Ryūō

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Template:Short description Script error: No such module "other uses". Ryūō (also Ryu-O, Ryu-oh, Ryuuou; in Japanese: 龍王, 竜王, lit. "Dragon King") is an annual Japanese professional shogi tournament and the title of its winner. The current Ryūō title holder is Sōta Fujii.

The Ryūō Tournament (Ryūō-sen 竜王戦) is sponsored by the Yomiuri Shimbun as well as the title awarded to its winner. It is one of the eight major professional shogi title matches and was first held in 1988. Among the eight titles in the professional shogi titleholder system, Ryūō and Meijin are the most prestigious ones. However, the Ryūō title gives out the highest monetary prizeTemplate:Mdasheven more than the Meijin title. Cash prizes are ¥44,000,000 for the winner of championship and new Ryūō titleholder,[1] and ¥16,500,000 for the loser.[2] Additional compensation includes ¥14,500,000 for the previous titleholder and ¥7,000,000 for the challenger.

This title should not be confused with that of Amateur Ryūō which is awarded each year to the winner of the Amateur Ryūō Tournament.

Name

File:Shogi rook p.jpg
The dragon king

The basic meaning of ryūō is a "promoted rook". It can move as both a rook (hisha 飛車) and a silver (ginshō 銀将) during a turn and is one of the two most powerful pieces in shogi.

Tournament structure

Script error: No such module "Unsubst". The tournament consists of six class tournaments and one ladder-format challenger tournament. All currently active professional shogi players as well as qualifying women's professionals, apprentice professionals and amateurs are assigned to one of six classes. There are roughly 16 players each in Class 1 to Class 3, 32 players in Class 4 and Class 5, and then all remaining players are assigned to Class 6. The top players in these class tournaments (the top five players from Class 1, the top two from Class 2, and the top player from Class 3, Class 4, Class 5 and Class 6) are then seeded into the challenger tournament. The two players advancing to the final of the challenger tournament play a three-game match to determine the overall winner. In the title match, the first player to win four out of seven championship games becomes the new titleholder.[3]

History

The Ryūō is a continuation of the earlier Tenth Dan (十段戦 jū-dan sen) title tournament. The Tenth Dan (1962–1987) itself is a continuation of the Ninth Dan (九段戦, 1956–1961) and the earlier 全日本選手権戦 (1948–1955) tournaments, which were also sponsored by the same Yomiuri Shimbun. The 全日本選手権 tournament became a title tournament in 1950, where the title was known as the Ninth Dan (九段) title. (At this time, the highest dan rank in shogi was 8-dan unlike the current ranking system.) Considering this lineage, the Ryūō is second historical title and the longest running title tournament apart from the Meijin title.[4]

Lifetime Ryūō

"Lifetime Ryūō" (Eisei Ryūō) is the title awarded to a player who wins the championship five times in a row or seven times in total. Active players may qualify for this title, but it is only officially awarded upon their retirement or death.[5]

Only two players have qualified for the Lifetime Ryūō title: Akira Watanabe and Yoshiharu Habu. Watanabe qualified for the title by winning his fifth championship in a row in 2008 (he has also won the title eleven times),[6] whereas Habu qualified by winning his 7th title overall in 2017.[7] Both players will be officially designated Lifetime Ryūō upon retirement or death.

Winners

The number in parentheses represents the cumulative times the player had won the title to date.

