White
|
Black |
21. L 17. Replies to Black's last move. |
22. Q 14. |
23. S 14. |
24. F 16. |
25. G 17. |
26. S 15. Secures the corner. |
27. P 10. |
28. Q 8. P 6 would have been better. (I. K.) |
29. C 14. |
30. D 14. |
31. C 13. |
32. D 12. Not the best move. M 3 would have been better. (I. K.) |
33. D 11. |
34. E 12. |
35. E 11. |
36. F 11. |
37. F 12. White cuts off. This is an aggressive move. |
38. F 13. G 14 would have been better. (I. K.) |
39. G 12. |
40. F 10. |
41. G 13. |
42. F 14. |
43. D 8. White provides an escape for stones on line 11. |
44. H 15. H 14 was better, as White dare not cut off at G 14. (I. K.) |
45. H 10. |
46. F 8. |
47. D 7. |
48. C 6. |
49. D 6. |
50. D 5. |
51. F 6. |
52. H 9. Black must provide an exit for his stones on line E. |
53. J 10. White cannot risk jumping farther. |
54. H 8. |
55. H 17. Not good. K 8 would have been better. (I. K.) |
56. K 8. Black promptly escapes. |
57. C 8. Good, but not the best. M 12 would have helped the white stones near the center. |
58. L 10. Black commences an attack on White's five stones. |
59. J 14. White retreats. |
60. J 15. |
61. L 14. |
62. L 15. |
63. L 12. |
64. J 12. This is a "Sute ishi," but it greatly aids Black's attack. |
Page:Smith - The game of go.djvu/124
This page has been validated.
98
THE GAME OF GO