Zhou Heyang

Zhou Heyang
Full name Zhou Heyang
Chinese Trad. 周鶴洋 Simp. 周鹤洋
Pinyin Zhōu Hèyáng
Born (1976-06-18) June 18, 1976
Henan, China
Residence China Shanghai, China
Turned pro 1988
Rank 9 dan
Affiliation Zhongguo Qiyuan

Zhou Heyang (Traditional: 周鶴洋; Simplified: 周鹤洋; Pinyin: Zhōu Hèyáng; born June 18, 1976) is a Chinese professional Go player.[1]

Biography

Zhou Heyang was born in Luoyang, Henan, China. He is a Chinese professional Go player. He turned professional in 1988, and advanced to 9 dan in 2001. He started learning how to play Go at the age of 8. When he was 11, he joined the National Wei-qi Youth Team.

As A Child

Zhou was described as being a mischievous, boisterous, opinionated and pugnacious child. He learnt Go because his father thought he'd change his behavior. He quickly progressed and improved quickly. He hated losing, and it could be seen. At the age of 10, he already achieved 4th place at the National Youth Championships. Since he was 4th in the tournament, he left home and joined the National Youth Squad in Beijing. Now he could learn about the deeper facts of Go. The team was an outstanding squad of Shao Weigang, Lui Jing, Chang Hao, Luo Xihe, Wang Lei, and Zhou himself. The problem Zhou had was that he was not like the other players. He did not go through the normal system of city or province squads. He never had those training methods. He slowly matured up after joining the team. It took him a long 18 months to finally reach the average strength of the group. He was still a very unconfident player. There was harsh criticism in the training system the team used. This is the one part Zhou had an advantage, and that was his stubbornness. Zhou was very lucky because the squad teacher, Wu Yulin, kept him with the team even though he was progressing much slower than the other teammates. Zhou would gain patience from the criticism. Now he could count a game accurately.

Growing Up

Zhou was getting much stronger now. It was said that if he ever got ahead in a game, not even Lee Chang-ho could come back and win. This became true when he beat Lee in the 10th Fujitsu Cup before following up on beating him again in the 13th Fujitsu Cup. He is not like Lee, but he claims that both their abilities to count in the yose (end game) is above others.

Zhou finally won his first major tournament when he won the 1996 National Go Individual. He would then get entry into the next year's Fujitsu Cup, but he was blocked off by Kobayashi Koichi after beating Choi Myung-Hoon, Takemiya Masaki, and Lee Chang-ho.

References

  1. "Games List: Zhou Heyang". Fuseki Info. Retrieved December 28, 2010.

Promotions

Year Rank
1988 1 dan
1989 2 dan
1990 3 dan
1992 4 dan
1994 5 dan
1995 6 dan
1997 7 dan
1999 8 dan
2001 9 dan

Titles & runners-up

Ranks No. 5 in total amount of titles in China.

Title Years Held
Current 9
China Mingren 2002
China Chang-ki Cup 2006
China NEC Cup 1999
China Ahan Tongshan Cup 2000, 2004
China CCTV Cup 2003
China Xinan Wang 2004
China National Go Individual 1996, 1999
Defunct 1
China Qisheng 2000
Continental 1
China Japan China-Japan Agon Cup 2005
Title Years Lost
Current 9
China Mingren 2003
China Tianyuan 2005, 2008
China NEC Cup (China) 2001, 2003
China Ahan Tongshan Cup 1999
China Liguang Cup 2001
China National Go Individual 2001
China National Sports Mass Meeting 2002
Continental 1
China Japan China-Japan Agon Cup 2001
International 2
Japan South Korea China Taiwan Europe United States Fujitsu Cup 2006
China South Korea Japan Taiwan Chunlan Cup 2005
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