No. Year Winner Score Opponent
1 1988 Akira Shima 4-0 Kunio Yonenaga
2 1989 Yoshiharu Habu 4-3 Akira Shima
3 1990 Koji Tanigawa 4-1 Yoshiharu Habu
4 1991 Koji Tanigawa (2) 4-2 Taku Morishita
5 1992 Yoshiharu Habu (2) 4-3 Koji Tanigawa
6 1993 Yasumitsu Sato 4-2 Yoshiharu Habu
7 1994 Yoshiharu Habu (3) 4-2 Yasumitsu Sato
8 1995 Yoshiharu Habu (4) 4-2 Yasumitsu Sato
9 1996 Koji Tanigawa (3) 4-1 Yoshiharu Habu
10 1997 Koji Tanigawa (4) 4-0 Keiichi Sanada
11 1998 Takeshi Fujii 4-0 Koji Tanigawa
12 1999 Takeshi Fujii (2) 4-1 Daisuke Suzuki
13 2000 Takeshi Fujii (3) 4-3 Yoshiharu Habu
14 2001 Yoshiharu Habu (5) 4-1 Takeshi Fujii
15 2002 Yoshiharu Habu (6) 4-3 Takashi Abe
16 2003 Toshiyuki Moriuchi 4-0 Yoshiharu Habu
17 2004 Akira Watanabe 4-3 Toshiyuki Moriuchi
18 2005 Akira Watanabe (2) 4-0 Kazuki Kimura
19 2006 Akira Watanabe (3) 4-3 Yasumitsu Sato
20 2007 Akira Watanabe (4) 4-2 Yasumitsu Sato
21 2008 Akira Watanabe (5) 4-3 Yoshiharu Habu
22 2009 Akira Watanabe (6) 4-0 Toshiyuki Moriuchi
23 2010 Akira Watanabe (7) 4-2 Yoshiharu Habu
24 2011 Akira Watanabe (8) 4-1 Tadahisa Maruyama
25 2012 Akira Watanabe (9) 4-1 Tadahisa Maruyama
26 2013 Toshiyuki Moriuchi (2) 4-1 Akira Watanabe
27 2014 Tetsurō Itodani 4-1[8] Toshiyuki Moriuchi
28 2015 Akira Watanabe (10) 4-1[9] Tetsurō Itodani
29 2016 Akira Watanabe (11) 4-3[10]Template:Efn Tadahisa Maruyama
30 2017 Yoshiharu Habu (7) 4-1[11] Akira Watanabe
31 2018 Akihito Hirose 4-3[12][13] Yoshiharu Habu
32 2019 Masayuki Toyoshima 4-1[14] Akihito Hirose
33 2020 Template:No wrap 4-1[15] Yoshiharu Habu
34 2021 Sōta Fujii 4-0[16][1] Masayuki Toyoshima
35 2022 Sōta Fujii (2) 4-2[17] Akihito Hirose
36 2023 Sōta Fujii (3) 4-0[18] Takumi Itō
37 2024 Sōta Fujii (4) 4-2[19] Yūki Sasaki

Records

  • Most titles overall: Akira Watanabe, 11
  • Most consecutive titles: Akira Watanabe, 9 in a row (2004–2012)
  • Most times recapturing title: Yoshiharu Habu, 4Template:Efn
  • Longest period between titles: Yoshiharu Habu, 15 years (2003–2017)
  • Oldest person to win title: Yoshiharu Habu, 47 years and 2 months[7]
  • Youngest person to win title: Yoshiharu Habu, 19 years and 2 months.[20]

Games played outside Japan

The first game of each of the following Ryūō title matches was played outside of Japan.[21][22]

No. Year Location
3 1990 Frankfurt, Germany
4 1991 Bangkok, Thailand
5 1992 London, England
6 1993 Singapore
7 1994 Paris, France
8 1995 Beijing, China
9 1996 Los Angeles, United States[23]
10 1997 Gold Coast, Australia
No. Year Location
11 1998 New York City, United States
13 2000 Shanghai, China
15 2002 Taipei, Taiwan
17 2004 Seoul, South Korea
19 2006 San Francisco, United States[24]
21 2008 Paris, France
27 2014 Honolulu, United States[25]

29th Ryūō challenger controversy

Hiroyuki Miura won the three-game challenger playoff match for the 29th Ryūō tournament by defeating Tadahisa Maruyama two games to one in early September 2016. Three days before Miura was to begin play against reigning Ryūō Akira Watanabe, however, the Japan Shogi Association (JSA) announced that Maruyama was replacing Miura as the challenger. The official reason given by the JSA had to do with Miura failing to follow proper procedure in requesting to be allowed to withdraw from the match, but there also had been suspicions raised about Miura's recent frequent leaving of his seat during official shogi games. Suspicions had been raised that he was doing so to consult shogi software or an app installed on a smartphone. Miura denied the accusations at a meeting of the JSA managing directors on October 11, and said he was withdrawing from the upcoming title match because he could not play shogi under such circumstances. The JSA said that Miura failed to submit an official notification of withdrawal by the required deadline on October 12 and as a result Miura was suspended from official game play until December 31, 2016.[26][27]

