Pavol Lisy (Slovakia):我是怎么学上围棋的# NextGeneration - 我爱宝宝
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Pavol Lisy (Slovakia):我是怎么学上围棋的
When I was four years old I started collecting beer caps. When I was five ye
ars old I had thousands of them. I was playing with the white and brown ones
, because they were the ones I had most of. My father saw me playing with th
em and remembered the game of go, so we made a board out of paper and that’
s how I got started. I began going to tournaments in Slovakia, and I had a t
eacher: Miroslav Poliak. He’s now 1 dan but he used to be 3 dan. We used to
play, like, once a week.
In the spring of 2009 I went to King’s Baduk Center in Korea for three mont
hs. That was the first time I studied go from books. We had to solve life an
d death problems. I was doing that for maybe three hours a day. I also repla
yed professional games, and played against an 8-dan professional player. I w
ent to Korea as a 1 kyu and came back 3 dan. That motivated me; that’s when
I began playing go seriously. I started to play on KGS, and began to focus
on doing better in tournaments. I don’t think I could play go professionall
y in Asia, but now we are starting to organize a professional league in Euro
pe, with support from China. If it becomes possible to play go professionall
y in Europe, that is something I will really try to do.
When I was four years old I started collecting beer caps. When I was five ye
ars old I had thousands of them. I was playing with the white and brown ones
, because they were the ones I had most of. My father saw me playing with th
em and remembered the game of go, so we made a board out of paper and that’
s how I got started. I began going to tournaments in Slovakia, and I had a t
eacher: Miroslav Poliak. He’s now 1 dan but he used to be 3 dan. We used to
play, like, once a week.
In the spring of 2009 I went to King’s Baduk Center in Korea for three mont
hs. That was the first time I studied go from books. We had to solve life an
d death problems. I was doing that for maybe three hours a day. I also repla
yed professional games, and played against an 8-dan professional player. I w
ent to Korea as a 1 kyu and came back 3 dan. That motivated me; that’s when
I began playing go seriously. I started to play on KGS, and began to focus
on doing better in tournaments. I don’t think I could play go professionall
y in Asia, but now we are starting to organize a professional league in Euro
pe, with support from China. If it becomes possible to play go professionall
y in Europe, that is something I will really try to do.