Nakagawa has won one non-major-title championship during his career: the 11th Young Lions [ja] tournament in 1987.[4][5]
Awards and honors
Nakagawa received the JSA's "Shogi Honor Fighting-spirit Award" in December 2011 for winning 600 official games as a professional.[6][7]
JSA executive
Nakagawa has served on the Japan Shogi Association's board of directors on multiple occasions.[8] He was first elected as a director at the association's 58th General Meeting on May 25, 2007,[9] and was re-elected to the same position on May 26, 2009.[10]
In May 2011, Nakagawa was selected to be an executive director at the JSA's 62nd General Meeting,[11] but resigned his position for personal reasons in December of that same year.[12]
At the JSA's 64th General Meeting in June 2013, Nakagawa was once again selected to be a JSA executive director.[13] He was re-elected to the same position in 2015,[14] but was one of three members of the board voted out of office by the JSA membership at an emergency meeting held in February 2017 for their involvement in the 29th Ryūō challenger controversy.[15]
^"Shinriji Tantō Busho no Oshirase" 新理事担当部署のお知らせ [New JSA officers and their respective responsibilities announced] (in Japanese). Japan Shogi Association. May 28, 2007. Retrieved July 13, 2018.
^"Shinriji no Oshirase" 新理事のお知らせ [New JSA officers announced] (in Japanese). Japan Shogi Association. May 27, 2009. Retrieved July 13, 2018.