The JSA subsequently established an independent investigative panel at the end of October 2016 to determine whether Miura had actually done anything wrong and to evaluate the appropriateness of its response to the allegations.[28][29] The panel held a press conference on December 26, 2016 to announce its findings. The panel found there was insufficient evidence to support the accusations of cheating made against Miura and that the claim that he had excessively left his seat during official games was false. Regarding the action taken by the JSA, the panel stated that it believed that the JSA response was appropriate given the circumstances since it had no real option other than to act the way it did.[30] In response to the panel's report, both the JSA and Miura held separate press conferences. JSA president Koji Tanigawa apologized to Miura and announced he was being allowed to return to active status in January. Tanigawa also stated that he and three other executives of the JSA would have their salaries cut by 30% for a period of three months.[31] Miura criticized the JSA in his press conference and stated that "he wonders why the association banned him from participating in the Ryu-oh championship match since there was no evidence of wrongdoing" and that "he wants things to be settled as soon as possible and that he will try hard to get back to his winning ways".[32]

On January 18, 2017, Tanigawa announced that he was resigning as JSA president to assume responsibility for the JSA's handling of the matter.[33] The following day, the resignations of Tanigawa and Akira Shima, the director in charge of the JSA's handling of the Miura allegations, were accepted at an emergency meeting of the JSA's board of directors.[34]

On February 27, 2017, another emergency meeting of JSA professionals was held in response to a petition signed by 28 current and former professionals asking that the JSA remove five board members involved in the handling of the controversy. The meeting took place via teleconferencing at JSA offices in Tokyo and Osaka, and a vote was held to determine whether the five should be asked to step down. Out of the 234 voting members of the JSA, 216 votes (including 64 by written proxy) were cast and a majority voted for the dismissal of three of the five: Teruichi Aono, Daisuke Nakagawa and Daisuke Katagami.[35][36]

On May 24, 2017, Miura and new JSA president Yasumitsu Satō held a joint press conference to announce that a settlement had been reached to resolve any outstanding issues between the two sides. Both sides acknowledged their acceptance of the findings in the independent investigative panel's report and expressed their desire to move on from the matter. It was also announced that the JSA agreed to pay Miura an undisclosed financial settlement to compensate him for not only lost game fees, but also for the mental anguish and damage caused to his reputation. Miura also announced that he met with Ryūō title holder Watanabe prior to the press conference and that he accepted Watanabe's apology for his role in the controversy.[37][38]

Players by Ryūō class

Below is a list of professional players grouped by their class for the 38th Ryūō league (2024Template:Ndash2025) including their dan ranking.[39][40] In addition to the regular professional players, four women's professionals, two apprentice professional 3-dans, and four amateur players also were assigned to Class 6.[41] Women's professional ranks are denoted by a "W" before a player's dan ranking.

37th Ryūō title holder
Name Dan Other titles
Sōta Fujii 9 Kiō, Kisei, Meijin, Ōi, Ōshō, Ōza

Class 1

38th Ryūō Class 1[42]
Name Dan Current titles
Takayuki Yamasaki 8
Kazuki Kimura 9
Masataka Gōda 9
Toshiyuki Moriuchi 9
Akihito Hirose 9
Akira Watanabe 9
Wataru Yashiro 7
Yasumitsu Satō 9
Toshiaki Kubo 9
Tatsuya Sugai 8
Ayumu Matsuo 8
Shintarō Saitō 8
Takumi Itō 8 Eiō
Hiroyuki Miura 9
Tadahisa Maruyama 9
Yūki Sasaki 8

Class 2

38th Ryūō Class 2[43]
Name Dan
Yoshiharu Habu 9
Takeshi Fujii 9
Amahiko Satō 9
Kenjirō Abe 7
Masayuki Toyoshima 9
Takashi Ikenaga 9
Tetsurō Itodani 8
Takuya Nagase 9
Ryūma Tonari 7
Chikara Akutsu 8
Makoto Sasaki 7
Taichi Takami 7
Kōichi Fukaura 9
Kei Honda 6
Shingo Sawada 7
Akira Inaba 8

Class 3

38th Ryūō Class 3[44]
Name Dan
Tatsuya Sanmaidō 7
Satoshi Takano 6
Shūji Muranaka 7
Takuma Oikawa 7
Seiya Kondō 8
Daisuke Suzuki 9
Kentarō Ishii 7
Kazutoshi Satō 7
Nobuyuki Yashiki 9
Hisashi Namekata 9
Daichi Sasaki 7
Shōta Chida 8
Hirotaka Kajiura 7
Shin'ichirō Hattori 7
Tadashi Ōishi 6
Yasuhiro Masuda 8

