Rui Naiwei

{{Short description|Chinese Go player (born 1963)}}

{{family name hatnote|Rui|lang=Chinese}}

{{Infobox go player

|name=Rui Naiwei

|image = 圍棋九段選手芮迺偉女士 (cropped).jpg

|hangul=루이나이웨이

|hanja=芮迺偉

|chinese=Trad. 芮迺偉 Simp. 芮迺伟

|pinyin=Ruì Nǎiwěi

|birth_date={{birth date and age|1963|12|28}}

|birth_place= Shanghai, China

| teacher = Wu Qing-yuan

|turnedpro=1985 (full time)

|rank=9 dan

|affiliation=Zhongguo Qiyuan (1985–19??)
American Go Association (19??–1999)
Hanguk Kiwon (1999–2011)
Zhongguo Qiyuan (2011–present)

}}

{{MedalTableTop}}

{{MedalCountry|{{CHN}}}}

{{Medal|Competition|Asian Games}}

{{Medal|Silver|2010 Guangzhou|Women's Team}}

{{MedalBottom}}

Rui Naiwei ({{zh|t=芮迺偉|s=芮迺伟|p=Ruì Nǎiwěi}}; born December 28, 1963) is a Chinese professional Go player, once active in South Korea. She is the strongest recorded female Go player, and is the only woman to have won one of the major open Go titles. She achieved this by winning the 1999 Guksu title (the oldest and one of the most prestigious Go competitions in Korea), on the way beating Lee Chang-Ho and Cho Hun-hyun, the two strongest players in the world at the time.

Biography

Rui was born in Shanghai, China. After starting to play around 1975 (at the age of 11—the age some other players go pro) she became a pro for the Zhongguo Qiyuan in 1985, being promoted all the way to 7-dan that year. She reached 9-dan in 1988, becoming the first woman ever to achieve that rank. After that, Chinese Feng Yun and Korean Park Jieun became the second and third female go players to reach 9 dan, following Rui Naiwei.

Leaving China in 1989, she moved to Japan. While the Nihon Ki-in did not allow her to play in any Japanese tournaments, she was able to make it to the semi-finals of the international Ing Cup in 1992. She spent several years in the San Francisco Bay Area.

She then moved to South Korea (with the help of Cho Hun-hyeon 9-dan). She participated actively in Korean tournaments. She dominated the women's events and won two open events, always previously won by men: the Guksu (the 43rd open Guksu title in South Korea, 1999) and the Maxim Cup (2004).

She returned to China in 2011.{{citation |url=https://www.usgo.org/news/2012/01/10-minutes-with-jujo-jiang-and-naiwei-rui/ |title=10 Minutes With: Jujo Jiang & Naiwei Rui |date=2012-01-09 |website=American Go E-Journal |url-status=dead |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20170911082149/https://www.usgo.org/news/2012/01/10-minutes-with-jujo-jiang-and-naiwei-rui/ |archive-date=2017-09-11}}

Rui's style tends to be extremely aggressive, and often characterized by large scale semeai.

Her husband is Jiang Zhujiu, also a 9-dan professional.

Titles & runners-up

Ranks #6-t in total number of titles in Korea.

class="wikitable"

!Title

Years Held
align="center" | Current

| align="center" | 17

{{flagicon|South Korea}} Guksu

| 1999

{{flagicon|South Korea}} Maxim Cup

| 2004

{{flagicon|South Korea}} Women's Myungin

| 2000–2002, 2004–2007

{{flagicon|South Korea}} Women's Guksu

| 2000–2002, 2006, 2007

{{flagicon|South Korea}} Women's Kisung

| 2006

{{flagicon|China}} National Women's Individual

| 1986–1989

align="center" | International

| align="center" | 7

{{flagicon|South Korea}} {{flagicon|China}} {{flagicon|Japan}} Jeongganjang Cup

| 2003

{{flagicon|South Korea}} {{flagicon|China}} {{flagicon|Japan}} Hungchang Cup

| 2000, 2001

{{flagicon|South Korea}} {{flagicon|China}} {{flagicon|Japan}} Eastern Airlines Cup

| 2000

{{flagicon|South Korea}} {{flagicon|China}} {{flagicon|Japan}} Bohae Cup

| 1994, 1996, 1997

class="wikitable"

!Title

Years Lost
align="center" | Current

| align="center" | 4

{{flagicon|South Korea}} Guksu

| 2000

{{flagicon|South Korea}} Maxim Cup

| 2003

{{flagicon|South Korea}} Women's Guksu

| 2003

{{flagicon|South Korea}} Women's Myungin

| 2003

align="center" | Defunct

| align="center" | 4

{{flagicon|South Korea}} LG Refined Oil Cup

| 2000

{{flagicon|USA}} North American Masters Tournament

| 1996, 1999, 2000

References

{{Reflist}}