Naoko Hayashiba
Naoko Hayashiba | |
---|---|
林葉直子 | |
Born | January 24, 1968 |
Nationality | Japanese |
Other names | Masaru Katori (かとり まさる) |
Occupation(s) | Shogi player, writer, manga artist |
Naoko Hayashiba (林葉 直子, Hayashiba Naoko, born on January 24, 1968), who is also known by the pen name Masaru Katori (かとり まさる, Katori Masaru), is a Japanese writer and manga artist from Fukuoka. She had a successful career as professional shogi player but quit during a sex scandal with another professional player, Makoto Nakahara, in 1995.[1][2] Since then, she has focused on writing and TV work. She has written two novel series, Tondemo Police and Kiss Dakeja Iya, and the manga Shion no Ō. In 2010, after a 15-year absence, she returned to shogi.[3]
Shogi professional
[edit]Hayashiba defeated professional shogi player Kinji Shiihashi in a 1991 Ginga Tournament game using the rare Sleeve Rook opening as Black,[4] which made her the first female professional to defeat a male in a tournament game. Hayashiba's victory, however, is considered to be an "unofficial" because the Ginga Tournament did not become an official tournament until 2000.
She had the record for the highest yearly winning rate of 0.852 (23 wins out of 27) in 1989 until it was surpassed by Ichiyo Shimizu in 1993 (0.897) and the record winning streak of 17 games in a row in 1982 until it was beaten by Hiroe Nakai in 2010 (19 games) and Kana Satomi in 2015 (21 games).[5]
Promotion history
[edit]This section needs expansion. You can help by adding to it. (March 2018) |
Titles and other championships
[edit]Hayashiba won a total of 15 titles in her career. She won the Women's Meijin title 4 times, the Women's Ōshō title 10 times, and the Kurashiki Tōka Cup 1 time.[6][7] When she was 15 years old, she became the youngest to win the Women's Meijin and the first as well as youngest to win two titles (2 crowns) at the same time.[8][9][10]: 23
Since she won the Women's Ōshō title more than 5 times, she was the first to qualify for the prestigious Lifetime Women's Ōshō (Queen Ōshō) title in 1985. However, since she left the JSA instead of retiring via the normal channels, she was not given the title.
She won the Ladies Open Tournament once in 1989.[11]
She won the Women's Amateur Meijin tournament in 1979 when she was 11 years old.[12]
Awards and honors
[edit]Hayashiba has received a number of Japan Shogi Association Annual Shogi Awards in recognition of her accomplishments in shogi.[13][14]
Annual shogi awards
[edit]- 10th Annual Awards (April 1982–March 1983): Female Professional Award
- 11th Annual Awards (April 1983–March 1984): Female Professional Award
- 12th Annual Awards (April 1984–March 1985): Female Professional Award
- 14th Annual Awards (April 1986–March 1987): Female Professional Award
- 17th Annual Awards (April 1989–March 1990): Female Professional Award
- 18th Annual Awards (April 1980–March 1991): Female Professional Award
References
[edit]- ^ West, Mark D. (2007). Secrets, sex, and spectacle: The rules of scandal in Japan and the United States. University of Chicago Press. p. 176. ISBN 978-0-2268-9408-9. Retrieved March 22, 2018 – via Google Books.
- ^ "林葉直子と中原誠の不倫騒動 将棋界に炸裂した「文春砲」". October 20, 2016.
- ^ 林葉直子さん 15年ぶり対局. Mainichi Shimbun (in Japanese). July 28, 2010. Retrieved January 1, 2011. [dead link ]
- ^ "林葉直子 vs. 椎橋金司 銀河戦".
- ^ "歴代ベスト記録・ランキング成績・ランキング|日本将棋連盟".
- ^ "岡田美術館杯女流名人戦 |棋戦|日本将棋連盟".
- ^ "霧島酒造杯女流王将戦 |棋戦|日本将棋連盟".
- ^ "里見香奈が女流名人位を奪取|将棋ニュース|日本将棋連盟".
- ^ "大山名人杯倉敷藤花戦 |棋戦|日本将棋連盟".
- ^ "Joryū Kikai no Yonjū Shūnen" 女流棋界の40周年 [40 years of Female Professional Shogi]. Shogi World (in Japanese). MyNabi Publishing/Japan Shogi Association. September 2014. pp. 25–29. Retrieved March 22, 2018 – via Google Books.
- ^ "レディースオープントーナメント歴代優勝者".
- ^ "女流アマ名人戦歴代優勝者一覧".
- ^ "将棋大賞受賞者一覧|棋士データベース|日本将棋連盟".
- ^ "将棋大賞受賞者一覧|棋士データベース|日本将棋連盟".
External links
[edit]- 林葉の振飛車 part1 · blog post about Hayashiba's shogi strategies
- 1968 births
- 20th-century Japanese novelists
- 21st-century Japanese novelists
- Light novelists
- Writers from Fukuoka (city)
- Professional shogi players from Fukuoka Prefecture
- Japanese shogi players
- Living people
- Female shogi players
- Japanese actresses
- Japanese women television personalities
- 20th-century Japanese businesspeople
- Manga writers
- Japanese female comics writers
- People from Fukuoka
- Women's Meijin
- Women's Ōshō
- Kurashiki Tōka Cup
- 21st-century pseudonymous writers
- Pseudonymous women writers