Alexandre Dinerchtein

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http://breakfast.go4go.net/images/Diner1small_2.jpg

Alexandre Grigorievich Dinerchtein (Александр Григорьевич Динерштейн, born April 19, 1980) is a Russian professional 3-dan Go player who became an yeongusaeng (Korean version of an insei) in South Korea.

Dinerchtein became a professional shodan with the Hankuk Ki-won in 2002, 3-dan in 2008.

Alexandre had a major success in the first round of the 8th LG Cup (2003-2004): he defeated O Rissei 9p. [ext] http://www.go4go.net/english/commentary/

Table of contents

Major Tournament Wins

  • European Go Championship 1999, 2000, 2002, 2003, 2004, 2005, 2009
  • European Ing Cup? 2001, 2002, 2005
  • European Go Oza? 2002, 2005
  • European Masters tournament? 2005,2007
  • Russian LG cup? 2000, 2001, 2003

Teaching

Alexandre offers one-to-one and group lessons on KGS and DGS, simultaneous games and live commentaries for tournament organizers. Some of his students are: Patrick Bridges?, Mihail Povalyaev, Ivo Schuurink, Alexander Bitman, Alexander Suponev?, Fanny Roitman?, Edbert Hsu?, Thomas Watson?, Les Waller, Thomas Derz and many others

More details on : [ext] http://breakfast.go4go.net/?id=3

In January 2010, he started the Korean-style Insei League on KGS. It started in with 5 divisions. In May this was extended with a league on DGS

Game Commentaries, Publications, and Websites

On the website Go4Go, Dinerchtein provides commented pro games and other services for a fee of 50 USD per year.

I enjoy these commented pro games enormously. It's about the only place on the net where you can get a glimpse of modern pro thinking, commented modern joseki and fuseki, comments which are moreover of Korean type. As a personal note, Dinerchtein does not fall into a habit I utterly dislike in pro comment, namely passing in global analyses.

The main editor of Goama, International Go Game Newsletter

[ext] San-ren-sei his website dedicated to teaching this fuseki.

His home page [ext] http://www.breakfast.go4go.net

Recently, he created much more on the internet.

  • Followed - early in 2010 - by a pro-version 9dan.com of it , which focuses on major games from several world title events, like Ing-, LG-, or Fujitsu-Cups.

In the same time he had worked also on baduk.pro - his alternative as a social site (but only for the go community) to Facebook, which was launched in March 2010. Soon, it gained several 100s of members.

Miscellaneous

Recent photos, Moscow -2005: [ext] http://goama.upstream.ru/gallery/albums/DVD/normal_2%20034.jpg [ext] http://goama.upstream.ru/gallery/albums/Champ-of-Russia/normal_DSC_0094.jpg [ext] http://goama.upstream.ru/gallery/albums/Champ-of-Russia/normal_DSC_0248.jpg

His name (Александр Динерштейн) is also transliterated as Alexandr Dinerstein or Alexander Dinershteyn, but "Alexandre Dinerchtein" is the form he seems to use himself.[1]

His KGS nickname is breakfast for teaching games, backpast for rated games

[ext] Alexandre Dinerchtein's KGS games

Go tests, compiled by Dinerchtein: [ext] http://play.baduk.org/ and [ext] http://style.baduk.org/

Go search engine, created by Dinerchtein: [ext] http://find.gogame.info/

Game reviews at GTL: [ext] http://gtl.xmp.net/members/info?p_key=1400&pseudo=breakfast


[1] Charles That's a Cyrillic romanisation based on French pronunciation - there are very traditional reasons for it.


This is a copy of the living page "Alexandre Dinerchtein" at Sensei's Library.
(OC) 2011 the Authors, published under the OpenContent License V1.0.
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