@Robin Wilson The guy is doing the time keeping. That's right. There are maximally 30 seconds per move, and there is 10 minutes main time, which you use if your 30 seconds weren't enough. If your 10 minutes are used up, you can lose by forfeit if you don't move in time. As a matter of fact he counts up in stead of count down ju-byo means ten-secs. ni-ju-byo means two-ten-secs, so 20 secs. Next count is 25, 26 ... upto 30 after which the main time is used. The woman calls the coordinates of the move. Mind that the origin is in the upper left. She usually adds the type of move after calling the coordinates. Eg. nobi = strech, kosumi = diagonal, osa-e = block.
+Yarnell Riley I came to the comment section in search for an answer to the same question. I can't play go and i don't understand japanese.... total waste of time
From what I understand, the women in the background called out the move monitor for the pros to discuss o. Why they moved their moves there. The man is the timer while the woman is the move monitor that record the kifu...right?
I'm new to Go so sorry if this is a dumb question, but from what I've seen openings contain a minimum of two moves around the 4-4 corner positions. Is going straight into an attack on the second move a common joseki that I am unaware of or is it just an insanely aggressive move?
It's not an unusually greedy move. 5-3 points have been played for hundreds of years. It's a move that keeps you low (safer) but extends influence toward the side you're on the 5th line of. The reason he immediately approached is because had he taken the time to play another corner move, Black would've had sente to enclose the corner in a very wide way. On the other hand, black could've enclosed with a 3-4 point and it would've been pretty normal, but playing the 5-3 first invites white to attack to stop something ridiculous and lets you have the stone where you would've wanted it anyway. On the topic of White's approach, though, the reason he didn't play the 3-4 (The other most common corner point in this position) is because it would be the same as if White had played 3-4 to begin with, black approached at the 5-3 and white just didn't respond for some reason. The shoulder hit at the 4-5 would've been really painful for white and would've forced a crawl on the third line, letting black take a ton of influence toward both the right side and center with white basically gaining nothing in return but a few points (that could still be reduced). If you're interested on seeing more uses of the 5-3 opening move, you should go study some games of Honinbo Dosaku from the mid to late 1600's. It was a move he liked to use a lot and to great effect.
+UnoptaniumMovies I was reading the comments before the game started. Now because of you the "jibio" makes me giggle every time. It just makes it more fun.
OK. Experienced spectators immediately extraced "52 NHK" from the surrounding hieroglyphs and translated 52 NHK into 2005 NHK Cup, but anyway :-) Sensei Takemiya Masaki 9p and sensei Aoba Kaori 4p were the commentators. The game happened on the beautiful day march 20th 2005.
Great game!!!! shape Chou U is vary beauty, Norimoto your style is beautiful, but a little less comprehensive than that of Cho U. I recommend watching this game. Very high level with a great chance of learning ...
You mean the nigiri? (Squeeze?) It is determine who got black or white..who play first.the white have 5 and half moku since black has advantages by going first
reistonator no prob.the black put down 1 stone since hes guessing the stones would be odd nmber and he got it right.therefore he gets black.if he guess the stones are even, the he would put down 2 stones..i m a novice in this but enjoying. (^-^)
kuronekouhai You are less novice than me, haha, I have read about the game and playing on an app but never saw this situation, very cool, thanks for sharing =)
it is similar to chess, the masters stop much earlier because they see when its all over much earlier. for a beginner it can seem undecided, but a mid-level player can try to continue from that end-position and will quickly learn that it is in fact over. you have areas that will be dead no matter what, even if there still are seemingly free areas, and others that will be live because they cannot be prevented from forming two eyes no matter how the game continues. if there is any disagreement about the score, the players continue playing until it becomes more clear.
The way you open affects the rest of game just like in chess for instance. If you are a good and experienced player you can tell where every move that is made will lead in the future, so you want to be careful what you do.
El Jovy you can also use time to make the feel of the game whether on the board or not really tense by using your time or you can use that time to relaz and play solidly it's not only about thinking how things will go because there are so many options i think pro's would usually think about the opening before the game even begins.....many different reasons why many people take their time in the beginning
El Jovy Its Maybe like chess, he knows the openings, but needs to decide, which he is going to play. especially if he is trying something new/ unexpected, the beginning is very important to get the right paths. The first 10-20 moves decide the flow of the whole game!
