The Borneo Post

Teen prodigy awes with record Japanese chess streak

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TOKYO: Japan yesterday was transfixed by a 14-year-old prodigy who smashed the record for consecutiv­e wins in a chess-like board game called shogi.

Junior high school student Sota Fujii notched up his 29th straight win late Monday, earning him rock-star media coverage with his face splashed across every major newspaper and the stunning feat topping newscasts.

Japanese media described the gruelling 11- hour match as “extraordin­ary” and “historic,” while Prime Minister Shinzo Abe also celebrated the win by Fujii, who trains against a computer.

The wunderkind only debuted on the pro shogi tour in December and has not been beaten since.

“I really couldn’t imagine I would win 29 straight,” he said after defeating a 19- year- old opponent.

“I ’ m delighted and very surprised,” he added. In his first match in December, Fujii defeated a now 77-year- old who set the previous record for the youngest- ever profession­al decades earlier.

The game, which is usually played atop a wood block set on a tatami-mat flooring, is similar to chess with players vying to capture their opponent’s king. Unlike chess, captured pieces can be reused.

Fuji i’s stunning victory comes after Google’s computer programmem­e AlphaGo beat the world’s top-ranked player in the ancient Chinese board game Go last month.

AlphaGo took the first encounter in a three- game series against Chinese world number one Ke Jie in a highly anticipate­d match, a year after it trounced South Korean grandmaste­r Lee SeDol — the first time a computer programmem­e beat a top player in a full contest.

 ?? — Reuters photo ?? Sota Fujii (left) is pictured after defeating fellow fourth-dan player Yasuhiro Masuda (right), 19, in the prestigiou­s Ryuo Championsh­ip finals at the Shogi Kaikan hall in Tokyo.
— Reuters photo Sota Fujii (left) is pictured after defeating fellow fourth-dan player Yasuhiro Masuda (right), 19, in the prestigiou­s Ryuo Championsh­ip finals at the Shogi Kaikan hall in Tokyo.

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