The Ing Cup (Chinese: 应氏杯; pinyin: Yīng Shì Bēi) is an international Go tournament with a cash prize of over US$400,000. It was created by, and is named after, Ing Chang-ki.[1] The tournament is held once every four years and hence often nicknamed the Go Olympics.

Ing Cup
Full nameIng Cup
Started1988
SponsorsIng Chang-ki Weiqi Educational Foundation
Prize moneyUS$400,000

In the 7th Ing Cup, held in 2012/13, Fan Tingyu defeated Park Junghwan and became the youngest Ing Cup winner in history. In the semifinal, Fan defeated Xie He, and Park defeated Lee Chang-ho.

Overview

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The Ing Cup is sponsored by Ing Chang-ki Weichi Educational Foundation, Yomiuri Shimbun, the Nihon-Kiin, and Kansai-Kiin, and is held every four years (and thus often nicknamed Go Olympics). The competition has its own special rules. There is no byoyomi; instead, players who run out of time pay a two-point penalty to receive some extra time. The precise amount of time has varied historically; in the 10th cup final in 2024, the time allotment was three and a half hours for each player, with a two-point penalty to receive an extra 35 minutes, and players could receive extra time this way at most three times.[2][3] The komi is 8 points, but Black wins ties.[4] The first rounds are single-elimination knockouts, the semifinals are best-of-three, and the finals are best-of-five (except in 2023, when the final was best-of-three).[5][6]

Past winners and runners-up

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Edition Year Winner Score Runner-up
1st 1988–1989   Cho Hunhyun 3–2   Nie Weiping
2nd 1992–1993   Seo Bongsoo 3–2   Otake Hideo
3rd 1996   Yoo Changhyuk 3–1   Yoda Norimoto
4th 2000–2001   Lee Changho 3–1   Chang Hao
5th 2004–2005   Chang Hao 3–1   Choi Cheolhan
6th 2008–2009   Choi Cheolhan 3–1   Lee Changho
7th 2012–2013   Fan Tingyu 3–1   Park Junghwan
8th 2016   Tang Weixing 3–2   Park Junghwan
9th 2020–2023   Shin Jinseo 2–0   Xie Ke
10th 2024   Ryo Ichiriki 3–0   Xie Ke

By nation

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Nation Winners Runners-up
  South Korea 6 4
  China 3 4
  Japan 1 2

8th Ing Cup (2016)

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First round
20 Apr 2016
Second round
22 Apr
Quarterfinals
24 Apr
Semifinals
10–14 Jun
Final
10–12 Aug, 22–26 Oct
bye   Fan Tingyu Shi Yue Shi Yue Tang Weixing (3–2)
  Shi YueYamashita Keigo     Shi Yue
  Kono RinChen Yaoye     Kono Rin Kono Rin
  Park Yeong-hunGu Li     Park Yeong-hun
  Hane NaokiEric Lui     Hane Naoki Tang Weixing Tang Weixing (2–1)
  Tang WeixingYuki Satoshi     Tang Weixing
  Mi YutingFan Hui     Mi Yuting Kim Ji-seok
  Kim Ji-seokLian Xiao    Kim Ji-seok
  Kang Dong-yunQiu Jun     Kang Dong-yun Kang Dong-yun Lee Sedol Park Junghwan
 Won Seong-jinTuo Jiaxi     Won Seong-jin
  Lee SedolAndy Liu     Lee Sedol Lee Sedol
  Lin LixiangNa Hyeon     Lin Lixiang
  Wang YuanjunMateusz Surma     Wang Yuanjun Ke Jie Park Junghwan (2–1)
  Ke JieCho U     Ke Jie
  Huang YunsongSo Yokoku     Huang Yunsong Park Junghwan
bye   Park Junghwan

9th Ing Cup (2020–2023)

