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One day,
as I browsed through a bookstore, I saw a magazine
containing hundreds of Sudoku puzzles, bought one and
shared it with a nephew who became hooked. He is a
mathematician wizard all right, but solving the Sudoku did
not involve pure mathematics skills (so I thought). It is
a small square of 9x9 boxes with some numbers in it. It
employed logic. It is fun. He carried it to the extreme
that even when we have family get-togethers, I would catch
him solving in the guise of watching the television!
Sudoku’s
attraction stems from its simplest rules, yet solving it
may require a complex of reasoning. Once you start, you
are challenged not to stop till you have solved it. And
then you start another. And another. Yet, this columnist
sees Sudoku as some truly scary puzzles—a simple yet
mentally challenging phenomenon.
When this
columnist joined the RP team in the 3rd World Sudoku
Championship in Goa, India, held recently (of which the
BusinessMirror is the exclusive media partner and sponsor
of the Mathematicians Trainers Guild, or MTG-Philippines),
I felt it was my obligation to share this newfound brain
teaser with my countrymen. Modesty aside, I told myself,
who better to start this than a neophyte puzzler who wants
more challenge. In between interviews and observing how
the worldwide competition was being done, I discovered
that a person who is just beginning to solve Sudoku
puzzles and is willing to spend a few days off to study
the techniques, procedures and solving strategies will get
off to a running start to solving these puzzles with
relative ease. A word of caution: do not expect to breeze
through the book like a novel and start solving the
puzzles. One has to subsequently study and put in lots of
practice.

The
Holiday Inn was the exotic venue for the 3rd World Sudoku
Championship, where the greatest puzzlers, from 30
countries, gathered to fight it out over two days for
individual and team honors. Although Goa is
sweltering—36°C—and the humidity is off the scale, these
people were here to solve Sudoku with an intensity and
speed that would leave your average commuter scratching
his head. Inside an air-conditioned hall, 89 participants
have their heads bent over grids of numbers. The challenge
is to improve solving speed and to tackle the more
difficult puzzle levels.
American
idol
On the
first day of competition the players were presented with a
blizzard of Sudoku variants with names such as Quad Max
and Alphabet Substitution Twins, requiring the puzzlers to
do much more than simply rattle through the grids. There
were some amazing feats of speed in the classic puzzle
rounds. Jakub Ondrousek, a young Czech, completed eight
fiendish puzzles in only 18 minutes. The shining star
during the first day was Michael Collins, 35, a fund
manager from London, when, mid-round, the electricity cut
out for about 30 seconds, he was the only puzzler to reach
into his bag and pull out a torch to keep solving.
The
outstanding player of this worldwide competition was
Thomas Snyder of the United States. He won the
championship for the second year running, beating a
Japanese player and two Czechs in the playoffs. He
likewise won the competition to find the best solver of
classic Sudoku puzzles, beating
Britain’s
David McNeill, a lecturer in electronic engineering at
Queen’s University.
Snyder,
28, who has a PhD in biochemistry and is studying
bioengineering at Stanford, is tagged as the superstar in
the Sudoku world. He has the technique and the experience
and the brain buster that processes the visual data in
Sudoku faster than anyone else. Shying away from an
interview, Snyder simply tells this columnist: “I take
advantage of my talents.” True indeed, Snyder solved the
puzzle in two minutes and 26 seconds, lifting the Classic
Cup.
The
British team, sponsored by Puzzler Media, finished ninth.
David McNeill, 44, reached the quarterfinal play-offs for
the second year running and was narrowly edged out of the
final four. George Danker, 17, a student at Hampton School
in West London, was placed 29th, Michael Collins was 43rd
and Simon Anthony, 34, an investment banker from London,
came 75th.
The team
competition was won by
Czech
Republic.
The Australian team came last—hardly surprising, given
that only one of the four players had done a Sudoku puzzle
just before the competition. Calling themselves the
Numbats, the team of rugby mates from the University of
Western Australia Club in Perth managed to get sponsorship
to come to Goa and was the first team to wear blazers and
flip-flops. They made up for their lack of success by
winning all the drinking competitions (they were the only
team taking part). Laughing it off, team captain Mark
Skiffington says with pride: “We are proud to have
represented our country, and we owe our gratitude to our
sponsors.”
Each
country was represented officially by four players. A
country could send more players, but competed as
individuals. Turkey had nine players while Slovakia and
China totaled to eight players each. Belarus sent a
one-man team.
The
Philippine team was represented by Mariel Alexis Dee,
Jacqueline Joyce Oh (the youngest participant at 14) and
Frederick Ong. Dee and Oh are students, and Ong is a young
businessman from
Bacolod
City. They were accompanied by team captain and vice
president of MTG-Phils. Rechilda Villame and this
columnist. The Philippine team garnered the 17th slot in
the team competition.
