European Youth Go Championship

The European Youth Go Championship (EYGC) is a championship for young players of the board game of Go. It is held annually, and first started in Băile Felix, Romania in 1996.[1] Some winners of the various age groups, such as Diána Kőszegi, have since progressed to become professional Go players.

The championship was divided into two sections until 2010, when it was split into three age groups.

This event is where one can first see the future European Go leaders, such as Ilya Shikshin or Artem Kachanovskyi, respectively first and second in the adult 2010 European Go Championship (EGC).

History

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In its very first year, the U-18 group produced two noteworthy prize-winners: Csaba Mérő (the section winner), and the future professional players Svetlana Shikshina (2nd place) and Alexandre Dinerchtein (3rd place).

Notable prize-winners

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Other juniors went on to win senior tournaments.

The U-12 winner in 2000 and 2001, Ilya Shikshin, went on to win the adult European Go Championship, in 2007 and 2010.

Notable U-18 winners who progressed to greater things include Csaba Mérő, Alexandr Dinerchtein (record 7-times-winner of the adult EGC) and Diána Kőszegi.

Awards

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From 2010 onwards, these are split into 3 sections. They are for U-12s (players aged under 12), U-16s and U-18s.

Under 12

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Year Winner Second Third Venue
1996   Antoine Fenech   Cosmin Mutu   Csaba Marton   Băile Felix
1997   Antoine Fenech   Vasilii Shvedov   Pal Balogh   Bratislava
1998   Ondrej Silt   Tommy Hollmann   Natalia Kovaleva   Cannes
1999   Natalia Kovaleva   Timour Dougine   Mykhailo Shevchuk   Cannes
2000   Ilya Shikshin   Mykola Gluschenko   Rita Pocsai   Sinaia
2001   Ilya Shikshin   Jan Prokop   Mykola Gluschenko   Ustron
2002   Andrii Kravets   Andrej Kashaev   Artem Kachanovskyi   Prague
2003   Ihor Zaitsev   Artem Kachanovskyi   Miroslav Sos   Cannes
2004   Rafael Samakaev   Thomas Debarre   Amir Fragman   Cologne
2005   Mihai Serban   Joshua Chao -   Oleg Kocherov   Kosice
2006   Joshua Chao -   Mateusz Surma   Alexandre Matushkin   St Petersburg
2007   Toma Theodor   Chun-Yin Woo   Alexandre Vashurov   Zandvoort
2008   Yurii Mykhaliuk   Nikita Khabazov   Roman Korolov   Mikulov
2009   Mikhail Sidorenko   Dmitri Miliukyn   Dmitrij Medvedev   Banja Luka
2010   Anson Ng   Alexandru Pitrop   Silvestru State   Sibiu
2011   Vladyslav Verteletskyi   Stepan Popov   Valerii Krushelnytskyi   Brno
2012   Valerii Krushelnytskyi   Silvestru State   Valerij Kulishov   Saint Petersburg
2013   Valerii Krushelnytskyi   Valerij Kulishov   Kim Shakhov   Budapest
2014   Oscar Vazquez   Denis Dobranis   Arved Pittner   Bognor Regis
2015   Denis Dobranis   Arved Pittner   Virzhinia Shalneva   Zandvoort
2016   Ioan Alexandru Arsinoaia   Virzhinia Shalneva   Nikita Prikarev   Palic
2017   Ivan Klochikhin   Stefan Adrian Rotarita   Polina Krushelnytska   Grenoble
2018   Stefan Adrian Rotarita   Artemii Pishchalnikov   Artur Gimadiev   Kyiv
2019   Vsevolod Ovsiienko   Artemii Pishchalnikov   Alexej Igonin   Moscow
2020   Vsevolod Ovsiienko   Askar Khusainov   Egor Lavrov   Stubičke Toplice
2021   Vjacheslav Shpakovskij   Ruslan Tarasov   Artur Gimadiev Internet
2022   Bende Barcza   Alper Sulak   Alexandru-Nicolas Patrascu   Prague
2023   Alper Sulak   Ryan Zhang   Bende Barcza   Ankara

Under 16

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This section was created in 2010, after the World Youth Go Championship altered the age categories under competition.

