Rin Kaiho

Rin Kaiho
Full name Rin Kaiho
Chinese 林海峰
Pinyin Lín Hǎifēng
Born May 6, 1942
Shanghai, Republic of China
Residence Tokyo, Japan
Teacher Go Seigen
Rank 9 dan
Affiliation Nihon Ki-in; Tokyo branch

Rin Kaiho or Lin Haifeng (Chinese: 林海峰; pinyin: Lín Hǎifēng; born May 6, 1942) is a professional Chinese Go player living in Japan.

Biography

Rin Kaiho was born in Shanghai, Republic of China. He was a student of Go Seigen when Go brought him to Japan in 1952. He was a promising player who won his first title at the age of 23, the Meijin. He is also part of the 1200 win group. Rin's rise to fame came in 1965 when he challenged Sakata Eio Meijin for his Meijin title. Rin, at the time, was still only 23 and critics thought he would stand no chance against the then powerful Sakata. Even Sakata himself said that no Go player under the age of thirty should be Meijin. However, Rin put up a great fight and won the Meijin title. Rin would continue winning the Meijin on different occasions, along with the Honinbo, during the late 1960s and early 1970s. His number of titles currently is 36, ranking him 4th of all time on the total number of titles list. Rin has been on a dry spell of titles lately, with the last time he even challenged for one being in 2001, for the Meijin. Rin became the first professional in Nihon Ki-in history to reach 1,300 career wins. He won the game against Nobuaki Anzai on October 19, 2006 in a preliminary match for the 32nd Kisei.[1] Rin currently resides in Tokyo, Japan, but remains a citizen of the Republic of China (Taiwan).

Promotion record

Rank
Year
Notes
1 dan

1955
2 dan

1955
3 dan

1957
4 dan

1958
5 dan

1959
6 dan

1960
7 dan

1962
8 dan

1965
9 dan

1967

Titles and runners-up

Ranks #7 in total number of titles in Japan.

Domestic
Title Wins Runners-up
Kisei 3 (1980, 1982, 1984)
Meijin 8 (1965–1967, 1969, 1971–1973, 1977) 8 (1968, 1970, 1974, 1978, 1987, 1991, 1994, 2001)
Honinbo 5 (1968–1970, 1983-1984) 6 (1967, 1971-1972, 1974, 1979, 1985)
Tengen 5 (1989–1993) 2 (1994, 1996)
Oza 1 (1973) 3 (1966, 1974, 1986)
Judan 1 (1975) 3 (1976, 1978, 1989)
Gosei 1 (1994) 2 (1993, 1995)
Ryusei 1 (1994)
NHK Cup 3 (1970, 1974, 1978) 1 (1987)
NEC Cup 1 (1989) 2 (1986, 1995)
Nihon Ki-in Championship 1 (1967)
Kakusei 3 (1979, 1992, 1998)
Hayago Championship 3 (1975, 1984, 1987) 2 (1990, 1995)
Asashi Pro Best Ten 3 (1966, 1973-1974) 1 (1969)
Total 34 34
Continental
China-Japan Tengen 2 (1990-1991) 3 (1992–1994)
Total 2 3
International
Fujitsu Cup 1 (1990) 2 (1988-1989)
Tong Yang Cup 1 (1992)
Total 1 3
Career total
Total 37 40

Trivia

External links

References