Josen
Encyclopedia
Professional go handicaps were a system developed in Japan, in the Edo period
Edo period
The , or , is a division of Japanese history which was ruled by the shoguns of the Tokugawa family, running from 1603 to 1868. The political entity of this period was the Tokugawa shogunate....

, for handicapping professional players of the game of go
Go (board game)
Go , is an ancient board game for two players that originated in China more than 2,000 years ago...

 against each other. With the abolition of the Oteai
Oteai
The was a tournament used in Japan, by the Nihon Ki-in and Kansai Ki-in, to determine the ranking of its go professionals on the dan scale. It was instituted in the 1920s soon after the Ki-in was set up in 1924. Initially it was run in Spring and Autumn sessions in Tokyo, with the pros brought...

 system, which from the 1920s had used some handicap games to determine the go ranking of professional players, this system has become obsolete. It is now completely superseded by the use of komidashi
Komidashi
in the game of Go are points added to the score of the player with the white stones as compensation for playing second. Black's first move advantage is generally considered to equal somewhere between 5 and 7 points by the end of the game. Standard komi is 6.5 points under the Japanese and Korean...

. Knowledge of it is required to understand the conditions of play in historical go matches, particularly the jubango
Jubango
Jubango is a Japanese term for a Go match consisting of ten games which might be ended earlier if agreed by the players. A decisive victory would result in the opponent being beaten down to a lower rank. A player would be beaten down if he fell behind his opponent by four wins in the net score...

 that died out around 1960.

Pro levels

The professional go ranks have traditionally been divided into nine levels, with shodan or 1 dan being the initial grade for a student player certified as professional (kishi in Japanese). The ranks go up to 9 dan, the whole system being based on old customs from the Chinese Imperial court. To this day there are nine professional dan levels in China and South Korean as well as in Japan; the same applies in Taiwan. The basic system described at go handicaps is insufficient to provide an accurate ranking, because professional levels are closer together. It is considered inconceivable that any pro should take a four-stone handicap from another .

Theoretically all nine pro levels were within a three-stone handicap spread. In modern times that has become even tighter, since professional shodan is not generally awarded to players who will remain at that level thereafter. In terms of a notional Elo system
Elo rating system
The Elo rating system is a method for calculating the relative skill levels of players in two-player games such as chess. It is named after its creator Arpad Elo, a Hungarian-born American physics professor....

, if 100 points is one amateur rank, the professional levels were notionally more like 35 points apart. That in contemporary go and under modern playing conditions has been compressed down, to fewer than 30 points apart.

In the Edo period, however, apprentice professionals would often be admitted as professional 1 dan at a young age (Honinbo Shusai
Honinbo Shusai
is the professional name of Hoju Tamura, also known as , who was a Japanese professional Go player.- Biography :He was born in Shiba, Tokyo, son of Tamura Yasunaga, a retainer of the shogun. He learned go at age 10 and joined the Hoensha in 1883, then under the leadership of Murase Shuho. He was...

 at 13, but this was by no means young; Takagawa Kaku was admitted at 11). These players might be at current amateur 6 dan or even 5 dan level, but would be promising talents.

It is documented that Takagawa let slip the comment that Go Seigen
Go Seigen
Wu Qingyuan , generally known in the West by his Japanese name Go Seigen, is considered by many players to be the greatest player of the game of Go in the 20th century and of all time.-Biography:...

 was 'one-third of a stone' stronger than he. This is evidence that the spreading of pro levels at three per handicap stone was a standard way of calibrating strengths.

Josen

The foundation of the old system was that josen applied to a professional rank difference of 2 dan.

is the go term describing the phase in a series of matches between two players - such as a jubango
Jubango
Jubango is a Japanese term for a Go match consisting of ten games which might be ended earlier if agreed by the players. A decisive victory would result in the opponent being beaten down to a lower rank. A player would be beaten down if he fell behind his opponent by four wins in the net score...