+Daniel Bae Not for me. Just my opinion, if you felt the urge to say, that you dont like it, go somewhere else. Theres plenty of room for you, probably you´d rather like "LOL" or something like that.
@Robin Wilson
The guy is doing the time keeping. That's right. There are maximally 30 seconds per move, and there is 10 minutes main time, which you use if your 30 seconds weren't enough. If your 10 minutes are used up, you can lose by forfeit if you don't move in time.
As a matter of fact he counts up in stead of count down ju-byo means ten-secs. ni-ju-byo means two-ten-secs, so 20 secs. Next count is 25, 26 ... upto 30 after which the main time is used.
The woman calls the coordinates of the move. Mind that the origin is in the upper left. She usually adds the type of move after calling the coordinates. Eg. nobi = strech, kosumi = diagonal, osa-e = block.
The Timekeeper Kazushige Ando and the Scorekeeper Mieko Nakashima are now married ^_^
オープニングの音楽にすごい懐かしさを感じました。
What the fuck am i doing here
+Yarnell Riley I came to the comment section in search for an answer to the same question. I can't play go and i don't understand japanese.... total waste of time
These games are a goldmine of ASMR.
i really miss the japanese videos...they have some kind of special atmosphere. thanks for this video.
yup, I used to watch this TV show when Kaori Aoba was an assistant. It was over 6 years ago..Nice game!
Kaori Aoba was gorgeous
and now this with english subtitles :D could someone reupload ^^" with subs? understand nothing ^^
1:34:50 my favorite part
Really colorful play.
"Jyubyou" means 10 seconds. It is telling the players they've been on the clock for 10 seconds that hand
I think I'd be good at that job ;).
Were is Sai when you need him
J
Enjoyed watching this game! Would have liked some English subtitles but I still think I learned something by watching!
小林光一さん、海石の娘です。🙇すいませんでした。有難う御座います
皆様、家庭も仕事も、弟や、多くに大変な思いを致しました。私も、さだめから逃げません。幼い頃を思い、申し訳御座いませ🙇
She is announcing the location of each move
Can anyone tell what means when tehy say "GBO" or something like that. They say that many times. I'm new to GO. Thanks
Whta happened at the end?
From what I understand, the women in the background called out the move monitor for the pros to discuss o. Why they moved their moves there. The man is the timer while the woman is the move monitor that record the kifu...right?
do they play without a clock?
I'm new to Go so sorry if this is a dumb question, but from what I've seen openings contain a minimum of two moves around the 4-4 corner positions. Is going straight into an attack on the second move a common joseki that I am unaware of or is it just an insanely aggressive move?
Sorry no one answered you.
It’s a response to an unusually greedy move from black
It's not an unusually greedy move. 5-3 points have been played for hundreds of years. It's a move that keeps you low (safer) but extends influence toward the side you're on the 5th line of.
The reason he immediately approached is because had he taken the time to play another corner move, Black would've had sente to enclose the corner in a very wide way.
On the other hand, black could've enclosed with a 3-4 point and it would've been pretty normal, but playing the 5-3 first invites white to attack to stop something ridiculous and lets you have the stone where you would've wanted it anyway.
On the topic of White's approach, though, the reason he didn't play the 3-4 (The other most common corner point in this position) is because it would be the same as if White had played 3-4 to begin with, black approached at the 5-3 and white just didn't respond for some reason.
The shoulder hit at the 4-5 would've been really painful for white and would've forced a crawl on the third line, letting black take a ton of influence toward both the right side and center with white basically gaining nothing in return but a few points (that could still be reduced).
If you're interested on seeing more uses of the 5-3 opening move, you should go study some games of Honinbo Dosaku from the mid to late 1600's. It was a move he liked to use a lot and to great effect.
@@taa347 Oh I see thanks for the explanation
For those, who dont understand any word: Skip to 5:50 ^^
Why is someone saying "jibio" all the time? And what does it means?
‘jubyou’- 10 seconds left
刘东霖 Thank you bro!
+UnoptaniumMovies I was reading the comments before the game started. Now because of you the "jibio" makes me giggle every time. It just makes it more fun.
