Skip to main content
Print This Page
Text Size
Scroll To Top
Join the AGA
Sign In
menu
Home
2026 Go Congress
Learn to Play Go
Find a Club
Events Calendar
News
AGA Ratings
Blogs
Home
News / Articles List
Details
News / Articles
Kiseido Releases Modern Master Games in Hard-Copy
Published on 3/20/2012
Kiseido has just issued
Modern Master Games, Volume One, The Dawn of Tournament Go
in hard-copy; it was first
released in September 2011 (
Modern Master Games & More New Releases from SmartGo Books 9/19 EJ
) in
digital format
by SmartGo Books. A survey of Japanese go from the founding of the Honinbo tournament in the 1940s to the Meijin and Judan tournaments in the 1960s,
Modern Master Games
was written by by Rob van Zeijst and Richard Bozulich, with historical notes by John Power. It includes 11 games, including the "Atomic Bomb Game" between Iwamoto and Hashimoto, analyzed in detail and tied together with a historical commentary by John Power. The games in this book were played in turbulent times. When the first Honinbo tournament was established in 1941, the war had not yet seriously affected the Japanese go world or the daily life of the average Japanese. But by the time of the third Honinbo tournament, Japanese society was in chaos --- bullets were whizzing overhead during the first game of the title match and the atomic bomb was dropped just 10 kilometers from where the second game was being played. After the war, life slowly returned to normal.
By the 1950s, the go world was again abuzz.
Rivalries were flourishing, and newspapers were establishing new tournaments with abundant prize money. As the post-war go world was reorganizing itself, the matches played were of much consequence --- it became more than just winning a title. The results were to determine the organizations that governed the game in Japan until today. The pressures on the players were intense, and it exposed their psychological strengths as well as fragilities. Takagawa's games in this book show how dangerous it is to underestimate an opponent. It was almost unbelievable to some that the mild-mannered Takagawa, whose quiet and laid-back style, never attacking too strongly and lacking the brilliance of a player like Sakata, could hold the Honinbo title against all comers for nearly a decade. Sakata's games are good illustrations of the slashing style which earned him the moniker Razor-Sharp Sakata. We also see examples of the depth of his analysis when he makes an unorthodox peep (dubbed the tesuji of the century) against Fujisawa Shuko that entails another tesuji 15 moves later whose consequences also have to be analyzed. The fact that both Sakata and Fujisawa could read this deeply and accurately shows that the level of their play was second to none. Fujisawa Hosai was another important player of this era --- his power on the go board was likened to that of a bulldozer. He had a penchant for playing imitation go, but this was, as explained in the commentary on one of his games, a well thought-out strategy that he used to take advantage of the komi system that had been recently adopted.
photo: Hashimoto Utaro (l) and Go Seigen (r) in 1947; photo courtesy
Go Igo Weiqi Baduk
blog.
Return to Previous Page
Menu Links
Learn to Play Go
Find a Club
Events Calendar
News
Go Congress
Ratings
Site Search
Other Links
About the AGA
American Go Foundation
Youth
Tournaments
Forums
Elections
AGA Code of Conduct
Documents
Archived Website
Contact Us
Terms of Use
Privacy Policy
Get the AGA E-Journal
Get important Go news from the AGA, links to upcoming events and new blog posts.
Subscribe/Unsubscribe
Make a Donation to the AGA
The AGA runs on the generosity of people like you
Donate Today
1997-2022 American Go Association
Powered by ClubExpress
Email Us
contact@usgo.org
Watch our livestreams
Follow us on social media