 is tesuji. If W5 instead, Black plays at W3.

W1 gains two things. First, it prevents B1. Playing sente is like cashing a check or coupon before it expires. In this case the expiration date is soon, before B4. The second thing W1 gains is B2. After B4, Black responds to B1 with W6.


[Diagram]

Leaving cutting aji

Charles Matthews In fact we can look again at this position. B1 is a standard idea to leave some aji in White's position.

[Diagram]

The cutting point

If now this, White has to worry about the cutting point at a. Since it may be slow to defend it immediately, it can remain as bad aji for White.

[Diagram]

Some other aji

But White may not respond directly here. If White plays tenuki, Black has some bad aji that wasn't present in the initial diagram - for example the tactics in this diagram. Right now this doesn't lead anywhere for White, of course. But in combination with some other fight, this might become a serious possibility.

(Question: I'm curious why White shouldn't feel compelled to connect above 5, which is in atari. Or am I just obviously missing the point of the lesson? Answer: When black takes stone 5 white then plays to the left of 9 squeezing black. With lots of white support in the area this might work.)


See also Aji example 3.


This is a copy of the living page "Aji Example 1" at Sensei's Library.
(OC) 2007 the Authors, published under the OpenContent License V1.0.
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