"chenns" becomes 9-dan!
We have already reported the identity of
"chenns" (in the previous article), but now we can put out more
details about him.
In his personal page on KGS, chenns has a list of his
results in the World Amateur Go Championship:
2005 World Amateur Go Championship (WAGC) 8th place
2006 WCGC 5th place
2007 WCGC 13 place
2008 WCGC 4th place
2009 WCGC 3rd place
2010 WCGC 4th place
So he must be Nai San CHAN. To be sure, I decided to
ask him personally:
DanielTom
[-]: chenns, are you Nai San Chan?
chenns [8d]:
yes
DanielTom
[-]: oh! I want to see you play! :-)
chenns [8d]:
may be next
So chenns is one of the strongest amateurs in the
world! He is from Hong Kong, China, so maybe (just maybe) "kghin"
8-dan, who is also from Hong Kong, sees him as a rival... (Just for the record,
they played a game two days ago and chenns won).
As promised, I will now show you a game played by
chenns.
It was a very stimulating game that has just been
played - with a complicated semeai in the middlegame - that chenns (8-dan at
the time) played against Hutoshi4, 8-dan.
White (chenns) won the game by resignation in less
than 200 moves, which made Hutoshi4 say after the game:
Hutoshi4
[8d]: I am too weak...
Keep in mind that just before this game Hutoshi4 was
crushed by "jove" 9-dan, so he was probably feeling tired! I wouldn't
say that Hutoshi4 is "too weak", but I could say that chenns and jove
are too strong!
White G14 (move 128) was too painful to allow... The
problem for Black was that with Q12 (move 117) he lost sente and White could
get, as we saw, G14. So after the game Hutoshi4 tried to form a better plan for
Black (I added the variations in the game file) and it seems that maybe Black
should start with a peep (O13 instead of Q12) and then take sente to defend his
group in the center.
Having won the game, chenns became KGS 9-dan. Watch
out for him!