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The 9th Ing Cup began in 2020, but its conclusion was significantly delayed, because of the COVID-19 pandemic and the organizers' decision to hold the final match face-to-face rather than online. The finalists were Shin Jin-seo and Xie Ke, who each advanced from the semifinals in January 2021.[2] Shin Jin-seo beat Xie Ke 2–0 in the final matches, held on August 21 and 23, 2023.[7]

First round
8 Sep 2020
Second round
9 Sep 2020
Quarterfinals
10 Sep 2020
Semifinals
10 & 12 Jan 2021
Final
21–24 Aug 2023
bye   Tang Weixing Tao Xinran Ichiriki Ryo Xie Ke
  Tao XinranLee Dong-hun     Tao Xinran
  Ichiriki RyoMi Yuting     Ichiriki Ryo Ichiriki Ryo
  An Seong-junLi Wei     An Seong-jun
  Ke JieKim Ji-seok     Ke Jie Ke Jie Xie Ke (2–0)
  Jiang WeijieMurakawa Daisuke     Jiang Weijie
  Xie KeAli Jabarin     Xie Ke Xie Ke
  Yang DingxinShibano Toramaru     Yang Dingxin
  Shin JinseoXie Erhao     Shin Jinseo Shin Jinseo Shin Jinseo (2–0) Shin Jinseo (2–0)
  Fan TingyuShin Min-jun     Fan Tingyu
  Kono RinLin Lixiang     Kono Rin Gu Zihao
  Gu ZihaoIyama Yuta     Gu Zihao
  Xu HaohongByun Sang-il     Xu Haohong Xu Haohong Zhao Chenyu
  Hsu Chia-yuanDang Yifei     Hsu Chia-yuan
  Zhao ChenyuRyan Li     Zhao Chenyu Zhao Chenyu
bye   Park Junghwan

10th Ing Cup (2024)

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The 10th Ing Cup expanded the number of players from 30 to 58. The finalists of the previous tournament, Shin Jinseo and Xie Ke, automatically qualified for the round of 16.[8] The first and second round were played online on April 20–21, 2024. The round of 16, round of 8, and semifinals were played July 3–9. Match-ups were not determined by a pre-set bracket, but randomly drawn each round.[9] Time controls in games before the semifinals were 2 hours per player, and players could pay a penalty to receive an extra 20 minutes up to three times. Games in the semifinals were played with 2.5 hours and up to three 25-minute extra periods; games in the finals were played with 3.5 hours and up to three 35-minute extra periods.[10]

Round of 16 (July 3):

Round of 8 (July 4):

Semifinals (July 6, 8, 9):

Final (August 12, 14, and September 8):

References

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  1. ^ "应昌期之子应明皓辞世享年76岁 父子俩为推广围棋贡献巨大_体育_腾讯网". sports.qq.com. Retrieved 2020-06-01.
  2. ^ a b "The Power Report: Korea wins Go Legends National Competition; Ing Cup". American Go E-Journal. 2021-02-27. Archived from the original on 2022-08-09.
  3. ^ "应氏杯决胜局唐韦星胜朴廷桓 中国第三度捧杯". www.ycqweiqi.com (in Chinese). 2016-10-27. Archived from the original on 2021-05-11.
  4. ^ "The Power Report (4/4): Kono to challenge for Kisei; Tang wins Ing Cup; Tri-country Young Stars". American Go E-Journal. 2016-11-16. Archived from the original on 2021-05-13.
  5. ^ "Go Tournament: Ing Cup". gogameworld.com. Archived from the original on 24 May 2011. Retrieved 31 May 2011.
  6. ^ "Introduction". gobase.org. Retrieved 31 May 2011.
  7. ^ "S. Korean Go Player Shin Jin-seo Wins 9th Ing Cup". KBS World. 2023-08-24.
  8. ^ "第十届应氏杯冠亚军决赛恢复五局决胜制 参赛选手人数58人". sh.chinanews.com.cn (in Chinese). 2024-02-20.
  9. ^
  10. ^ "应氏杯第二阶段上海打响 16强对阵:申真谞VS王星昊 申旻埈VS柯洁". sohu.com (in Chinese). 2024-07-02.
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