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China–Korea Tengen

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5-2915: The China–Korea Tengen was a Go competition . It was played between China's Tianyuan titleholder and Korea's Chunwon titleholder each year in a best-of-three match. The competition was held 19 times, from 1997 to 2015. China won 10 times and Korea won 9 times. The Chunwon was discontinued after 2015, which ended the China–Korea Tengen as well. Past winners and runners-up [ edit ] Edition Year Winner Score Runner-up 1st 1997 [REDACTED] Lee Chang-ho 2–1 [REDACTED] Chang Hao 2nd 1998 [REDACTED] Lee Chang-ho 2–0 [REDACTED] Chang Hao 3rd 1999 [REDACTED] Lee Chang-ho 2–0 [REDACTED] Chang Hao 4th 2000 [REDACTED] Lee Chang-ho 2–0 [REDACTED] Chang Hao 5th 2001 [REDACTED] Chang Hao 2–0 [REDACTED] Lee Sedol 6th 2002 [REDACTED] Park Yeong-hun 2–1 [REDACTED] Huang Yizhong 7th 2003 [REDACTED] Gu Li 2–0 [REDACTED] Song Tae-kon 8th 2004 [REDACTED] Gu Li 2–1 [REDACTED] Choi Cheol-han 9th 2005 [REDACTED] Gu Li 2–1 [REDACTED] Choi Cheol-han 10th 2006 [REDACTED] Ko Geuntae 2–1 [REDACTED] Gu Li 11th 2007 [REDACTED] Gu Li 2–0 [REDACTED] Cho Han-seung 12th 2008 [REDACTED] Won Seong-jin 2–0 [REDACTED] Gu Li 13th 2009 [REDACTED] Chen Yaoye 2–1 [REDACTED] Kang Dong-yun 14th 2010 [REDACTED] Park Junghwan 2–1 [REDACTED] Chen Yaoye 15th 2011 [REDACTED] Chen Yaoye 2–0 [REDACTED] Choi Cheol-han 16th 2012 [REDACTED] Chen Yaoye 2–0 [REDACTED] Choi Cheol-han 17th 2013 [REDACTED] Chen Yaoye 2–1 [REDACTED] Park Yeong-hun 18th 2014 [REDACTED] Park Junghwan   2–0 [REDACTED] Chen Yaoye 19th 2015 [REDACTED] Chen Yaoye 2–0 [REDACTED] Na Hyun  [ ko ] See also [ edit ] China–Japan Tengen List of professional Go tournaments References [ edit ] ^ "中韩天元对抗19年回顾 双边番棋何日君再来?" , sina.com.cn (in Chinese), 2015-08-27 ^ "中韩天元赛陈耀烨2-0罗玄 中国队总分10-9获胜" , 163.com (in Chinese), 2015-08-27 ^ "中韩天元战陈耀烨零封罗玄 总比分中国10比9" , sina.com.cn (in Chinese), 2015-08-27 ^ Jing (2011-09-01), "Chen Yaoye wins 15th China Korea Tengen" , Go Game Guru , archived from

10-656: Is a South Korean professional Go player . He is the fourth youngest (12 years 2 months) to become a professional Go player in South Korean history behind Cho Hun-hyun (9 years 7 months), Lee Chang-ho (11 years 1 months) and Cho Hye-yeon (11 years 10 months). His nickname is "The Viper". Choi became a professional when he was 12 years old. He began playing Go at the age of seven, studying with Lee Sedol in Kweon Kab-yong 's academy in Seoul . At that time, Choi

15-525: Is a list of professional Go tournaments , for competitors in the board game of Go . The tradition, initiated by the Honinbo Tournament in Japan , is for an event to be run annually, leading up to a title match and the award of a title for one year to the winner. Tournaments do not consist, generally, of players coming together in one place for a short period, but are spread out over time. Go

20-1598: The original on 2017-02-22 ^ Jing (2013-08-25), "Chen Yaoye's China Korea Tengen hat trick" , Go Game Guru , archived from the original on 2016-04-14 ^ Jing (2014-09-27), "Park Junghwan ends Chen Yaoye's China Korea Tengen run" , Go Game Guru , archived from the original on 2016-04-14 External links [ edit ] China Korea Tengen at Sensei's Library v t e Continental Go titles Current Asian TV Cup World Mingren Bosai Cup Team Nongshim Cup Zhaoshang Cup Asian New Star Match CSK Cup China-Japan China-Japan Agon Cup China-Japan Supermatches China–Japan Tengen China-Korea China–Korea Tengen China-Korea New Pro Wang China-Korea Champions League Kangwon-Land Cup Riyuexing Cup China-Taiwan China-Taiwan Yayi Cup Japan-Taiwan Japan-Taiwan Jingying Team Jeonggwanjang Cup Huanglongshi Cup Competitions in italics are defunct Retrieved from " https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=China–Korea_Tengen&oldid=1217056790 " Categories : International Go competitions Go competitions in South Korea Go competitions in China Hidden category: CS1 Chinese-language sources (zh) Go competitions This

25-708: Was a sport in the Asian Games in Guangzhou 2010 and Hangzhou 2022 (held in 2023 due to COVID-19). It is one of four board games in the multi-sport event, along with chess , xiangqi , and contract bridge . The 2010 competition featured three Go events: men's team, women's team, and mixed pair. Hangzhou 2022 also featured three Go events: men's individual, men's team, and women's team. Major Team Major Minor Hayago Leagues Major Minor Hayago Leagues Major Minor Choi Cheol-han Choi Cheol-han ( Korean :  최철한 )

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