Top Qs
Timeline
Chat
Perspective

Yuria Katō

Japanese shogi player (born 2003) From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Yuria Katō
Remove ads

Yuria Katō (加藤 結李愛, Katō Yuria; born February 15, 2003 in Sendai, Miyagi Prefecture) is a Japanese women's professional shogi player ranked 2-dan.

Quick Facts Native name, Born ...
Remove ads

Early life and becoming a women's shogi professional

Summarize
Perspective

Katō was born on February 15, 2003, in Sendai, Miyagi Prefecture.[1] She learned how to play shogi from her older brother when she was a second-grade elementary school student.[2] She started playing shogi at a local shogi club in Sendai and continued to improve saying she "enjoyed playing against older people because her age didn't matter" and that it was "fun trying to figure out how each game would develop".[3] She first thought about actually trying to become a women's professional shogi player after meeting shogi professional Akira Shima and women's shogi professional Kanna Suzuki at an shogi event for local children as part of the JSA's efforts to help those in Tōhoku region recover from the 2011 Tōhoku earthquake and tsunami.[3]

In April 2016, she was accepted into Class D1 of the Japan Shogi Association (JSA) training group system,[2] and she finished tied for third in the 48th Women's Amateur Meijin Tournament [ja] later that same year in October.[3][4]

Katō was promoted to Class C1 of the training group system in September 2017 after winning six games in a row, which meant she met the criteria for becoming a provisional women's professional shogi player ranked 3-kyū, and officially became a provisional women's professional, under the guidance of shogi professional Kazuo Ishida [ja], on April 1, 2018.[2][3] In July 2018, she advanced to the main tournament draw of the 12th Mynavi Open [ja], which meant that she qualified for promotion to the rank of women's professional 2-kyū and full women's professional status.[5]

Remove ads

Women's shogi professional

Katō advanced to the finals of the 27th Kurashiki Tōka Cup  [ja] challenger tournament in September 2019, but lost to Sae Ito.[6][7]

Katō defeated Ayano Hori to win the 7th Women's Professional Yamada Challenge Cup [ja] in January 2023 for her first shogi tournament championship.

Promotion history

Katō's promotion history is as follows:[8]

  • 3-kyū: April 1, 2018
  • 2-kyū: July 7, 2018
  • 1-kyū: June 13, 2019
  • 1-dan: August 25, 2019
  • 2-dan: July 13, 2024

Note: All ranks are women's professional ranks.

Remove ads

Personal life

Katō is suffers from a congenital muscular disease and finds it difficult to sit in the seiza position required for some official games. As a result, the JSA announced in September 2019 that she can play all of her games seated in a chair at a table.[9][10]

References

Loading related searches...

Wikiwand - on

Seamless Wikipedia browsing. On steroids.

Remove ads