Samsung Fire Cup

The Samsung Fire Cup (Korean: 삼성화재배, Hanja: 三星火災杯) is a Go competition.

Samsung Fire Cup
Full nameSamsung Fire & Marine Insurance World Masters Baduk
Started1996
SponsorsSamsung Fire & Marine Insurance
Prize money300,000,000 Won ($216,600)

Outline

The Samsung Cup is an international Go competition. The official name is The Samsung Fire & Marine Insurance World Masters Baduk. The Samsung Fire & Marine Insurance of South Korea (which is a branch of the Samsung Group) and Hanguk Kiwon host the competition. The format starts with a preliminary tournament in which even amateur players are allowed to play. After the preliminaries, 16 players who advance plus the last four players of the previous year make up the main event. The semi-finals have a best-of-3 format, while the final has a best-of-3 match.

The latest edition starts off with the preliminaries, and then it is followed by splitting the players into 8 groups, with 4 players in each. There are three rounds, which are used to determine the 16 players that will be in the main tournament. The players must win two of their matches in order to advance to the round of 16. If there is someone with one win and one loss, they will play each other to see who can gain the second win. Obviously the people with two losses, whether they have a win or not, will be eliminated from the tournament.

Past winners and runners-up

Lee Chang-ho receiving the 11th Samsung Fire Cup Runner-up trophy
YearNat.WinnerScoreNat.Runner-up
1996Yoda Norimoto2–1Yoo Chang-hyuk
1997Lee Chang-ho3–0Kobayashi Satoru
1998-19993–2Ma Xiaochun
19993–0Cho Son-jin
2000Yoo Chang-hyuk3–1Yamada Kimio
2001Cho Hun-hyun2–1Chang Hao
2002-20032–0Wang Lei
2003Cho Chikun2–1Pak Yeong-hun
2004Lee Se-dol2–0Wang Xi
2005-2006Luo Xihe2–1Lee Chang-ho
2006-2007Chang Hao2–0
2007-2008Lee Se-dol2–1Pak Yeong-hun
2008-20092–0Kong Jie
2009Kong Jie2–0Qiu Jun
2010Gu Li2–1Heo Yeong-ho
2011Won Seong-jin2–1Gu Li
2012Lee Se-dol2–1
2013Tang Weixing2–0Lee Se-dol
2014Kim Ji-seok2–0Tang Weixing
2015Ke Jie2–0Shi Yue
20162–1Tuo Jiaxi
2017 Gu Zihao 2-1 Tang Weixing
2018 Ke Jie 2-1 An Kukhyun
2019 Tang Weixing 2-1 Yang Dingxin
2020 Ke Jie 2-0 Shin Jin-seo

By nation

Nation Winners Runners-up
 South Korea 12 9
 China 11 13
 Japan 2 3

See also


This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.