World Amateur Go Championship

List of champions of previous World Amateur Go Championships

2007-06-04 02:37

1979: the first session: Nie Weiping. It is worth mentioning that Nie Weiping was elected as one of the top ten athletes in China.

1980: Imamura is a civilized, three-time world amateur champion, ranking first.

198 1: Shao

1982: Cao Dayuan

1983: Ma

1984: Wang Qun

1985: Wang Jianhong

1986: Chen Jiarui, a former Guangdong chess player, later settled in Hong Kong and finally went to Japan.

1987: This village is civilized, and the runner-up is Yu Bin. The level of this village can be imagined.

1988: Zhang Wendong

1989: Che Wu Ze

1990: Chang Hao, Chang Hao and China players before him are all professional players, which Japan and South Korea have never done before. 199 1: Imamura Civilization (Japan), Section 6, Section 5, Li Jiaqing.

1992: Yasuro Kikuchi (Japan), third runner-up in Section 6 of Han Qiyu.

1993: section 7 of Sun.

1994: Satoshi Hiraoka (Japan), third in the seventh group of Cun Wang.

1995: Hirozawa Hirata (Japan), Shi Jijun.

1996: paragraph 7 of Liu Jun.

1997: Liu Jun

1998: Jin Canyou (Korea), third place in paragraph 7 of Zhao Wendong.

1999: Yu zaixing (Korean), the seventh grandson.

2000: Sakai Hideyuki

200 1: liqi section

2002: Liv 8, China Amateur 6, Japanese Chess Academy Amateur 8.

2003: Closed due to SARS.

2004: Li Kangxu (Korea) won the third place in Fu Li.

2005: Hu Yuqing performed well in this competition. In the following rounds, he defeated Yasuhiro Kikuchi of Japan, Cho Tae-won of North Korea, Xu of China Taipei and South Korea. Zhao Taiyuan won the second place, Yu won the third place and Xu won the fourth place. Flantz-Joseph de kohut, a 36-year-old German, won the fifth place, which was somewhat unexpected.

2006: Japanese chess player Satoshi Hiraoka won the championship. This is his second championship after 1995. Tang, and Hong Wanji won the second and fourth place respectively.

2007: The 28th session started on May 27th, and China 14-year-old Dan Teng won all eight games, and was awarded the title of amateur eight by Japanese Chess Academy. South Korea's Yudongxia and Japan's Senyangxi ranked second and third respectively.

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