Minoru Kitani

Minoru Kitani
Minoru Kitani
Full name Minoru Kitani
Kanji 木谷実
Born January 25, 1909(1909-01-25)
Kobe, Japan
Died December 19, 1975(1975-12-19) (aged 66)
Japan
Teacher Tamejiro Suzuki
Pupil List of Minoru Kitani pupils
Turned pro 1924
Rank 9 dan

Minoru Kitani (木谷 実 Kitani Minoru?, January 25, 1909 - December 19, 1975) was one of the most celebrated professional Go players and teachers of the game of Go in the twentieth century in Japan.

Contents

Biography

He earned the nickname "the Prodigy" after winning a knockout tournament. He defeated eight opponents from the Kiseisha in a row during 1928. He played a celebrated match with then retiring Honinbō Shūsai. The Nobel Prize winning author Kawabata Yasunari used this game in his novel "The Master of Go". In 1954 he suffered a cerebral hemorrhage, but soon recovered. His condition came back in 1964, in which he would practically retire. He was given the Okura Prize in 1967.

Segoe Kensaku, a friend and rival of Kitani, nicknamed him "the Great Kitani" due to his extraneous efforts relating to go.

Relationship with Go Seigen

He was a young prodigy, who quickly attracted attention after the founding in 1924 of the Nihon Ki-in. He became a great rival to, and friend of, Go Seigen, after the latter was brought to Japan from China.

Go and Kitani were the vanguard of the Shinfuseki or "New Opening" theory, a period roughly 1933-6 which saw great innovations in go opening theory.

Go Seigen and Kitani played in the Kamakura jubango, from 1939, the most celebrated jubango of the century. It ended in Go's decisive victory. Kitani's career never quite recovered; he was also hampered by bad health, in the form of a heart condition. He was later noted for a style of spectacular idiosyncrasy, with great emphasis on secure territory.

Kitani dojo

Kitani was subsequently noted as the most prolific teacher ever of future professional players. The Kitani dojo, which began to flourish after 1945 in the Kitani house in the countryside, was in practical terms run by his wife, produced a whole generation of top players who would dominate Japanese go from the early 1970s to mid-1990s. His own daughter Reiko (1939–1996) reached 6 dan and won the All-Japan Women's Championship several times,[1] and married one of his best students, Koichi Kobayashi. Their child in turn, Izumi Kobayashi, Kitani's granddaughter, is now one of Japan's current leading female players. At the time of his death, he had taught over 60 students, 40 of whom went on to become professionals. The total dan rank of all his students totalled to over 250.

Promotion Record

Rank
Year
Notes
1 dan 1924
2 dan 1926
3 dan 1926
4 dan 1927
5 dan 1929
6 dan 1933
7 dan 1935
8 dan 1942
9 dan 1956

Titles & runners-up

Title Years Held
Current 1
Japan NHK Cup 1960
Defunct 2
Japan Asashi Top Position 1957, 1958
Title Years Lost
Current 5
Japan Honinbo 1947, 1953, 1959
Japan NHK Cup 1958, 1961
Defunct 3
Japan NHK Championship 1958
Japan Asashi Top Position 1959
Japan Igo Senshuken 1958

References


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