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Teenager takes Japan by storm with record-breaking ‘shogi’ debut

Shogi is similar to chess, though players can reuse captured pieces as their own, making it more complex.

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A 14-year-old boy is taking Japan by storm with a record-breaking start to his professional career in the country’s version of chess.

Sota Fujii broke a 30-year-old record this week with his 29th win in a row in the game of “shogi”.

His face was plastered across front pages of major newspapers on Tuesday, getting a bigger display than the bankruptcy filing of Japanese air bag maker Takata.

Shogi is similar to chess, though players can reuse captured pieces as their own, making it more complex.

Sota Fujii, centre, is surrounded by media after Fujii defeated Yasuhiro Masuda to break a 30-year-old record with his 29th win in a row, in the qualifying round of a major tournament in Tokyo (Iori Sagisawa/Kyodo News via AP)
Sota Fujii, centre, is surrounded by media after Fujii defeated Yasuhiro Masuda to break a 30-year-old record with his 29th win in a row (Iori Sagisawa/Kyodo News via AP)

In competitions, they kneel on the floor of a traditional tatami-mat room and play on a thick wooden block that is the board.

Fujii defeated 19-year-old opponent Yasuhiro Masuda after a battle of more than 11 hours, with lunch and dinner breaks, that ended Monday night.

Kneeling with his eyes cast down, the teenage phenomenon told dozens of reporters, photographers and video journalists crowded around him that he was both happy and surprised to win 29 consecutive matches.

His accomplishment is all the more impressive because the matches are the first 29 he has played since becoming professional.

Sota Fujii holds shogi board with a number of 29 after Fujii defeated Masuda to break a 30-year-old record with his 29th win in a row (Kyodo News via AP)
Sota Fujii holds shogi board with a number of 29 after Fujii defeated Masuda to break a 30-year-old record with his 29th win in a row (Kyodo News via AP)

Fujii became the youngest-ever to qualify to enter the professional ranks last October.

In his first match in December he defeated Hifumi Kato, a then-76-year-old master who had set the previous record for the youngest-ever pro in the 1950s.

Japan’s Kyodo News agency says public interest in the game has not been as high since 1996, when a player won all seven major championships in the same year.

Prime Minister Shinzo Abe told reporters that Fujii had made history with a victory that he thinks will inspire the hopes and dreams of other Japanese.

Fans wonder just how good Fujii is, and how far he will go in this year’s tournaments. His next match is July 2.

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