White
|
Black |
7. Q 6. |
8. M 5. The following is also good. B. L 5, M 3, M 4 |
9. K 4. |
10. K 6. |
11. H 4. |
12. G 4. |
13. J 6. |
14. K 7. |
15. G 6. |
16. R 11. Black cannot play at R 5 without seeing P 3 and 4 cut off. |
17. R9. |
18. Q14. |
19. C 6. |
20. C 4. |
21. C 14. |
22. G 17. |
23. C 17. |
24. C 16. |
25. D 17. |
26. E 16. |
27. B 16. |
28. B 15. |
29. B 17. |
30. C 15. |
31. E 17. |
32. F 17. |
33. D 14. |
34. F 15. |
35. M 17. |
36. C 8. |
37. E 6. |
38. D 11. |
39. B 14. The ordinary answer to this is A 14, but this time Black cannot play in this way since White would follow at B 12 and thus threaten the black stones at C 8 and D 11. |
40. E 8. |
41. J 7. |
42. K 8. |
43. H 9. |
44. G 11. |
45. A 15. Black could not occupy A 14 on his 42d and 44th moves. |
46. J 10. |
47. H 3. |
48. O 17. |
49. J 17. |
50. G 2. This move is necessary |
Page:Smith - The game of go.djvu/195
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“JOSEKI” AND OPENINGS
169