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By having the perfect number of rounds to determine a winner, you don't give anyone a chance to take first place except for the undefeated. This is true of elimination tournaments as well, the only first place possibility is the undefeated. By playing extra rounds you allow more people to have a shot at first place, people that lost or tied a game somewhere along the way.
At smaller tournaments, its nice when you get to play all the players in a category.
...why is it preferred to have more rounds...
Quote from: robm on June 29, 2009, 08:36:36 PMAt smaller tournaments, its nice when you get to play all the players in a category.You want seven rounds of a category in an 8-player tournament?
Mainly because people came to the tournament to play Redemption. The more rounds, the more they get to play.
I also like having an extra round where someone gets to try to knock off the undefeated person in 1st.
Quote from: DaClock on June 29, 2009, 08:29:59 PMBy having the perfect number of rounds to determine a winner, you don't give anyone a chance to take first place except for the undefeated.This actually is not statistically true.
By having the perfect number of rounds to determine a winner, you don't give anyone a chance to take first place except for the undefeated.
However, Swiss style pits the best player and the 2nd best player against each other in the second round. The 2nd best player looses and then, without the additional swiss round, doesn't have a chance to place. I have strongly felt all along that swiss style is not complete and does not demonstrate 2nd place-3rd place accurately unless additional rounds are played.
It actually is statistically true when the number of players is a power of 2 or one less than that. At that point if you lose one game you are out of contention for first (barring multiple time out wins by the undefeated player).
Only at Nationals. Every other tournament I've been to, District and up, has had an undefeated winner. And I don't think Natz is the tournament in question here.I know mine is only one example, but just to throw that in there.
Quote from: EmJayBee83It actually is statistically true when the number of players is a power of 2 or one less than that. At that point if you lose one game you are out of contention for first (barring multiple time out wins by the undefeated player).I don't see how this proves that only an undefeated player can win a category.
You seem to fall into the same trap as everybody else, assuming that one (in the interest of completeness - and only one) person will always be undefeated.
Seriously, has no one here ever attended a tournament that has ever had a winner that did not go undefeated? Ever?
Stephen, set up a four player two-round tournament (or an eight player three-round tournament or...) and use Swiss pairings. Show me how a player with one or more losses can possibly win the tournament (barring multiple time out wins by the undefeated player).
This happens all the time when you play more than the minimum number of rounds, or when you are just slightly over the threshold for the next round bump (say 9 players forcing four rounds).