Further
individual results were: Overall champion Thomas Snyder
(USA), next in line were Yuhei Kusui (Japan), Jakub
Ondrousek (Czech Republic) and Jakub Hrazdira (Czech
Republic); Classic topnotch Thomas Snyder (USA), followed
by David McNeill (UK) and Michael Ley (Germany); Team
champion of the world went to Czech Republic, while Japan,
Germany and the USA came in second, third and fourth,
respectively.
MTG
president Dr. Simon Chua believes the Philippine team will
harvest better results in the forthcoming international
Sudoku competitions. “Our Filipino youths can bring honor
to the country if these young math wizards are only given
proper training and exposure.”
The MTG,
organized by a group of math teachers, started training
students in mid-1990s to prepare them for local and
international mathematics competition, including the
Euclid Contest, and Kangaroo and Westpac medals, and the
most prestigious Mathematics Olympics given by the
Australian Mathematics Competition.
Together
with the BusinessMirror and other corporate sponsors, the
National Finals of Sudoku Super Challenge was held in
January this year at the University of Makati. The
sponsors include Coca-Cola Phils., the City Government of
Makati, SanMig Coffee, Faber-Castell, Phoenix Publishing
House, Chowking, Illustrado, Mang Inasal, Philippine
Graphic magazine, dwIZ, Home Radio and RJ 100.
Still
rising
While
Sudokumania has ebbed in Britain—the frenzy of the early
days replaced by a steady enthusiasm—the wave is still
rolling all over the world. In
India
there are more than 10 million Sudoku players and rising
fast. In Bangladesh 48,000 entered the competition to form
a team to send to the championships. More significantly,
the Chinese are now Sudoku enthusiasts. Last year only a
handful of Chinese publications carried Sudoku. Now there
are 19 daily papers with a puzzle and more than 200 Sudoku
magazines.
Sun Shu
Ping, general manager of Beijing Sudoku and Culture
Society Development Ltd., which sponsored the Chinese
team, estimates there are now 2 million players in China.
How many more will be next year? She says, “Perhaps 20
million, even more.”
Sudoku is
a Japanese abbreviation of suuji wa dokushin ni kagiru,
which means “the numbers must occur only once.” It
originally started in the US in the ’70s sporting the name
“Number Place.” A Japanese publisher, on a trip to the
US,
saw it and brought the idea to Japan. Soon it caught like
wild fire there.
In a rare
chance encounter with Tetsuya Nishio, puzzle designer from
Tokyo, Japan, he says he has written numerous books on
Sudoku that have been the latest craze puzzles around the
world, and many people will attest to being infuriated,
frustrated and befuddled by the number puzzle.
“The tips
available won’t tell you [very] much, but from your
knowledge and experience, you will need analytical tools
and techniques to solve the puzzles,” he said.
A
never-ending discovery, Nishio makes sure that the
technology is correct and sound, and capable of solving
any Sudoku puzzle his books published so far.
“When you
practice, you will be able to recognize the various
patterns and strategies,” adding that one must practice in
order to absorb and understand the technology, and then
develop the expertise in applying it. “There are many
Sudoku puzzles and each puzzle requires a different
approach and a different mindset,” Nichio explained.
But
doesn’t a one-stop solution take away all the fun of
trying to solve a puzzle? “The fun is from a different
perspective. It is in solving the difficult puzzles in a
short period of time, and in managing to unlock the secret
of the puzzle. And it’s in being able to solve the puzzles
in shorter and shorter periods of time,” he added.
Asked how
his book differs from all the other books that also claim
to provide solutions, Nichio replied: “We’re talking about
Sudoku technology and knowledge. There is more to Sudoku
than just a game, as it requires critical thinking,
logical reasoning and other mental skills essential to
everyday life.” If a person is able to solve any type of
Sudoku puzzle using the tools and techniques, that person
would have acquired a level of thinking ability that will
facilitate the acquisition of knowledge in any
disciplines.
The basic
premise of solving a Sudoku puzzle sounds simplistic. You
must place one number between 1 and 9 in each cell of each
block in each of the nine blocks that make up the entire
Sudoku grid. Sounds easy? Okay, here’s the twist. You want
to place your numbers so that every row and column and
individual 3x3 block contains the numbers 1 through 9 but
that no one number appears more
than once!
So sharpen
your pencil and start your addiction! Find out up to what
difficulty level you are able to solve. You may consider
yourself to have mastered that level when you are able to
compete that level within a short period of time. Now, can
you beat the world champion? |