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1st August 1988 Masaki Takemiya.
2nd August 1989 Masaki Takemiya.
The third August 1990 Lin Haifeng.
The 4th August 1991 Zhao Zhixun.
The 5th August 1992 Otake Hero.
6th August 1993 Yoo Chang-hyuk.
7th August 1994 Cho Hoon-hyun.
The 8th August 1995 Ma Xiaochun.
9th August 1996 Lee Chang-ho.
10th August 1997 Koichi Kobayashi.
11th 19988 Lee Chang-ho.
The twelfth August 1999 Liu Changhyuk.
The thirteenth August 2000 Cho Hoon-hyun.
The 14th August 2001 Cho Hoon-hyun.
15th August 2002 Lee Sedol.
16th July 2003 Lee Sedol.
17th July 2004 Park Yong-hoon.
18th July 2005 Lee Sedol.
19th July 2006 Park Jung-sang.
20th July 2007 Park Yong-hoon.
21st July 2008 Coulee.
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For details, see Tom Go).
Champion of the Fujitsu Cup.
Champion of several years.
1 1988 Masaki Takemiya.
2 1989 Masaki Takemiya.
3 1990 Lin Haifeng.
4 1991 Zhao Zhixun.
5 1992 Otake Heroes.
6 1993 Liu Chang-hyuk.
7 1994 Cho Hoon-hyun.
8 1995 Ma Xiaochun.
9 1996 Lee Chang-ho.
10 1997 Kobayashi Koichi.
11 1998 Lee Chang-ho.
12 1999 Liu Chang-hyuk.
13 2000 Cho Hoon-hyun.
14 2001 Cho Hoon-hyun.
15-2002 Lee Sedol.
16 2003 Lee Sedol.
17 2004 Park Young-hoon.
18-2005 Lee Sedol.
19-2006 Park Jung-sang.
20 2007 Park Young-hoon.
21 2008 Coulee.
22-2009 Jiang Dongrun.
23-2010 Kong Jie.
24-2011 Park Ting-hwan.
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Number of sessions, year, champion, runner-up.
Masaki Takemiya Nine Sections Lin Haifeng Nine Sections.
Masaki Takemiya Nine Sections Lin Haifeng Nine Sections.
Lin Haifeng, nine sections, Nie Weiping, nine sections.
Zhao Zhixun, Jiuduan, Qian Yuping, Jiuduan.
The Great Trembling Bamboo Hero Nine Sections Wang Licheng Nine Sections.
Yoo Chang-hyuk 6th dan Cho Hoon-hyun 9th dan.
Cho Hoon-hyun, 9th dan, Yoo Chang-hyuk, 6th dan.
Ma Xiaochun, 9 dan, Kobayashi Koichi, 9 dan.
Lee Chang-ho 9 dan Ma Xiaochun 9 dan .
Kobayashi Koichi Kudan Wang Licheng Kudan.
Lee Chang-ho 9 dan Chang Hao 9 dan .
Liu Changhe, 9 duan, Ma Xiaochun, 9 duan.
Cao Xun Hyun Nine Sections Chang Hao Eggplant Mountain Nine Sections.
Cho Hoon-hyun, 9 dans, Choi Myung-hoon, 8 dans.
Lee Sedol 3rd dan Yoo Chang-hyuk 9th dan
Lee Sedol, 7th section, Song Tae-kun, 4th section.
Park Yongxun 6th dan and Ida Kiki 9th dan.
Lee Sedol, 9 dan, Choi Cheol-han, 9 dan.
Park Zhengxiang 6th section Zhou Heyang 9th paragraph.
Park Yong-hoon, 9 dan, Lee Chang-ho, 9 dan.
21, Changqiao 2008 Gu Li Jiu Duan Lee Chang Ho Jiu Duan.
Kang Dong Yun 9 dan Lee Chang Ho 9 dan
Kong Jie 9 dan Lee Sedol 9 dan .
Park Tinghuan 9 Duan Qiu Jun 9 Duan.
Three-time champions: Cho Hoon-hyun (1994, 2000, 2001, 1993 runner-up), Lee Sedol (2002, 2003, 2005).
Two-time champions: Masaki Takemiya (1988, 1989), Yoo Chang-hyuk (1993, 1999, 1994 runner-up, 2002 runner-up).
Lee Chang-ho (1996, 1998, 2007 runner-up, 2008 runner-up) <>
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<> Fujitsu Cup World Professional Go Championship (Japanese.
Name: Fujibashi Yutong Cup (World's Tournament) is the world's first international professional Go tournament. The tournament was founded in 1988 and held annually until 2011, when it was discontinued after its 24th edition.
Among the 24 championships produced, the Chinese team won 3, and the Japanese team eliminated jujubes.
Won 6 from the Korean team.
Obtain 15 of them.
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1. Introduction: The Fujitsu Cup is co-sponsored by Japan's Yomiuri Shimbun, Japan Chess Academy and Kansai Chess Academy, and sponsored by Fujitsu Japan. It is the first World Go Championship, which was born in 1988 and is held once a year, and has been held for 19 times so far.
