Ing Cup
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The Ing Cup (Chinese:应氏杯;pinyin:Yīng Shì Bēi) is an international Go tournament with a cash prize of over US$400,000. It was created by, and is named after, Ing Chang-ki. The tournament is held once every four years and hence often nicknamed the Go Olympics.
In the 7th Ing Cup, held in 2012/13, Fan Tingyu defeated Park Junghwan and became the youngest Ing Cup winner in history. In the semifinal, Fan defeated Xie He, and Park defeated Lee Chang-ho.
Overview
The Ing Cup is sponsored by Ing Chang-ki Weichi Educational Foundation, Yomiuri Shimbun, the Nihon-Kiin, and Kansai-Kiin, and is held every four years (and thus often nicknamed Go Olympics). The competition has its own special rules. There is no byoyomi; instead, players who run out of time pay a two-point penalty to receive some extra time. The precise amount of time has varied historically; in the 10th cup final in 2024, the time allotment was three and a half hours for each player, with a two-point penalty to receive an extra 35 minutes, and players could receive extra time this way at most three times. The komi is 8 points, but Black wins ties. The first rounds are single-elimination knockouts, the semifinals are best-of-three, and the finals are best-of-five (except in 2023, when the final was best-of-three).
Past winners and runners-up
| Edition | Year | Winner | Score | Runner-up |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1st | 1988–1989 | South Korea Cho Hunhyun | 3–2 | China Nie Weiping |
| 2nd | 1992–1993 | South Korea Seo Bongsoo | 3–2 | Japan Otake Hideo |
| 3rd | 1996 | South Korea Yoo Changhyuk | 3–1 | Japan Yoda Norimoto |
| 4th | 2000–2001 | South Korea Lee Changho | 3–1 | China Chang Hao |
| 5th | 2004–2005 | China Chang Hao | 3–1 | South Korea Choi Cheolhan |
| 6th | 2008–2009 | South Korea Choi Cheolhan | 3–1 | South Korea Lee Changho |
| 7th | 2012–2013 | China Fan Tingyu | 3–1 | South Korea Park Junghwan |
| 8th | 2016 | China Tang Weixing | 3–2 | South Korea Park Junghwan |
| 9th | 2020–2023 | South Korea Shin Jinseo | 2–0 | China Xie Ke |
| 10th | 2024 | Japan Ryo Ichiriki | 3–0 | China Xie Ke |
By nation
| Nation | Winners | Runners-up |
|---|---|---|
| South Korea | 6 | 4 |
| China | 3 | 4 |
| Japan | 1 | 2 |
8th Ing Cup (2016)
| First round 20 Apr 2016 | Second round 22 Apr | Quarterfinals 24 Apr | Semifinals 10–14 Jun | Final 10–12 Aug, 22–26 Oct |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| bye | Fan Tingyu | Shi Yue | Shi Yue | Tang Weixing (3–2) |
| Shi Yue – Yamashita Keigo | Shi Yue | |||
| Kono Rin – Chen Yaoye | Kono Rin | Kono Rin | ||
| Park Yeong-hun – Gu Li | Park Yeong-hun | |||
| Hane Naoki – Eric Lui | Hane Naoki | Tang Weixing | Tang Weixing (2–1) | |
| Tang Weixing – Yuki Satoshi | Tang Weixing | |||
| Mi Yuting – Fan Hui | Mi Yuting | Kim Ji-seok | ||
| Kim Ji-seok – Lian Xiao | Kim Ji-seok | |||
| Kang Dong-yun – Qiu Jun | Kang Dong-yun | Kang Dong-yun | Lee Sedol | Park Junghwan |
| Won Seong-jin – Tuo Jiaxi | Won Seong-jin | |||
| Lee Sedol – Andy Liu | Lee Sedol | Lee Sedol | ||
| Lin Lixiang – Na Hyeon | Lin Lixiang | |||
| Wang Yuanjun – Mateusz Surma | Wang Yuanjun | Ke Jie | Park Junghwan (2–1) | |
| Ke Jie – Cho U | Ke Jie | |||
| Huang Yunsong – So Yokoku | Huang Yunsong | Park Junghwan | ||
| bye | Park Junghwan |
9th Ing Cup (2020–2023)
The 9th Ing Cup began in 2020, but its conclusion was significantly delayed, because of the COVID-19 pandemic and the organizers' decision to hold the final match face-to-face rather than online. The finalists were Shin Jin-seo and Xie Ke, who each advanced from the semifinals in January 2021. Shin Jin-seo beat Xie Ke 2–0 in the final matches, held on August 21 and 23, 2023.