Year Winner Second Third Place
2010   Mateusz Surma   Vanessa Wong   Yurii Mykhaliuk   Sibiu
2011   Mateusz Surma   Vanessa Wong   Alexander Vashurov   Brno
2012   Yurii Mykhaliuk   Stepan Popov   Alexandru-Petre Pitrop   Saint Petersburg
2013   Stepan Popov   Silvestru State   Vjacheslav Kajmin   Budapest
2014   Alexandru-Petre Pitrop   Grigorij Fionin   Vjacheslav Kajmin   Bognor Regis
2015   Vjacheslav Kajmin   Valerii Krushelnytskyi   Stepan Popov   Zandvoort
2016   Vjacheslav Kajmin   Valerii Krushelnytskyi   Kim Shakhov   Palic
2017   Oscar Vazquez   Valerii Krushelnytskyi   Kim Shakhov   Grenoble
2018   Arved Pittner   Solal Zemor   Savva Mezin   Kyiv
2019   Virzhinia Shalneva   Arved Pittner   Linh Vu Tu   Moscow
2020   Linh Vu Tu   Alexandr Muromcev   Davide Bernardis   Stubičke Toplice
2021   Alexandr Muromcev   Egor Lavrov   Vsevolod Ovsiienko Internet
2022   Vsevolod Ovsiienko   Yuze Xing   Anna Melnyk   Prague
2023   Vsevolod Ovsiienko   Yuze Xing   Olesia Malko   Ankara

Under 18

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Year Winner Second Third Venue
1996   Csaba Mérő   Svetlana Shikshina   Alexandre Dinerchtein   Băile Felix
1997   Dmytro Bohatskyi   Jonas Fincke   Paul Drouot   Bratislava
1998   Dmytro Bohatskyi   Diana Koszegi   Martin Kuzela   Cannes
1999   Andrei Kulkov   Diana Koszegi   Merlijn Kuin   Cannes
2000   Diana Koszegi   Andrei Kulkov   Timur Dugin   Sinaia
2001   Pal Balogh   Diana Koszegi   Ondrej Silt   Ustron
2002   Pal Balogh   Timur Dugin   Oleg Mezhov   Prague
2003   Ilya Shikshin   Timur Dugin   Antoine Fenech   Cannes
2004   Ondrej Silt   Ilya Shikshin   Igor Nemliy   Cologne
2005   Timur Dugin   Bohdan Zhurakovskyi   Jun Tarumi -   Igor Nemly   Kosice
2006   Ilya Shikshin   Rita Pocsai   Thomas Debarre   St Petersburg
2007   Artem Dugin   Dusan Mitic   Ondrej Fidrmuc   Zandvoort
2008   Artem Kachanovskyi   Thomas Debarre   Javier-A. Savolainen   Mikulov
2009   Ali Jabarin   Artem Kachanovskyi   Nikola Mitic -   Viktor Lin   Banja Luka
2010   Mihai Serban   Roman Ruzhanskyi   Laura Avram   Sibiu

Under 20

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During the 2011 championship of Brno, it was mentioned "under 20" category instead of "under 18"

Year Winner Second Third Venue
2011   Pavol Lisy   Ali Jabarin   Lukas Kraemer   Brno
2012   Lukas Podpera   Alexander Vashurov   Alexander Eerbeek   Saint Petersburg
2013   Pavol Lisy   Ali Jabarin   Lukas Podpera   Budapest
2014   Lukas Podpera   Jonas Welticke   Tanguy Le_Calve   Bognor Regis[2]
2015   Pavol Lisy   Lukas Podpera   Tanguy Le_Calve   Zandvoort
2016   Grigorij Fionin   Stanislaw Frejlak   Dominik Boviz   Palic
2017   Vjacheslav Kajmin   Grigorij Fionin   Anton Chernykh   Grenoble
2018   Sinan Djepov   Matias Pankoke   Elian_Ioan Grigoriu   Kyiv
2019   Anton Chernykh   Grigorij Fionin   Elian Ioan Grigoriu   Moscow
2020   Anton Chernykh   Sinan Djepov   Elian Ioan Grigoriu   Stubičke Toplice
2021   Oscar Vazquez   Arved Pittner   Savva Mezin Internet
2022   Arved Pittner   Davide Bernardis   Denis Dobranis   Prague
2023   Denis Dobranis   Arved Pittner   Ufuk Emre Yıldırım   Ankara

See also

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References

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  1. ^ "1st European Youth Goe Championships 1996". European Go Federation. Retrieved 13 August 2010.
  2. ^ "19th European Youth Go Championships". European Go Federation.