Shōji Segawa
Shōji Segawa | |
---|---|
Native name | 瀬川晶司 |
Born | (1970-03-23) March 23, 1970 (age 54) |
Hometown | Yokohama |
Career | |
Achieved professional status | November 6, 2005(2005-11-06) (aged 35) |
Badge Number | 259 |
Rank | 6-dan |
Teacher | Terutaka Yasue [ja] (8-dan) |
Meijin class | C2 |
Ryūō class | 4 |
Websites | |
JSA profile page | |
Official website |
Shōji Segawa (瀬川 晶司, Segawa Shōji, born March 23, 1970) is a Japanese professional shogi player ranked 6-dan.[1] Segawa is known for becoming a professional player without being promoted by winning the 3-dan tournament within the professional apprenticeship program, which subsequently led to Japan Shogi Association establishing the Professional Admission Test as way for amateurs who are not apprentice professionals to obtain professional status. The 2018 movie The Miracle of Crybaby Shottan [ja] is based on Segawa's 2006 autobiography of the same name.
Becoming a professional shogi player
Segawa was a 3-dan ranked apprentice shogi professional, but was unable to gain promotion to 4-dan professional before turning 26 in 1996. Thus, per the association's rules, he was required to withdraw from its apprentice school.[2] Segawa continued to play shogi as an amateur and won a number of national amateur tournaments which allowed him to qualify for entry into professional shogi tournaments. Segawa's record of 17 wins and 7 losses against professionals in these tournaments led him to request that the association grant him another opportunity to become a professional. The JSA discussed Segawa's petition at its annual general meeting in May 2005, and the membership voted 129 to 52 to grant him a special exception to attempt to become a professional.[3]
The JSA arranged for him to play six games against a variety of professional opponents, stating that he would be granted 4-dan professional status if he won three games. Segawa's opponents were to be four professional players (Hiromitsu Kanki, Toshiaki Kubo and Makoto Nakahara and Kunio Yonenaga), one female professional player (Hiroe Nakai), and one apprentice school 3-dan (Amahiko Satō).[4]
The games were held from July to November 2005. Segawa lost Game One against Satō, won Game Two against Kanki, lost Game Three against Kubo, and then won Game Four against Nakai. His opponent for Game Five was originally scheduled to be Nakahara, but he was replaced by Hideyuki Takano. Segawa defeated Takano to achieve the necessary third win on November 6, 2005 and was granted professional status by the JSA on the same day. He became the first person in 61 years to obtain professional status via test shogi.[2][5]
As a result of Segawa's successful attempt to become professional, the matter was re-discussed by the JSA members during the association's annual general meeting in May 2006, and the membership voted 154 in favor to 34 against to create a formal way for other strong amateurs to obtain professional status called the "Professional Admission Test" (プロ編入試験 (Puro Henyū Shiken)).[6]
Shogi professional
Promotion history
The promotion history of Segawa is as follows:[7]
- 4-dan: November 6, 2005
- 5-dan: August 13, 2012
- 6-dan: November 8, 2018
The Miracle of Crybaby Shotan
In 2006, Segawa released his autobiography titled The Miracle of Crybaby Shottan [ja]. The book was later adapted into a 2018 movie of the same name directed by Toshiaki Toyoda.[8]
References
- ^ "Kishi Dētabēsu: Segawa Shōji" 棋士データベース: 瀬川晶司 [Professional Shogi Player Database: Shōji Segawa] (in Japanese). Japan Shogi Association. Retrieved February 27, 2018.
- ^ a b Nakamura, Akemi (December 29, 2005). "Newest 'shogi' pro followed unlikely path". The Japan Times. Retrieved February 28, 2018.
- ^ Nakasuna, Kōji (May 26, 2005). "Kyōgō Ama・Segawa-san no Puro e no Shiken Taikyoku Kettei" 強豪アマ・瀬川さんのプロへの試験対局決定 [Details of "Pro Test" for Extremely Strong Amateur Segawa Decided]. Mainichi Shimbun (in Japanese). Archived from the original on May 29, 2005. Retrieved November 5, 2017.
- ^ "Segawa Shōji-shi no Puro Iri ni Tsuite" 瀬川晶司氏のプロ入りについて [Regarding Shōji Segawa Becoming a Professional] (in Japanese). Japan Shogi Association. June 19, 2005. Archived from the original on June 19, 2005. Retrieved November 5, 2017.
- ^ Nakasuna, Kōji (November 6, 2005). "Shōgi: Segawa-san, Pro Shiken Gōkaku Tsūsan Sanshō Nihai" 将棋: 瀬川さん, プロ試験合格 通算3勝2敗 [Shogi: Segawa Passes Pro Test with 3 Wins and 2 Losses]. Mainichi Shimbun (in Japanese). Archived from the original on November 25, 2005. Retrieved November 5, 2017.
- ^ "Henyū Seido Tōshisho A" 編入制度答申書 A [Admission Test System Report A] (in Japanese). Japan Shogi Association. May 26, 2006. Archived from the original on January 14, 2007. Retrieved November 5, 2017.
- ^ "Kishi Dētabēsu: Segawa Shōji Shōdan Rireki" 棋士データベース: 瀬川晶司 昇段履歴 [Professional Shogi Player Database: Shōji Segawa Promotion History] (in Japanese). Japan Shogi Association. Archived from the original on November 7, 2017. Retrieved November 5, 2017.
- ^ "Shōji Segawa 5th stage "Miracle of crying bugs (tentative title)" is decided as a movie!". August 2017. Retrieved February 28, 2018.
External links
- ShogiHub: Professional Player Info · Segawa, Shoji
- Segawa's blog
- Nakimushi Shottan no kiseki at IMDb
- 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
- Shingo Itō
- Kōta Kanai
- Yūsei Koga
- Reo Kurosawa
- Mitsunori Makino
- Akihiro Murata
- Yūya Nagaoka
- Ryōsuke Nakamura
- Kazuhiro Nishikawa
- Takehiro Ōhira
- Satoru Sakaguchi
- Shōji Segawa
- Hideyuki Takano
- Satoshi Takano
- Yūichi Tanaka
- Yūsuke Tōyama
- Hiromu Watanabe
- Masakazu Watanabe
- Shin'ya Yamamoto
- Tetsuya Fujimori
- Nagisa Fujimoto
- Kōhei Hasebe
- Yoshitaka Hoshino
- Junpei Ide
- Kenji Imaizumi
- Naohiro Ishida
- Yūta Ishikawa
- Keita Kadokura
- Wataru Kamimura
- Yūta Komori
- Takayuki Kuroda
- Hiroshi Miyamoto
- Takuya Nishida
- Shōgo Orita
- Asuto Saitō
- Shin'ichi Satō
- Ryō Shimamoto
- Kazuo Sugimoto
- Akihiro Takada
- Yūgo Takeuchi
- Seiya Tomita
- Hiroshi 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 |
|