Bingsheng Cup

The Bingsheng Cup (Chinese: 兵圣杯; pinyin: Bīngshèng Bēi) is an international women's Go tournament. It was created in 2010 and is held annually. The tournament is held at Qionglong Mountain in Suzhou, Jiangsu, China. It is also known as the Qionglong Mountain Bingsheng Cup. The name bingsheng is in honor of Sun Tzu, who is said to have written The Art of War at Qionglong Mountain;[1] the historicity of Sun Tzu is uncertain.

Rules

The Bingsheng Cup is a Go competition for female players from China, Japan, South Korea, Taiwan, Europe, North America, and Oceania. It is a 16-player knockout tournament. Games are played under Chinese rules with a 7.5 point komi. Each player has 2 hours of main time with five 60-second byoyomi periods.

The winner's prize is 300,000 RMB and the runner-up's prize is 100,000 RMB (as of the 10th cup).[2] Formerly, from the 1st to the 3rd Bingsheng Cup, the winner received 200,000 RMB in prize money and the runner-up received 80,000 RMB.[3][4] From the 4th to the 6th cup, the prizes were 250,000 RMB and 100,000 RMB, respectively.[1][5] In the 7th cup, the winner's prize was further increased to the current 300,000 RMB.[6]

History

The Bingsheng Cup was first held in 2010. At the time of its creation, the Bingsheng Cup was the only international women's individual Go tournament. Other such tournaments had been held before, such as the Bohai Cup, but were discontinued or were one-off events.[7] It remained the only one until the Wu Qingyuan Cup was established in 2018.

The 1st Bingsheng Cup winner was Park Jieun, and the runner-up was Joanne Missingham. Missingham, who was born in Australia and is a Taiwan Qiyuan professional player, represented Oceania in the tournament, achieving the best-ever international tournament result for a player born outside Asia.[8]

Korean players have won the title 7 times and Chinese players have won 3 times. Japan's best result was a semifinals appearance by Rina Fujisawa in 2019.[9]

Winners and runners-up

EditionYearWinnerRunner-up
1st[8][3] 2010 Park Jieun Joanne Missingham
2nd[10] 2011 Park Jieun Tang Yi
3rd[4] 2012 Li He Rui Naiwei
4th[1] 2013 Wang Chenxing Yu Zhiying
5th[11] 2014 Choi Jeong Rui Naiwei
6th[5] 2015 Yu Zhiying Park Jieun
7th[6] 2016 Oh Yu-jin Wang Chenxing
8th 2017 Choi Jeong Wang Chenxing
9th[12] 2018 Choi Jeong Oh Yu-jin
10th[2][9] 2019 Choi Jeong Zhou Hongyu

References

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