Takahiro Ōhashi
Takahiro Ōhashi | |
---|---|
Ōhashi at a human shogi [ja] event in November 2018. | |
Native name | 大橋貴洸 |
Born | (1992-09-22) September 22, 1992 (age 31) |
Hometown | Shingū, Wakayama |
Career | |
Achieved professional status | October 1, 2016(2016-10-01) (aged 24) |
Badge Number | 308 |
Rank | 7-dan |
Teacher | Kazuharu Shoshi (7-dan) |
Tournaments won | 2 |
Meijin class | B1 |
Ryūō class | 3 |
Websites | |
JSA profile page |
Takahiro Ōhashi (大橋 貴洸, Ōhashi Takahiro, September 22, 1992) is a Japanese professional shogi player ranked 7-dan.
Early life and apprenticeship
Ōhashi was born in Shingū, Wakayama on September 22, 1992.[1] He learned how to play shogi as fourth-grade elementary school student, and entered the Japan Shogi Association's apprentice school at the rank of 6-kyū as a student of shogi professional Kazuharu Shoshi in September 2006.[2]
Takahashi was promoted to 3-dan in 2010 and obtained professional status and the rank of 4-dan in October 2016 after finishing runner-up in the 59th 3-dan League (April 2016 – September 2016) with a record of 12 wins and 6 losses.[2][3]
Shogi professional
Takahashi finished runner-up in the 46th Shinjin-Ō [ja] in 2015, losing to Tatsuya Sugai 2 games to 1. Takahashi was still ranked an apprentice professional 3-dan at the time, and won the first game of the match before Sugai came back to win the last two.[4]
Takahashi won his first tournament as a professional in August 2018 when he defeated Seiya Kondō to win the 3rd Yamada Challenge Cup [ja].[5] In October of the same year, he defeated Hirotaka Kajiura 2 games to none to win the 8th Kakogawa Seiryū Tournament [ja].[6][7][8]
Promotion history
The promotion history for Ōhashi is as follows:[9]
- 6-kyū: September 2006
- 3-dan: October 2010
- 4-dan: October 1, 2016
- 5-dan: July 31, 2019
- 6-dan: October 23, 2019
- 7-dan: February 8, 2023
Titles and other championships
Ōhashi has yet to appear in a major title match, but he has won two non-major title championships.[10]
Awards and honors
Ōhashi received the Japan Shogi Association Annual Shogi Award for "Best New Player" for the 2018–2019 Shogi Year.[11] He won the Kōzō Masuda Award for developing the Yōryū Fourth File Rook opening in 2020.[12][13]
References
- ^ "Kishi Dētabēsu: Ōhashi Takahiro" 棋士データベース: 大橋貴洸 [Professional Shogi Player Database: Takahiro Ōhashi] (in Japanese). Japan Shogi Association. Retrieved April 3, 2019.
- ^ a b "Shinyondan Tanjō no Oshirase * Fujii Sōta (Shijō Sainenshō Yondan)・Ōhashi Takahiro" 新四段誕生のお知らせ *藤井聡太(史上最年少四段)・大橋貴洸 [New 4-dans announced: Sōta Fujii (the youngest 4-dan in history) and Takahiro Ōhashi] (in Japanese). Japan Shogi Association. September 3, 2016. Retrieved April 3, 2019.
- ^ "Dai Gojūkyūkai Shōreikai Sandan Rīgusen Nisenjūrokunen Shigatsu kara Nisenjūrokunen Kugatsu" 第59回奨励会三段リーグ戦 2016年4月~2016年9月 [59th apprentice school 3-dan league: April 2016 to September 2016] (in Japanese). Japan Shogi Association. 2016. Retrieved April 3, 2019.
- ^ "Shogi Tsugai Rokudn ga Shinjin-Ō ni" 将棋 菅井六段が新人王に [Tsugai 6d wins Shinjin-Ō] (in Japanese). Japan Communist Party. October 20, 2015. Retrieved April 3, 2019.