+刘东霖 not left but passed.
OK. Experienced spectators immediately extraced "52 NHK" from the surrounding hieroglyphs and translated 52 NHK into 2005 NHK Cup, but anyway :-)
Sensei Takemiya Masaki 9p and sensei Aoba Kaori 4p were the commentators.
The game happened on the beautiful day march 20th 2005.
Great game!!!! shape Chou U is vary beauty, Norimoto your style is beautiful, but a little less comprehensive than that of Cho U. I recommend watching this game. Very high level with a great chance of learning ...
囲碁は奥が深い
Do you hear the person saying "juu byo" pretty often? He's timing the game, so they don't need a clock at the table.
The guy in the background is keeping time, but occasionally the woman speaks too - what's she saying?
Are the commentators' boards for go and shōgi magnetic or something?
the "stones" have magnets attached to their bottom
I hate how the male commentator keeps pointing out perfectly obvious moves to the female commentator.
people should put some subtitle to those videos...
Thanks inspesctor !
Nice call by NHK to bring in other go players to commentate, as they actually know what they're talking about.
Does anyone know why did the white palced few pieces at the table at the very beginning?
You mean the nigiri? (Squeeze?) It is determine who got black or white..who play first.the white have 5 and half moku since black has advantages by going first
kuronekouhai Thanks VM Kurone!
reistonator no prob.the black put down 1 stone since hes guessing the stones would be odd nmber and he got it right.therefore he gets black.if he guess the stones are even, the he would put down 2 stones..i m a novice in this but enjoying. (^-^)
kuronekouhai You are less novice than me, haha, I have read about the game and playing on an app but never saw this situation, very cool, thanks for sharing =)
+kuronekouhai It is called Nigiri. Kind of toss to know who takes black and who takes white.
Starts at 5:50
There are people there watching the clock
go is strong in this one
How was this scored? How do you know what is whose territory? Other than eyes and prisoners of course.
it is similar to chess, the masters stop much earlier because they see when its all over much earlier. for a beginner it can seem undecided, but a mid-level player can try to continue from that end-position and will quickly learn that it is in fact over. you have areas that will be dead no matter what, even if there still are seemingly free areas, and others that will be live because they cannot be prevented from forming two eyes no matter how the game continues.
if there is any disagreement about the score, the players continue playing until it becomes more clear.
It wasn't scored. Black resigned.
My favorite go player, The person who defeated meijin rin kaihon
Why they wait so long in the first move? they have the whole square??
The way you open affects the rest of game just like in chess for instance. If you are a good and experienced player you can tell where every move that is made will lead in the future, so you want to be careful what you do.
Ok, thanks lukaszepsi
El Jovy he only took something like 25 seconds for move 1. i guess that is for dramatic effect.
El Jovy you can also use time to make the feel of the game whether on the board or not really tense by using your time or you can use that time to relaz and play solidly it's not only about thinking how things will go because there are so many options i think pro's would usually think about the opening before the game even begins.....many different reasons why many people take their time in the beginning
El Jovy Its Maybe like chess, he knows the openings, but needs to decide, which he is going to play. especially if he is trying something new/ unexpected, the beginning is very important to get the right paths. The first 10-20 moves decide the flow of the whole game!
終局の3手前くらいでジャミングというか、モザイクみたいになってしまった。そこは見たかった。
whats the name of the female go commentator? She's cute
張栩の読み力凄いっす!
井山さんがタイトルを独占するまで張さんとかがタイトルを独占していた時代でしたね❗
囲碁面白すぎる!!
yo jibio
Someone get Akira and Hikaru!!!
Disrespect? Hahaha, oh wow. I really hope you're kidding.
これいつの?
2005年3月20日と思われます。
1:20の「地震情報」は当日起きた福岡県西方沖地震に関するものでしょうね。
夫婦で記録係をやってるww
?
@@AlCEZUKl ???
Je suis le seul français ?😰
Nope
As i thought, white won
めっちゃ女性が媚びててなんだかなぁ笑
boring
+Daniel Bae Not for me. Just my opinion, if you felt the urge to say, that you dont like it, go somewhere else. Theres plenty of room for you, probably you´d rather like "LOL" or something like that.