1st Meijin
Go tournament
The 1st Meijin was the first Meijin title sponsored by Asahi Shimbun. The tournament used a nine player round robin league system. Hideo Otake won the last Old Meijin title and his title was honored as holder of the Meijin title. Shuchi Kubouchi, Takeo Kajiwara and Norio Kudo qualified through the preliminary stages while Yoshio Ishida, Hideyuki Fujisawa, Eio Sakata, Utaro Hashimoto, Rin Kaiho, Toshiro Yamabe retained their places from the 14th Old Meijin. Yoshio Ishida won the league and challenged Otake for the title. Otake won the title in five games.[1]
Challenger league
Player | I.Y. | H.S. | E.S. | U.H. | R.K. | T.Y. | S.K. | T.K. | N.K. | Record | Notes |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Ishida Yoshio | – | B+R | X | B+14 | B+2 | X | B+R | W+2 | W+R | 6–2 | Challenger |
Hideyuki Fujisawa | X | – | X | W+2 | X | B+5 | X | X | B+R | 3–5 | Eliminated |
Eio Sakata | B+4 | W+R | – | X | X | W+R | W+R | X | X | 4–4 | |
Utaro Hashimoto | X | X | W+R | – | X | B+R | B+R | X | B+R | 4–4 | |
Rin Kaiho | X | B+R | W+16 | B+R | – | W+R | X | W+R | B+R | 6–2 | |
Toshiro Yamabe | B+5 | X | X | X | X | – | X | X | X | 1–7 | Eliminated |
Shuchi Kubouchi | X | W+1 | X | X | W+R | B+R | – | B+R | X | 4–4 | |
Takeo Kajiwara | X | B+R | W+9 | B+R | X | W+R | X | – | X | 4–4 | |
Norio Kudo | X | X | B+1 | X | X | B+R | W+R | B+6 | 4–4 | Eliminated |
Finals
Player | 1 | 2 | 3 | 4 | 5 | 6 | 7 | T |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Hideo Otake (Meijin) | B+R | W+5.5 | B+2.5 | B+R | 4 | |||
Yoshio Ishida (Challenger) | B+2.5 | 1 |
References
- ^ "meijin title, 1st edition, 1976". gobase.org. Retrieved 29 June 2011.
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Meijin
- Hideo Otake (1976)
- Rin Kaiho (1977)
- Hideo Otake (1978–1979)
- Cho Chikun (1980–1984)
- Koichi Kobayashi (1985)
- Masao Kato (1986–1987)
- Koichi Kobayashi (1988–1994)
- Masaki Takemiya (1995)
- Cho Chikun (1996–1999)
- Norimoto Yoda (2000–2003)
- Cho U (2004–2005)
- Shinji Takao (2006)
- Cho U (2007–2008)
- Yuta Iyama (2009–2010)
- Yamashita Keigo (2011–2012)
- Yuta Iyama (2013–2015)
- Takao Shinji (2016)
- Yuta Iyama (2017)
- Cho U (2018)
- Shibano Toramaru (2019)
- Yuta Iyama (2020–2021)
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