The tournament is played in a single-elimination format until the final champion is determined. The prize money for the winner of the Fujitsu Cup was originally 20 million yen, but since 2003, it has been reduced to 15 million yen.
2. Previous champions and championship history: The first session: Masaki Takemiya (Cao Dayuan, Ma Xiaochun, Kobayashi Hikatsu.
1. Lin Haifeng) 2nd: Masaki Wugong (Qian Yuping, Liu Xiaoguang, Cao Xunxuan, Lin Haifeng) 3rd: Lin Haifeng (Liang Zaihao, Wang Licheng, Kobayashi Guang.
1. Nie Weiping) 4th: Zhao Zhixun (Liu Changhe, Ma Xiaochun, Wang Licheng, Qian Yuping) 5th: Dazhu Heroes (Akirul, Mike Raymond, Nie Weiping, Ma Xiaochun, Wang Licheng) 6th:
Yoo Chang-hyuk (Yoshio Ishida, Wang Licheng, Hero Otake, Osamu Awaji.
3. Cao Xunxuan) 7th: Cao Xunxuan (Yoshio Ishida, Masao Kato, Lin Haifeng, Liu Changhyuk) 8th: Ma Xiaochun (Kunio Ishii, Masao Kato, Lin Haifeng, Zhao Zhixun, Kobayashi Koichi) 9th:
Lee Chang-ho (Chen Yongan, Nie Weiping, Wang Mingwan, Kobayashi Guang.
1. Ma Xiaochun) 10th: Kobayashi Koichi (Xu Bongsu, Chang Hao, Zhou Heyang, Wang Licheng) 11th: Lee Chang-ho (Katarin, Ishida Yoshio, Yu Bin, Hikosaka Naoto, Chang Hao) 12th:
Yoo Chang-hyuk (Goto Toshi-no, Ishida Yoshio, Cho Ji-hoon, Ma Xiaochun) 13th: Cho Hoon-hyun (Joo Jun-hoon, Cho Ji-hoon, Cho He-yang, Mu Jin-suk, Chang Hao) 14th: Cho Hoon-hyun (Kong Jie, Kobayashi Hikatsu.
1. Lin Haifeng, Choi Myung-hoon) 15th: Lee Sedol (Wang Senfeng, Lim Haifeng, Joo Jun-hoon, Lee Chang-ho, Yoo Chang-hyuk) 16th: Lee Sedol (Naoki Hane, Kobayashi Satoru, Yitian Kiki, Song Tae-kun) 17th:
Park Yongxun (Seong-cong, Keigo Yamashita, Jang Xu, Yoo Chang-hyuk, Yida Kiki) 18th: Lee Sedol (Nakanoda Tomoki, Yida Kiki, Yu Bin, Yoo Chang-hyuk, Choi Cheol-han) 19th: Park Jung-sang (Jiang Mingjiu, Hane Naoki, Chang Hao, Choi Cheol-han, Zhou Heyang).
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Total prize money: 33,460,000 yen (44,200,000 yen before the 16th term) Champion: 15,000,000 yen.
Runner-up: 5 million yen.
3rd place: 3.5 million yen.
4th place: 1.5 million yen.
Semifinals: 800,000 yen.
Advance to the second round: 480,000 yen.
Entering Round 1: 240,000.
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The 23rd Fujitsu Cup World Professional Go Championship opened on April 9, 2010 in Tokyo, Japan, and the participating players from various countries and regions have been fully determined.
The 23rd Fujitsu Cup is as follows:
South Korea: Kang Dong-yun 9 dan, Lee Chang Ho 9 dan, Park Yong-hoon 9 dan, Lee Sedol 9 dan, Choi Cheol-han 9 dan, Kim Ji Seok 7 dan, Park Jeong-hwan 7 dan, Mu Jin-seok 9 dan.
7 people from Japan: Zhang Xu 9th dan, Keigo Yamashita 9th dan, Naoki Hane 9th dan, Takao Shinji 9th dan, Yoshio Ishida 9th dan, Sakai Hidezhi 7th dan, Ansai Nobuaki 6th dan.
5 Chinese people: Gu Li 9 duan, Kong Jie 9 duan, Chang Hao 9 duan, Qiu Jun 8 duan, Park Wenyao 5 duan.
Chinese Taipei 1 person: Chen Shiyuan 9 duan.
1 in Europe: Dihon, Sanzinastain, 3rd dan.
1 person in North America: Li Jie 7 paragraphs.
South American 1: Akirul 6th dan.
The players who entered the second round in advance were: Gu Li, Kong Jie, Kang Dong-run, Lee Chang-ho, Park Yong-hoon, Lee Sedol, Zhang Xu, Keigo Yamashita The 23rd Fujitsu Cup quarterfinals Qiu Jun defeated Kang Dong-yun with a white half-eye.
The 23rd Fujitsu Cup quarterfinals Kong Jie defeated Kim Ji Seok in the middle game.
The 23rd Fujitsu Cup quarterfinals Park Wenyao defeated Park Yongxun in the middle game.
