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Can anyone think of an example where the winning % between the tied players would NOT work?
The Swiss system is set up so that players have games against people who having a similar amount of success in the tournament. So if a player doesn't play any of the other top 5 people in a tournament, then that player must have done more poorly all tournament long until the last game, and therefore was never close enough to the top to play any of those players.
Since I brought it up already in this thread and am not sure about what should have been done, here is what happened at Midwest Regionals last month for type 1 2-player:First and Second place were obvious from game points.For Third place:- Player A had 12 points, -1 LS differential, and won against Player C- Player B had 12 points, 0 LS differential, and didn't play Player A or C- Player C had 12 points, +2 LS differential, and lost against Player AAccording to my understanding of the rules at the time that were explained by John (that head-to-head only counted if everyone had played head-to-head), I awarded Third place to Player C, who had the highest LS differential.Based on the REG quote that has been provided, should I have ranked Player C lower since he lost against one of the tied players, and given Third place to Player B? Or should I have given Third place to Player A for being the only player to have beaten one of the other tied players?If Player C should not be in Third place under the current system, what should I do to correct this situation?Thank you for any guidance!Ken
T2-2P from Nationals 2002. Bryon Hake went undefeated (5-0) and got 1st. But he didn't play against the 2nd or 3rd place winners, and only played 1 game against players that finished in the top 7.
Six way tie. Player A only played Player E and won. Player B beat players C, D, and E. Player B lost to player F. Player F lost to players C and D. Player C beat player D.
Quote from: EmJayBee83 on June 25, 2012, 12:34:08 AMOn a side note, I once lost a tournament (took second) without losing a single game, solely because I received a first round bye with the resulting LS differential of zero.Again, I don't see how this is possible unless you are leaving out the information that you also did NOT win all your games.
On a side note, I once lost a tournament (took second) without losing a single game, solely because I received a first round bye with the resulting LS differential of zero.
Again, I don't see how this [my example--mjb] happens.
Yes, but have you played in 'a LOT' of big tournaments?
my last game ended in a timeout tie with the person who ended up taking first.
My concern is that your proposed "strength of schedule" weights early round losses more heavily than later round losses.
A much more common occurence is going to be ...Three players tied with two of them having played each other and one having played neither...it strikes me as more than a little unfair to start by eliminating from consideration the player who didn't play the others.
Quote from: SirNobody on June 25, 2012, 05:19:02 PMT2-2P from Nationals 2002. Bryon Hake went undefeated (5-0) and got 1st. But he didn't play against the 2nd or 3rd place winners, and only played 1 game against players that finished in the top 7.Again, how can this possibly happen.
Quote from: SirNobody on June 25, 2012, 04:40:06 PMSix way tie. Player A only played Player E and won. Player B beat players C, D, and E. Player B lost to player F. Player F lost to players C and D. Player C beat player D.Again, I don't see how this scenario can even happen. How can you have 6 players who all do well enough to finish at the top of a tournament, and yet Player A only played 1 game against ANY of the others to get there.
Quote from: Red Dragon Thorn on June 25, 2012, 09:06:42 PMYes, but have you played in 'a LOT' of big tournaments?I guess that depends on how you define "a LOT", but by the end of this summer I'll have played in 4 Nats, close to 10 Regionals, and around 15 States.
How many of those tournaments had single events that went 6+ rounds and included 30+ people?
Quote from: EmJayBee83 on June 26, 2012, 12:11:04 AMMy concern is that your proposed "strength of schedule" weights early round losses more heavily than later round losses.I don't think so.
If the PtB are really going to try and come up with a new tie-breaking system, I hope that they go back and test it against real tournament results and see if they pass the smell test.
Since our intuition fails us...This is, however, only based on my intuition