- ^ "Shōgi no Yamadahai Ōhashi Yondan ga Hatsuyūshō" 将棋のYAMADA杯 大橋四段が初優勝 [Ōhashi 4d wins Yamada Cup for first championship as a professional]. The Nikkei (in Japanese). August 22, 2018. Retrieved April 3, 2019.
- ^ Mizuta, Yukihiro (October 20, 2018). "Shōgi・Kakogawa Seiryūsen Ōhashi Takahiro Yondan ga Yūshō" 将棋・加古川青流戦 大橋貴洸四段が優勝 [Takahiro Ōhashi wins Kakogawa Seiryu Tournament]. Kobe Shimbun (in Japanese). Retrieved April 3, 2018.
- ^ "Shōgi no Kakagawa Seiryūseni Ōhashi Yondan ga Yūshō" 将棋の加古川青流戦 大橋四段が優勝 [Ōhashi 4d wins Kakogawa Seiryū Tournament]. The Nikkei (in Japanese). October 28, 2018. Retrieved April 3, 2019.
- ^ Sato, Keiji (October 20, 2018). "Ōhashi Takahiro Yondan ga Kakogawa Seiryūsen wo Seisu" 大橋貴洸四段が加古川青流戦を制す [Takahiro Ōhashi wins Kakogawa Seiryū Tournament]. Asahi Shimbun (in Japanese). Retrieved April 3, 2019.
- ^ "Kishi Dētabēsu: Ōhashi Takahiro Shōdan Rireki" 棋士データベース: 大橋貴洸 昇段履歴 [Professional Shogi Player Database: Takahiro Ōhashi Promotion History] (in Japanese). Japan Shogi Association. Retrieved February 8, 2023.
- ^ "Kishi Dētabēsu: Ōhashi Takahiro Yūshō Rireki" 棋士データベース: 大橋貴洸 優勝履歴 [Professional Shogi Player Database: Takahiro Ōhashi Championship History] (in Japanese). Japan Shogi Association. Retrieved April 3, 2019.
- ^ "Saiyūshūkishishō wa Toyoshima Nikan Fujii Shichidan wa 「Myōshu」 de Jushōlhanguage=ja" 最優秀棋士賞は豊島二冠 藤井七段は「妙手」で受賞 [Toyoshima 2-crown named "Player of the Year"; Fujii 7d wins award for "best move".]. Asahi Shimbun. April 1, 2019. Retrieved April 3, 2019.
- ^ "Dai Yonjūhakkai Shōgi Taishō Jushōsha no Oshirase" 第48回将棋大賞受賞者のお知らせ [48th Annual Shogi Awards Winners] (in Japanese). Japan Shogi Association. April 1, 2021. Retrieved April 2, 2021.
- ^ Murase, Shin'ya (April 1, 2021). "Fujii Nikan, Hatsu no Saiyūshūkishishō Yonnen Renzoku Shōritsu Hachiwarichō wo Hyōka" 藤井二冠, 初の最優秀棋士賞 4年連続勝率8割超を評価 [Fujii 2-crown wins "Player of the Year" for the first time and also praised for having a better than .800 winning percentage for the 4th consecutive year]. Mainichi Shimbun (in Japanese). Retrieved April 2, 2021.
