Anytime a young
go player has success playing against some of Europe’s best players in a big
tournament – players should take note.Rada Kamysheva’s recent 3rd place result at the European Pair
Go tournament sparked the interest of many players at the tournament, and it
also prompted me to introduce her and present one of her recent games.
Rada began
taking lessons from me on KGS shortly after learning the rules of go.Rada was unranked at the time and had never
played a game on KGS.Her only
experiences of go came from playing against the computer or against her
parents, who were also beginners.Fast-forward 2 years – and she is now ranked 5 kyu on KGS and starting to
show signs of real potential.
Oh, and did
I mention that she is only 8-years old.
This is a
game between Rada (atatasha) and a 3 kyu ranked player on KGS named Lambic12.Rada played without komi. In this game, White played poorly in fuseki
and later lost two groups during ko fights.In the end, Black won by 6.5 points.
Svetlana Shikshina
( RU ) 2010-05-03 01:05
Hi Sasha,
Yes. Go ahead and show the variation. It was likely a mistake. She needs to learn more joseki.
someone,
It's exciting to see the youth do well and have good results. Perhaps you'll post an article on those kids the next time they do well in a big tournament.
someone
- ( US ) 2010-05-03 04:05
imho, nothing special, i can name 3+ younger+stronger kids in usa
breakfast
2010-05-02 11:05
Also, it's good to know Rada's plan. She wants to reach pro level?
breakfast
2010-05-02 11:05
Shall I post that variation to make it more clear?
breakfast
2010-05-02 11:05
Hi, Sveta
Did you see her game from PairGo last round?
I am curious about first joseki she used, was it home-prepared idea, or just move, choosed because she did not know standard joseki?