Chunlan Cup
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The Chunlan Cup, officially the Chunlan Cup World Professional Weiqi Championship (Chinese: 春兰杯世界职业围棋锦标赛), is an international Go competition.
Outline
[edit | edit source]The Chunlan Cup is an international Go tournament sponsored and hosted by the Chunlan Group of China. 24 players are chosen as follows:
- 3 top players of last tournament
- 8 from File:Flag of the People's Republic of China.svg China
- 5 from File:Flag of Japan.svg Japan
- 4 from File:Flag of South Korea.svg South Korea
- 2 from File:Flag of Chinese Taipei for Olympic games.svg Chinese Taipei
- 1 from North America
- 1 from Europe
The 24 players are reduced to 16 after the first round. The top 8 players are qualified for the next round while the bottom 8 play each other in a knockout tournament.
Each player has 2 hours and 30 minutes of time with five 60-second byoyomi periods, since the 12th cup.[1] (Formerly, the time limit was 3 hours with five 60-second byoyomi periods.[2]) The komi is 7.5 points. The winner's prize is US$150,000.
Past winners and runners-up
[edit | edit source]| Edition | Year | Winner | Score | Runner-up |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1st | 1998–1999 | South Korea Cho Hunhyun | 2–1 | South Korea Lee Chang-ho |
| 2nd | 1999–2000 | Japan O Rissei | 2–1 | China Ma Xiaochun |
| 3rd | 2000–2001 | South Korea Yoo Changhyuk | 2–1 | Japan O Rissei |
| 4th | 2002–2003 | South Korea Lee Chang-ho | 2–0 | Japan Hane Naoki |
| 5th | 2003–2005 | South Korea Lee Chang-ho | 2–1 | China Zhou Heyang |
| 6th | 2006–2007 | China Gu Li | 2–0 | China Chang Hao |
| 7th | 2008–2009 | China Chang Hao | 2–0 | South Korea Lee Chang-ho |
| 8th | 2010–2011 | South Korea Lee Sedol | 2–1[3] | China Xie He |
| 9th | 2012–2013 | China Chen Yaoye | 2–1[4] | South Korea Lee Sedol |
| 10th | 2014–2015 | China Gu Li | 2–0 | China Zhou Ruiyang |
| 11th | 2016–2017 | China Tan Xiao | 2–1[2] | South Korea Park Yeong-hun |
| 12th | 2018–2019 | South Korea Park Junghwan | 2–0[1] | South Korea Park Yeong-hun |
| 13th | 2020–2021 | South Korea Shin Jin-seo | 2–0[5] | China Tang Weixing |
| 14th | 2022–2023 | South Korea Byun Sang-il | 2–0[6] | China Li Xuanhao |
| 15th | 2024–2025 | China Yang Kaiwen | 2–1[7][8][9] | South Korea Park Junghwan |
By nation
[edit | edit source]| Nation | Winners | Runners-up |
|---|---|---|
| File:Flag of South Korea.svg South Korea | 8 | 6 |
| File:Flag of the People's Republic of China.svg China | 6 | 7 |
| File:Flag of Japan.svg Japan | 1 | 2 |
References
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- ^ a b Lua error in Module:Citation/CS1/Configuration at line 2172: attempt to index field '?' (a nil value).
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External links
[edit | edit source]- Official website (in Chinese)
- gotoeveryone.k2ss.info