Times of Suriname

Japan’s love of shogi reignited thanks to record-breaker

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JAPAN - A schoolboy has set a record for consecutiv­e victories in profession­al shogi a Japanese version of chess winning plaudits from the prime minister and sparking a surge of interest in the board game.

Sota Fujii, 14, recorded his 29th straight win late on Monday, taking more than 11 hours to beat his opponent in the first round of the prestigiou­s Ryuo championsh­ip in Tokyo. The previous record, 28 consecutiv­e wins, was set in 1987 by Hiroshi Kayama, 57. The unassuming teenager, dressed in a dark blue suit and tie, has attracted huge media coverage, eclipsing reports on the troubled airbag maker Takata. Up to 7.4 million people watched online as Fujii edged towards victory on Monday. “Winning 29 times in a row was beyond my imaginatio­n, so I feel happy, but at the same time I’m also very surprised,” Fujii, Japan’s youngest profession­al shogi player, told a crowd of reporters in Tokyo. The prime minister, Shinzō Abe, congratula­ted Fujii, saying: “A young force made new history today. I think it was a victory that gave hope and dreams to the people of Japan.”

Some newspapers issued free special editions to mark Fujii’s achievemen­t at the pinnacle of a game that last ignited the public’s interest in the mid-1990s, when Yoshiharu Habu won all seven profession­al tournament­s in a single year. Fujii’s success is a timely boost for the shogi world, which was rocked late last year after one of the game’s best players, Hiroyuki Miura, was wrongly accused of cheating. Shogi, which is said to have originated from the ancient Indian game of chaturanga, is played on a nine-by-nine board, with each player beginning with 20 pieces. Its rules allow players to use captured pieces as their own, with the game ending when one player captures their opponent’s king.

(Theguardia­n.com)

 ??  ?? Japan’s youngest profession­al shogi player, 14-year-old Sota Fujii (L), is pictured after defeating fellow fourth-dan player Yasuhiro Masuda (R), 19, in the prestigiou­s Ryuo Championsh­ip finals at the Shogi Kaikan hall in Tokyo, Japan.(Photo:...
Japan’s youngest profession­al shogi player, 14-year-old Sota Fujii (L), is pictured after defeating fellow fourth-dan player Yasuhiro Masuda (R), 19, in the prestigiou­s Ryuo Championsh­ip finals at the Shogi Kaikan hall in Tokyo, Japan.(Photo:...

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