Daichi Sasaki

Japanese shogi player (born 1995) From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Daichi Sasaki

Daichi Sasaki (佐々木 大地, Sasaki Daichi, born May 30, 1995) is a Japanese professional shogi player ranked 7-dan.

Quick Facts Native name, Born ...
Daichi Sasaki
Thumb
Native name佐々木大地
Born (1995-05-30) May 30, 1995 (age 29)
HometownTsushima, Nagasaki
Career
Achieved professional statusApril 1, 2016(2016-04-01) (aged 20)
Badge Number306
Rank7-dan
TeacherKōichi Fukaura (9-dan)
Meijin classC2
Ryūō class3
Websites
JSA profile page
Close

Early life, amateur shogi and apprenticeship

Summarize
Perspective

Sasaki was born in Tsushima, Nagasaki on May 30, 1995.[1] He learned shogi from his father when he was three years old.[2] As a third-grade elementary school student, he won the Grades 1 to 3 division of the 3rd All Japan Elementary School Student Kurashiki Ōshō Tournament [ja] in 2004.[3][4] Then, as a sixth-grade elementary school student in 2007, he finished reached the semi-finals of the 32nd Elementary School Student Meijin Tournament [ja], but lost to fellow future professional Seiya Kondō.[5][6]

The following year, Sasaki entered the Japan Shogi Association's apprentice school at the rank of 6-kyū as a student of shogi professional Kōichi Fukaura. He was promoted to the rank or 3-dan in 2013, and obtained professional status and the rank of 4-dan in April 2016 after finishing the 58th 3-dan League (October 2015  March 2016) with a record of 12 wins and 6 losses. Although Sasaki actually finished league play tied with several other players who also had 12 wins, his lower league seed meant he finished in third place and thus did not earn automatic promotion to the rank of 4-dan. Third place, however, was good enough to earn him a second promotion point, and gave him the option to enter the professional ranks as a free class player.[2][7]

Shogi professional

Sasaki made his first appearance in a major title match in June 2023 when he challenged Sōta Fujii for the 94th Kisei title (JuneJuly 2023) but lost the match 3 games to 1.[8] The following month, Sasaki also challenged Fujii for the 64th Ōi title (JulyAugust 2023) but lost again, this time 4 games to 1.[9]

Promotion history

Sasaki's promotion history is as follows:[10]

  • 6-kyū: September 2008
  • 3-dan: October 2013
  • 4-dan: April 1, 2016
  • 5-dan: February 20, 2019
  • 6-dan: February 16, 2022
  • 7-dan: April 28, 2022

Titles and other championships

Ssaki's has appeared in a major title match twice, but has yet to win a title.[11]

Awards and honors

Sasaki received the Japan Shogi Association Annual Shogi Awards for "Most Games Won" for the 201819 shogi year,[12] "Most Games Played" for the 20192020 shogi year,[13] and "Most Consecutive Games Won" for the 202324 shogi year.[14]

Year-end prize money and game fee ranking

Sasaki has finished in the "Top 10" of the JSA's year-end prize money and game fee rankings [ja] once: 8th with JPY 18,810,000 in earnings in 2023.[15]

References

Loading related searches...

Wikiwand - on

Seamless Wikipedia browsing. On steroids.