Class 4

38th Ryūō Class 4[45]
Name Dan Current titles
Takahiro Ōhashi 7
Mikio Kariyama 5
Yasuaki Murayama 8
Template:No wrap 8
Yūta Ishikawa 5
Akihiro Murata 6
Kazuo Sugimoto 6
Hiromu Watanabe 6
Hiroki Iizuka 8
Issei Takazaki 7
Eiji Iijima 8
Tadao Kitajima 7
Reo Kurosawa 6
Mirai Aoshima 6
Kazushi Watanabe 6
Osamu Nakamura 9
Kazuhiro Nishikawa 6
Kōji Tanigawa 9 Template:No wrap
Akihiro Ida 5
Kōhei Funae 6
Shōgo Orita 5
Hirotaka Nozuki 8
Akira Nishio 7
Hiroaki Yokoyama 7
Shingo Itō 6
Shin'ya Satō 7
Naohiro Ishida 6
Makoto Tobe 7
Michio Takahashi 9
Kōru Abe 7
Atsushi Miyata 7
Kōta Kanai 6

Class 5

38th Ryūō Class 5[46]
Name Dan
Kensuke Kitahama 8
Hiroshi Kobayashi 8
Wakamu Deguchi 6
Yūgo Takeuchi 5
Nagisa Fujimoto 6
Norihiro Yagura 7
Template:No wrap A3
Keita Inoue 9
Hiroshi Yamamoto 5
Keiichi Sanada 8
Kōsuke Tamura 7
Daisuke Katagami 7
Taichi Nakamura 8
Masakazu Watanabe 6
Manabu Senzaki 9
Takeshi Kawakami 7
Asuto Saitō 6
Daisuke Nakagawa 8
Sakio Chiba 7
Yoshitaka Hoshino 5
Keita Kadokura 6
Yoshiyuki Kubota 7
Kōhei Hasebe 5
Tetsuya Fujimori 5
Junpei Ide 5
Satoru Sakaguchi 6
Tomohiro Murata 7
Template:No wrap 8
Takashi Abe 9
Akihiro Takada 5
Yūsuke Tōyama 6

Class 6

38th Ryūō Class 6[41]
Name Dan Current titles
Ichirō Hiura 8
Hiroshi Okazaki 7
Kōichi Kinoshita 7
Yasuaki Tsukada 9
Wataru Kamimura 5
Template:No wrap 7
Sae Itō W4
Template:Ill 4
Template:Ill 4
Taku Morishita 9
Kōya Takeuchi Amateur
Template:Ill 4
Hiroshi Kamiya 8
Yoshiyuki Matsumoto 7
Kenshi Tokuda 5
Naoya Fujiwara 7
Takanori An'yōji 7
Kenji Waki 9
Yūji Masuda 7
Ryō Shimamoto 6
Isao Nakata 8
Yūya Nagaoka 6
Hisashi Ogura 8
Akira Shima 9
Toshifumi Arata Amateur
Template:Ill 4
Hideyuki Takano 7
Tomoki Yokoyama 4
Template:Ill 5
Momoko Katō W4
Takayuki Kuroda 5
Kōzō Arimori 8
Template:Ill 4
Bungo Fukusaki 8
Masahiko Urano 8
Yūta Komori 5
Yoshikazu Minami 9
Takuya Nishida 6
Mitsunori Makino 6
Hiroshi Naganuma 8
Kenji Imaizumi 5
Hirotoshi Ueno 5
Ayaka Ōshima W2
Yūya Saitō 4
Seiya Tomita 5
Shin'ya Yamamoto 6
Yūya Morishita Amateur
Template:Ill 4
Yūsei Koga 6
Hiroshi Miyamoto 6
Template:No wrap 8
Kenji Kanzaki 8
Shingo Hirafuji 7
Kazuharu Shoshi 7
Template:No wrap 8
Hiroki Taniai 4
Masaki Izumi 8
Ryōsuke Nakamura 6
Masakazu Kondō 7
Yūichi Tanaka 6
Hiroyuki Sekiya Amateur
Yūki Saitō A3
Takahiro Toyokawa 7
Takehiro Ōhira 6
Template:Ill 4
Tomoka Nishiyama W5 Template:Ill, Template:Ill, Template:Ill
Shōji Segawa 6
Reo Koyama 4
Eisaku Tomioka 9
Reo Okabe 5
Shūji Satō 8
Shin'ichi Satō 6

Notes

Template:Notelist

References

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External links

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