Placement principles

  Difficulty: Beginner   Keywords: Tesuji

General Principles in Placement

The following principles may be kept in mind when killing a group with a placement.

Principle 1. Maximise the liberties of your placement group

See: counting liberties

Example:

[Diagram]

A placement should strive for maximum liberties

This is a standard life and death shape Carpenter's Square that if played correctly leads to a ko fight and for black; correct play begins with a placement, B1. The more liberties the harder it is to be killed. The aim is to live as long as possible. This principle not relevant when the placement is a sacrifice (see Principle 5).


Principle 2. Try to make an eye

See: eye in the belly.

Obviously if you can make 2 eyes do so. But in a situation where the placement cannot live by itself inside the territory of the opponent's group, having an eye may decide the outcome of the situation. Using the previous example, suppose the opponent unwisely plays elsewhere:

[Diagram]

Eye-making

B3 threatens to create an eye at square (and in fact kills white unconditionally).
Using the same reasoning,

[Diagram]

The purpose of W2

The correct W2 is to play underneath B1. This move seems unusual (placement within a placement) until one realise that

  1. W2 removes the possibility of black making an eye
  2. Reduces liberty of B1
  3. W2 is gote connected to the white group.


Principle 3. Keep your placement group in a dead shape

See: killing shapes.

[Diagram]

Keep placement group dead shape

Black is a bent four in the corner dead shape. If he plays at square in the next move he makes a bulky five which is dead standing. However if he plays at circle his shape is alive; white can capture it and live.


This simplistic diagram illustrates how, instead of looking for live shape, one wants the opposite (aka dead shape) with regard to a placement group that cannot live on its own. e.g. straight three, bent four in the corner, bulky five... etc., so that the opponent is forced to capture, and ends up with a territory that is a dead shape. This does not necessarily mean death for the opponent's group, but it at least forces further play (e.g. escape into the centre, link up with another group, kill an outside group) to live.

Principle 4. Be aware of opponents' group(s) with 3 or potentially 3 liberties

See: oiotoshi

A group of stones is vulnerable to oiotoshi if it ends up with 2 liberties. No matter how brilliant a move is, it can only reduce the liberties of an attacked group one by one. A placement that leads to oiotoshi therefore requires a targeted group with 3 liberties (or you can reduce the liberties to 3 by other means).

[Diagram]

Oiotoshi-able

The correct move begins with B1, which makes no sense until one sees it as a way to force the white stones to end up with 3 liberties.

[Diagram]

Oiotoshi-able 2

None of the black stones can live in its own. Their sole purpose is to reduce the liberties of the white groups to 3 (circles), so that black's play at

[Diagram]

Oiotoshi-able 2

...becomes an oiotoshi to white, or escape for the black stone with circle.


Principle 5. placement to force bad shape

See throw-in.


This is a copy of the living page "Placement principles" at Sensei's Library.
(OC) 2012 the Authors, published under the OpenContent License V1.0.
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