, where one player takes Black (makes the first move) throughout. One says also "playing at sen", or a "one-stone-handicap game".

Players are taken to be evenly matched at two ranks apart if the victories are evenly divided at sen; or in other words the higher-ranked player can manage 50% wins with White.

Sen-ai-sen

describes the handicap of taking Black (making the first move) in two games out of every three. This was the smallest handicap possible between two players in the era before the introduction of komi.

This is the crucial level from the point of view of promotions under the handicap system. To prove one is under-ranked, one should play a match against a player of one rank above. To break even under sen-ai-sen means to win (for example) 65% of games with Black, and 20% of games with White; or two games out of three with Black, and one game in six with White. A steady player, under the old style of opening, would aim to win games with Black more frequently; a less consistent but more aggressive player would expect better success in claiming some wins with White with ambitious strategies to cause confusion on the board.

Tagaisen

Tagaisen (互い先) is the handicap for players of equal rank. They alternate with Black. The player who first gets Black will be chosen by some method such as nigiri.

Other handicaps

The principles were extended: for a rank difference of three the handicap was sen-ni-sen, which meant one game on a two-stone handicap out of every three, the others being with Black. Then came ni-sen-ni for rank difference of four, and a plain two-stone handicap for rank difference five. From then on the steps replaced a two-stone handicap by a three-stone handicap, for six and seven difference. Theoretically, then, a professional shodan should play a 9 dan (who by definition would be Meijin
Meijin
Meijin , literally translated, means "Brilliant Man." It is the name of the second most prestigious Japanese Go Tournament. It also refers to a traditional Japanese title given to the strongest player of the day during the Edo period.- The tournament :...

) at three stones in every game. This system provided a basis in the Oteai for any two players to compete.

Game records

The kifu
Kifu
Kifu is the Japanese term for a game record for a game of Go or shogi. Kifu is traditionally used to record games on a grid diagram, marking the plays on the points by numbers....

of old games typically have an annotation showing the handicap position. Even if the game was a one-off challenge, there was very often the implied context: the players had formal ranks, the game might be notionally part of a longer series. The modern way to indicate Black in a Japanese game record is still to write sen ban.

Beating down

Usually, after three or four games are won in a row by the same player (or some other agreed threshold is reached), the handicap shifts. For example when senaisen (BWB) was being used, the handicap moves to josen (B) or to tagaisen (even, BW}. A player against whom the handicap moves is said to be 'beaten down', at least a requirement to acknowledge the strength of the opponent, possibly a severe professional humiliation. The jubango series sponsored by the Yomiuri Shimbun
Yomiuri Shimbun
The is a Japanese newspaper published in Tokyo, Osaka, Fukuoka, and other major Japanese cities. It is one of the five national newspapers in Japan; the other four are the Asahi Shimbun, the Mainichi Shimbun, Nihon Keizai Shimbun, and the Sankei Shimbun...

in the twentieth century emphasised this competitive aspect, which was part of the negotiated match conditions.

A game which if lost would result in a shift in the handicap is called a kadoban (corner game). This term is also now used in the titleholder system
Titleholder system
The titleholder system is the most common type of structure used in professional tournaments in the game of go. In practice these events almost always are based in East Asian countries with a professional system: China, Japan, South Korea and Taiwan...

, for a game the loss of which loses the whole match (for example 2-3 down in a best-of-seven match, the next game will be a kadoban). Cf. match point
Match point
Match point may refer to:* Match point is won if the player in the lead scores * Match Point, a 2005 film directed by Woody Allen* Bridge...

in tennis.

Over a ten-game match, the worse possibility arises of being beaten down twice. In confrontations between top players, under the older etiquette players were spared the embarrassment, for the series would be suspended. Newspaper sponsors could be less accommodating.

The distinction between classical jubango and just any ten-game challenge match therefore lies in the drafting of the specific beating-down arrangements.

External links

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