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Rui Naiwei
Name Rui Naiwei
Chinese Trad. 芮乃偉 Simp. 芮乃伟
Pinyin Ruì Nǎiwěi
Born December 28, 1963
Birthplace Shanghai, China
Residence South Korea
Teacher none
Rank 9 dan
Affiliation Hanguk Kiwon

Rui Naiwei (Traditional: 芮乃偉; Simplified: 芮乃伟; Pinyin: Ruì Nǎiwěi; born on December 28, 1963) is probably the strongest female go player who has ever lived.

Biography


She was born in Shanghai, China, and as of 2005 lives in Seoul, South Korea, with her husband, Zhujiu Jiang, also a 9-dan professional. She and Mr. Jiang participate actively in Korean tournaments.

After starting to play around 1975 (at the age of 11--the age some other players go pro) she became a pro for the Zhongguo Qiyuan in 1985, being promoted all the way to 7-dan that year. She reached 9-dan in 1988, becoming the first woman ever to achieve that rank.

Leaving China in 1989, she moved to Japan. While the Nihon Ki-in did not allow her to play in any Japanese tournaments, she was able to make it to the semi-finals of the international Ing Cup in 1992. She spent several years in the San Francisco Bay Area with her husband, then they moved to Korea, where she has dominated the women's events and has won two open events, always previously won by men: the Guksu (the 43rd open Guksu title in South Korea, 1999) and the Maxim Cup (2004).

Naiwei's style tends to be extremely aggressive, and often characterized by large scale semeai.

Titles & Runner Up's


Ranks #6-t in total amount of titles in Korea.

Title Years Held
Current
Guksu 1999
Maxim Cup 2004
Women's Myungin 2000, 2001, 2002, 2004 - 2006
Women's Guksu 2000, 2001, 2002, 2006
National Women's Individual 1986 - 1989
International
Jeongganjang Cup 2003
Hungchang Cup 2000, 2001
Eastern Airlines Cup 2000
Bohae Cup 1994, 1996, 1997

Title Years Lost
Current
Guksu 2000
Maxim Cup 2003
Women's Guksu 2003
Women's Myungin 2003
Defunct
LG Refined Oil Cup 2000
North American Masters Tournament 1996, 1999, 2000

External links


1963 births | Living people | Go players | Chinese Go players

Rui Naiwei | ゼイ廼偉

 

This article is licensed under the GNU Free Documentation License. It uses material from the "Rui Naiwei".

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