60460 Kimura won the championship in the end and became the first Meijin to reign under the tournament system.
60461 Kimura continued to demonstrate unmatchable prowess and became a hero of the times, joining the ranks of yokozuna Futabayama.
60462 Following a suggestion by Meijin Kimura after the war, a tournament system was introduced to rank all shogi players in the nation except the Meijin, with the top player competing against the Meijin once a year.
60463 The first challenger for the title of Meijin after the war was a man called Masao Tsukada, who beat Kimura-once thought of as invincible-to capture the title of Meijin.
60464 The new wave after the war included prodigies of Kinjiro Kimi, including Kozo Masuda and Yasuharu Oyama, who battled against each other in 1948 for the right to challenge for the Meijin title in a three-game match on Mount Koya in Wakayama prefecture.
60465 Masuda was favored to win, yet fell to Oyama, who advanced on the way to the Meijin title but was cut short by Tsukada.
60466 Kimura, aroused by the up-and-coming players nipping at his heels, fought his way to a rematch with Tsukada the following year in 1949 and reclaimed the title in the last game at the Saineikan Hall of the Imperial Palace.
60467 Beginning with the ninth competition, the Asahi Shimbun replaced the Mainichi Daily News as the sponsor of the Meijin tournament.
60468 Kimura defeated both Oyama and Masuda to hold a total of eight career titles, but at the 11th tournament in 1952, he was finally beaten by Oyama and never again recaptured the Meijin title, retiring with the words, "I have a good successor."
60469 After Kimura's retirement, he was recommended to become the 14th lifetime Meijin.
60470 Oyama defeated Masuda and his fellow Kimi apprentices one after the other to successfully capture five consecutive titles and become a lifetime Meijin, but the sixth time around he battled Masuda three times and ended up relinquishing the title of Meijin.
60471 Masuda was a king of a game, who attained the ninth level and was the first to hold three different titles.
60472 In 1959, Oyama made a comeback and reclaimed the Meijin title by successively repulsing Masuda and the powerful newcomers, Tatsuya Futakami, Hifumi Kato, Michiyoshi Yamada, and fellow Kimi prodigies such as Michio Ariyoshi to hold 13 consecutive Meijin titles, 18 in all with the addition of his earlier titles.
60473 The rising sun, Makoto Nakahara, was the one to break Oyama's stronghold.
60474 Nakahara fearlessly competed against Oyama and captured the Meijin title at the young age of 24.