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  Динерштейн Александр Григорьевич
   (19.04.1980)
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 |      |  Город: Казань 
 
 Звание и разряд: ЗМС, ГР, 1 p 
 
 Учителя: ВалерийШикшин, ЗТР, 
 Чун Понгчжо 7p, Хо Жанхэ 9p 
 
 Сайт:   http://breakfast.go4go.net/ 
 |      |  Достижения: 
 
-  1999, 2000, 2002, 2003, 2004, 2005  1 место, ЧемпионатЕвропы
 
 -  2001, 2002  1 место, Ing Chang Ki Memorial
 
 -  2005, 2007  1 место, European Masters
 
 -  2007  1 место, Кубок России
  
   
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  Краткая биографическая статья
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 | Александр Динерштейн  первый российский мастер, получивший статус профессионала в Корейской Го Федерации (ХангукКивон). 17 июня 2003 г. Александр в одном из профессиональных турниров в Корее обыграл с перевесом в 1.5 очка О Риссэя, который имеет 9-й профессиональный дан и является сегодня одним из самых известных и титулованных игроков Японии. 
  
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|     | I started to play Go in 1986. I was 6 years old and my father (10 kyu) was my first teacher. For the several years I was playing both chess and go, but from the age of 10 I gave up chess and started to learn Go more actively with a new teacher Valeryi Shikshin, 4 dan and his students. I was very fortunate to be living in Kazan, because it was the capital of Russian Go. There were so many top players around me : Ivan Detkov 6d, Valeryi Solovyev 6d, Ruslan Saifullin 6d, Rustam and Nail Sahabutdinov both 5d, Alexei Vasilev 5d and Roman Gataullin 5d. They were very kind to me and I owe them a big debt of gratitude. 
 
In 1996 (I already was a 5-dan) Cheon Pung-cho, 7-dan professional from Korean Baduk Association (KBA) invited Svetlana Shikshina (daughter of my teacher) and me to study Go in Seoul. First of all I was really surprised at the level of the Korean children. I was living in one of the largest Go Schools, and there was around 20 students who were both stronger and much younger than me. Later I changed clubs several times, but I was never the strongest player in any of them. I studied Go with Pak Yeong-hun, who was already the strongest Korean amateur (I only beat him once, in 1998), Pak Chi-eun 3p, Yi Chae-ung 2p, Yi Ta-hye 1p, Kang Don-yun 1p, Ko Kun-tae 1p and later, from 2001, with Pak Cheong-sang 3p, Chu Hyeon-wook 2p and Pak Chi-hun 1p. By the time you read this article many more of the children who were training alongside me will have become professionals. 
 
I became a professional in 2002, by the special decision of the KBA with the kind support of Cho Nam-ch'eol 9p, an honorary member of the KBA, and my teacher Cheon Pung-cho 7p. I am probably not the weakest professional here, but to be honest, I would say that there is about 1 stone difference between me and the other new professionals in Korea. Nowadays I am still studying hard to make this difference smaller.  
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 my results:
|     |    1999 
European Championship, Slovakia  1 place 
Ing cup, Finland  2 place 
LG cup, Russia  3 place 2000 
Seimitsu cup,  Japan (online)  1 place 
Chonmekbe cup, Korea  2 place 
European Championship, Germany  1 place 
Asian Amateur tournament, Korea  2 place 
Russian teams championship, Russia  2 place ( best result on the first board) 
LG cup, Russia  1 place 2001 
Seimitsu cup, Japan (online)  1 place 
Ing memorial tournament, Netherlands  1 place 
LG World Championship  1/32 ( Korea, European representative) 
European Teams Championship (Russia)  1 place 
Konishi cup, Russia  1 place 
LG cup, Russia  1 place 
Fujitsu cup, Netherlands  2 place 2002 
European Go Oza Championship, Netherlands  1 place 
Ing cup, Russia  1 place 
Toyota&Denso World Oza 1/32 Japan, European representative 
Konishi cup, Russia  1 place 
European Championship, Croatia  1 place 
Week-End Tournament, Croatia  1 place 
Fujitsu cup, Netherlands  3 place 2003 
LG World Championship, Korea  1/16 
LG cup, Russia  1 place 
European Go Championship, Russia  1 place 2004 
European Go Championship  1 place 
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