China Naming Network - Baby naming - Evolution of Shi Ying Cup World Professional Go Championship

Evolution of Shi Ying Cup World Professional Go Championship

Ying's foundation organized the first World Weiqi Competition, with a prize of up to 400,000 US dollars, which was the highest in the world of chess. The first competition started at 1988 and ended at 1989, with a total of *** 16 participants.

The winner is South Korean Cao Xunxuan. The second game starts at 1992 and ends at 1993. The number of participants increased to 24, including the final seed places: 8 Japanese, 6 Korean, 5 China Taiwan Province Province, 3 China (individual), USA 1 person, and Australia 1 person.

The winner is South Korean Xu Fengzhu.

China opposed the representativeness of the competition and went on strike collectively. A few overseas China players participated in the competition in their own names. The third game starts from 1996 and ends at 1997. The controversy subsided and China entered the competition again. Number of participants: last quarter-finals, 5 from China, 4 from Japan, 3 from South Korea, 2 from Taiwan Province Province, USA 1, Europe 1. The last quarter-final was a bye in the first round.

The winner is South Korean Liu Changhe. The fourth competition started in 2000 and ended at 200 1. Number of entries: last quarter-finals, 5 from China, 4 from South Korea, 3 from Japan, 2 from Taiwan Province Province, 1 from America/kloc-0, 1 from Europe/kloc-0.

The winner is South Korean Li Changgao. The fifth competition started in 2004 and ended in 2005. The number of entries remains unchanged.

The winner is Chang Hao of China.

This is the first time that a China chess player has left the championship in China, fulfilling the last wish of its founder, Mr. Ying Changqi. The sixth competition started in 2008 and ended in 2009. The representative of Taiwan Province Province was first selected by China Weiqi Club and Taiwanese Chess Academy, and was won by two four-time champions Zhou Junxun and Chen Shiyuan. The representative of Korean chess institute was changed from full distribution to semi-pre-selection, and the number of pre-selection places was four times according to the grade, and the result was single defeat and elimination. Participation places: South Korea will be reduced from four to three, China will be increased from five to six, and the rest will remain unchanged.

The winner is South Korean Cui Zhehan. The 7th Ying's Cup Tennis Tournament opened in Taipei on May 22nd, 20 12 and closed in Shanghai on March 6th, 20 13. There were 24 contestants, including eight seeded players, Park, Jiang, Zhang Xu, Li Shishi, seven unseeded players, Liu Xing, Kong Jie, Chen, Tan Xiao, Sheikh and Fan Tingyu, and three Japanese players, Gao Wei, Shen Lu, Uegen Naoki and Jie Cheng.

The winner is Fan Yuting of China. The 8th Shi Ying Cup kicked off in Shanghai on April 20th, 20 16. On April 20 th, the qualifiers of the top 28 began. On April 22, the 16 battle was held, and on April 24, the quarter-finals battle was held. The final champion will be decided in the last five chess games in August and June of 5438+00.

Compared with the past, this year's Yingshi Cup has two reform measures. First, the scale of the competition was expanded, from 24 people in the last session to 30 people; Second, the basic time limit and the number of penalty points for delay were reduced from 3 hours and 30 minutes to 3 hours, and the penalty points for delay were changed from 3 times in 35 minutes to 2 times in 20 minutes.

China's players include the last champions Fan, Ke Jie, Shi Yue, Chen, Lian Xiao, Tang, Tong Jiaxi and Huang, who were selected through points, while Chi Yuting was promoted through points selection. South Korea is also doing its best. Park Jun-hwan, the last runner-up, is still very strong. Li Shishi, Young Joon Park and Jiang He ranked second to fifth.