The 23rd Fujitsu Cup quarterfinals Lee Sedol defeated Gu Li in the middle game (Hong Min-pyo commentary).
So far, the first stage of the Fujitsu Cup has ended, and 3 of the 5 Chinese players have advanced to the semi-finals, with a survival rate of 60%. But Lee Sedol, who has won 19 consecutive victories, is still there, and China does not dare to have the slightest ease. The semi-finals and finals will be played on July 3 and 5, 2011, with Park Moon-yo taking on Lee Sedol and Kong Jie taking on Qiu Jun.
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Fujitsu Cup World Go Championship (Japanese name: Fujitsu Cup 世界囲碁player 権戦, English name: Fujitsu Cup WorldGoChampionship) is an international Go tournament founded in 1988 and held annually.
In December 2011, the Fujitsu Cup, the world's oldest Go tournament in the world, was held for 24 sessions in Pichongmu.
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The Fujitsu Cup, the world's oldest Go tournament in the world, has finally come to an end after 24 sessions. On December 19, 2011, the Foreign Affairs Department of the Chinese Chess Academy received an official letter from the Japan Chess Academy informing it of the decision to suspend the Fujitsu Cup.
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Due to the financial crisis and Japan's domestic economic downturn, Fujitsu has become increasingly stretched thin to host the event.
In the past, when Japanese Go led the top three in China, Japan and South Korea, Japanese companies were very happy to promote themselves through sponsorship competitions, but in recent years, with the defeat of Japanese players in the face of Chinese and Korean chess players, the enthusiasm of Japanese companies to sponsor Go has also decreased year by year. In the Fujitsu Cup, for example, the last time Japanese players won the championship was Koichi Kobayashi in 1997, and in the following ten years, they only won one runner-up (Noriki Ita 2004) and five third places, and the remaining top three places were all divided between Chinese and Korean players. The top three players in the Fujitsu Cup have more than 20 million yen in cash prizes every year, and everyone has ideas for spending so much money in exchange for a crushing defeat for their own country's players and watching players from other countries win the cup.
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There are two main reasons: one is the economic downturn in Japan, and the other is the poor performance of the Japanese chess players in the World Championship.
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1988 1st edition:
Format: 16 players, a single-elimination system, and a winner in the final.
Quotas: 7 from Japan (5 from Japan Chess Academy, 2 from Kansai Chess Academy), 4 from China, 3 from South Korea, 1 from Europe, and 1 from the Americas, for a total of 16 students.
Prize money: 15 million yen for the first place, 7 million yen for the second runner-up, and 2.3 million yen for the third place.
Chess rules: Japanese chess rules. Black paste 5 and a half mesh.
Time: Hosted by the Yomiuri Shimbun, the Japan Chess Academy and the Kansai Chess Academy, and the Japanese Fujitsu Co., Ltd. praised and returned to the main help.
Co-organizers: International Go Federation (IGF), Chinese Weiqi Association, Korean Chess Academy, Chinese Taipei Weiqi Association, American Weiqi Association, European Weiqi Federation.
Note: Chinese Taipei Weiqi Association, that is, Taiwan's Chinese Go Association, follows the Olympic model, and the word "China" does not appear in Taiwan's representatives, the second session in 1989:
The number of players in this competition increased to 24, and eight people had a bye in the first round.
Quota: 3 champions, runners-up and runners-up in the previous year, 7 from Japan, 5 from China, 4 from South Korea, 2 from Taiwan (Chinese Go Club), 1 from Europe, 1 from the United States, and 1 from South America, a total of 24 winners.
1992 5th:
The last runner-up Qian Yuping was absent from the game due to illness, and the quota was selected and filled by the Chinese Chess Academy.
1993 6th:
South Korea's Lee Chang-ho missed the game for some reason, and the quota was filled by the Korean Chess Academy's selection of Liang Jae-ho in the eighth section.
1995 8th:
Quota: South Korea increased from 4 to 5, Taiwan reduced from 2 to 1.
20th session in 2007:
Taiwan's representation is hosted by the Chinese Weiqi Association, and the Chinese Weiqi Association and the Taiwan Chess Academy jointly select and elect, and the representatives of the Chinese Weiqi Association still participate in the competition.
The tournament was held in Tokyo, Japan on April 14, 2007.
South Korea has been dominant for ten consecutive years.
21st session in 2008:
The representation of the Korean Chess Academy has been changed from full assignment to half of the pre-selection, and four times the number of pre-selected places will be taken according to the rating, and a single elimination will be made.
24th in 2011:
The top 24 matches in this tournament were changed to the top 32 matches (13 from Japan, 6 from China, 6 from South Korea, 1 from Taiwan, 1 from North America, 1 from South America, and 1 from Europe, the top three in the previous session).
The match time has been changed from 3 hours to 2 hours per side, and the number of counts has been changed from 10 times per minute to 5 times per minute.
The start time of the game has been changed from 10 a.m. (local time) to 11 a.m., and the one-hour lunch break has been cancelled.
It will no longer be held in phases.
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