| First round 8 Sep 2020 | Second round 9 Sep 2020 | Quarterfinals 10 Sep 2020 | Semifinals 10 & 12 Jan 2021 | Final 21–24 Aug 2023 |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| bye | Tang Weixing | Tao Xinran | Ichiriki Ryo | Xie Ke |
| Tao Xinran – Lee Dong-hun | Tao Xinran | |||
| Ichiriki Ryo – Mi Yuting | Ichiriki Ryo | Ichiriki Ryo | ||
| An Seong-jun – Li Wei | An Seong-jun | |||
| Ke Jie – Kim Ji-seok | Ke Jie | Ke Jie | Xie Ke (2–0) | |
| Jiang Weijie – Murakawa Daisuke | Jiang Weijie | |||
| Xie Ke – Ali Jabarin | Xie Ke | Xie Ke | ||
| Yang Dingxin – Shibano Toramaru | Yang Dingxin | |||
| Shin Jinseo – Xie Erhao | Shin Jinseo | Shin Jinseo | Shin Jinseo (2–0) | Shin Jinseo (2–0) |
| Fan Tingyu – Shin Min-jun | Fan Tingyu | |||
| Kono Rin – Lin Lixiang | Kono Rin | Gu Zihao | ||
| Gu Zihao – Iyama Yuta | Gu Zihao | |||
| Xu Haohong – Byun Sang-il | Xu Haohong | Xu Haohong | Zhao Chenyu | |
| Hsu Chia-yuan – Dang Yifei | Hsu Chia-yuan | |||
| Zhao Chenyu – Ryan Li | Zhao Chenyu | Zhao Chenyu | ||
| bye | Park Junghwan |
10th Ing Cup (2024)
The 10th Ing Cup expanded the number of players from 30 to 58. The finalists of the previous tournament, Shin Jinseo and Xie Ke, automatically qualified for the round of 16. The first and second round were played online on April 20–21, 2024. The round of 16, round of 8, and semifinals were played July 3–9. Match-ups were not determined by a pre-set bracket, but randomly drawn each round. Time controls in games before the semifinals were 2 hours per player, and players could pay a penalty to receive an extra 20 minutes up to three times. Games in the semifinals were played with 2.5 hours and up to three 25-minute extra periods; games in the finals were played with 3.5 hours and up to three 35-minute extra periods.
Round of 16 (July 3):
- Japan Ichiriki Ryo defeated China Liu Yuhang
- China Li Qincheng def. China Liao Yuanhe
- China Xie Ke def. South Korea Kim Jin-hwi
- China Xu Jiayang def. South Korea Park Junghwan
- Chinese Taipei Xu Haohong def. China Peng Liyao
- China Wang Xinghao def. South Korea Shin Jinseo
- South Korea Won Seong-jin def. China Li Xuanhao
- China Ke Jie def. South Korea Shin Min-jun
Round of 8 (July 4):
- Japan Ichiriki Ryo defeated China Xu Jiayang
- China Ke Jie def. China Wang Xinghao
- China Xie Ke def. South Korea Won Seong-jin
- Chinese Taipei Xu Haohong def. China Li Qincheng
Semifinals (July 6, 8, 9):
Final (August 12, 14, and September 8):
- Japan Ichiriki Ryo 3–0 China Xie Ke