External links
- ShogiHub: Professional Player Info · Oohashi, Takahiro
- v
- t
- e
- Takashi Abe
- Sōta Fujii
- Takeshi Fujii
- Kōichi Fukaura
- Bungo Fukusaki
- Masataka Gōda
- Yoshiharu Habu
- Akihito Hirose
- Keita Inoue
- Kazuki Kimura
- Toshiaki Kubo
- Tadahisa Maruyama
- Yoshikazu Minami
- Hiroyuki Miura
- Taku Morishita
- Toshiyuki Moriuchi
- Takuya Nagase
- Osamu Nakamura
- Hisashi Namekata
- Amahiko Satō
- Yasumitsu Satō
- Manabu Senzaki
- Akira Shima
- Daisuke Suzuki
- Michio Takahashi
- Kōji Tanigawa
- Eisaku Tomioka
- Masayuki Toyoshima
- Yasuaki Tsukada
- Kenji Waki
- Akira Watanabe
- Nobuyuki Yashiki
- Chikara Akutsu
- Kōzō Arimori
- Shōta Chida
- Mamoru Hatakeyama
- Naruyuki Hatakeyama
- Ichirō Hiura
- Kazushiza Horiguchi
- Eiji Iijima
- Akira Inaba
- Tetsurō Itodani
- Hiroki Iizuka
- Masaki Izumi
- Hiroshi Kamiya
- Kenji Kanzaki
- Kensuke Kitahama
- Hiroshi Kobayashi (b. 1976)
- Yasuhiro Masuda
- Ayumu Matsuo
- Yasuaki Murayama
- Daisuke Nakagawa
- Isao Nakata
- Hiroshi Naganuma
- Taichi Nakamura
- Hirotaka Nozuki
- Hisashi Ogura
- Shintarō Saitō
- Keiichi Sanada
- Yūki Sasaki
- Shūji Satō
- Tatsuya Sugai
- Masataka Sugimoto
- Masahiko Urano
- Takayuki Yamasaki
- Kenjirō Abe
- Kōru Abe
- Takanori An'yōji
- Sakio Chiba
- Kōhei Funae
- Naoya Fujiwara
- Shingo Hirafuji
- Kentarō Ishii
- Takumi Itō
- Hirotaka Kajiura
- Daisuke Katagami
- Kiyokazu Katsumata
- Takeshi Kawakami
- Kōichi Kinoshita
- Tadao Kitajima
- Masakazu Kondō
- Seiya Kondō
- Yoshiyuki Kubota
- Yūji Masuda
- Yoshiyuki Matsumoto
- Atsushi Miyata
- Shūji Muranaka
- Tomohiro Murata
- Akira Nishio
- Takuma Oikawa
- Takahiro Ōhashi
- Tadashi Ōishi
- Hiroshi Okazaki
- Tatsuya Sanmaidō
- Daichi Sasaki
- Makoto Sasaki
- Kazutoshi Satō
- Shin'ya Satō
- Shingo Sawada
- Kazuharu Shoshi
- Taichi Takami
- Issei Takazaki
- Kōsuke Tamura
- Makoto Tobe
- Ryūma Tonari
- Takahiro Toyokawa
- Kazushi Watanabe
- Norihiro Yagura
- Wataru Yashiro
- Hiroaki Yokoyama
- Mirai Aoshima
- Wakamu Deguchi
- Shin'ichirō Hattori
- Kei Honda
- Takashi Ikenaga
- Naohiro Ishida
- Shingo Itō
- Kōta Kanai
- Yūsei Koga
- Reo Kurosawa
- Mitsunori Makino
- Akihiro Murata
- Yūya Nagaoka
- Ryōsuke Nakamura
- Kazuhiro Nishikawa
- Takehiro Ōhira
- Satoru Sakaguchi
- Shin'ichi Satō
- Shōji Segawa
- Ryō Shimamoto
- Hideyuki Takano
- Satoshi Takano
- Yūichi Tanaka
- Yūsuke Tōyama
- Hiromu Watanabe
- Masakazu Watanabe
- Shin'ya Yamamoto
- Akihiro Ida
- Mikio Kariyama
- Naoki Koyama
- Reo Koyama
- Kanta Masegi
- Kenta Miyajima
- Saito Morimoto
- Reo Okabe
- Yūya Saitō
- Yūjirō Takahashi
- Hiroki Taniai
- Kenshi Tokuda
- Hirotoshi Ueno
- Taiki Yamakawa
- Tomoki Yokoyama
- Sōta Fujii (Ryūō, Meijin, Ōi, Ōza, Kiō, Ōshō and Kisei)
- Takumi Itō (Eiō)
Awarded |
|
---|---|
Qualifying |
|