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So this happened in June at Northeast regionals, then in July at PA states and North Central regionals? I think we need to reevaluate our current system. Just saying.
I didn't see anything CHANGING the CURRENT rules that have been in effect for a few years, even with the recent discussion. Based on that, since all three DID NOT play each other, you would completely ignore head-to-head and just use Lost Soul differential. While Rob agreed that change needed to be made and suggestions were made for that change, I don't believe that any change has officially happened. Therefore, I would rank them A, C, B.
Putting all kidding aside, a top cut would resolve all disputes like this.
I think that we should turn to Christian theology to resolve this--just as we did with the ruling on whether or not demons can be redeemed.
Not just that, but to minimize these issues, all high-level tournaments should only use an odd number of rounds. In PA States (and I'm almost certain NE Regional, but I wasn't as involved with the points), we had a clear and distinct winner (or two players with clear tie-breakers) after 3 rounds. If we went to 5 rounds, we would have also had a clear and distinct winner. Having even numbers of rounds increases the number of players with the same points.
Quote from: Redoubter on July 23, 2012, 06:39:51 PMNot just that, but to minimize these issues, all high-level tournaments should only use an odd number of rounds. In PA States (and I'm almost certain NE Regional, but I wasn't as involved with the points), we had a clear and distinct winner (or two players with clear tie-breakers) after 3 rounds. If we went to 5 rounds, we would have also had a clear and distinct winner. Having even numbers of rounds increases the number of players with the same points.NE Regional had 5 rounds. Odd or even rounds has nothing to do with it.
Quote from: everytribe on July 23, 2012, 08:57:19 PMQuote from: Redoubter on July 23, 2012, 06:39:51 PMNot just that, but to minimize these issues, all high-level tournaments should only use an odd number of rounds. In PA States (and I'm almost certain NE Regional, but I wasn't as involved with the points), we had a clear and distinct winner (or two players with clear tie-breakers) after 3 rounds. If we went to 5 rounds, we would have also had a clear and distinct winner. Having even numbers of rounds increases the number of players with the same points.NE Regional had 5 rounds. Odd or even rounds has nothing to do with it.Actually, we had 6 rounds - Otherwise player C couldn't have 15 points and a loss to player B
Ah, I see.I'm not sure if Bill meant to refer to NE or NC there.NC for sure had 6 rounds though, just as an FYI.
1 - How many victory points do they have? (the more the better)2 - How many games did they play against ranked players (top 3 including ties)? (the more the better)3 - What was their winning % in those games? (the more the better)4 - What was their LS differential? (the more the better)
Using my proposed new method of ranking makes this easy Quote1 - How many victory points do they have? (the more the better)2 - How many games did they play against ranked players (top 3 including ties)? (the more the better)3 - What was their winning % in those games? (the more the better)4 - What was their LS differential? (the more the better)1 - Victory Points - They are all tied at 15, move on to the next question.2 - Strength of Schedule - B played 2 top players, A and C only played 1. B is in 1st place.3 - Success at the Top - A is 100% against top players. C is 0% against top players.4 - LS Differential - not necessary.Rankings = B, A, CThe big problem with this is that A beat B head-to-head. However what isn't shown in the info given in the original post is that A must have lost to a lower ranked player to be tied in VPs with the others. I would argue that losing to a lower player is worse than losing to a top player, and therefore B actually had a better tournament overall. Therefore I think the ranking system above still works.Of course this is still in the proposal stage. So comments are welcome
I think we all agree that regardless of how 2nd and 3rd flesh out, player A takes first.He beat player B head to head and differential, and player C on LS differential. At that point since first is locked in, you look only at players B and C for 2nd and 3rd. So the fact that player C never played player A doesn't matter, and player B wins via head to head.That's the way I feel about it.That being said, I'm not 100% sure that's how its currently being ruled, or if that will be the way that it is ruled in the future.
Player A has to be declared the winner. A has the most lost souls and beat B head to head.
I like this the best. Now I get 1st.
Quote from: everytribe on July 24, 2012, 01:15:48 PMPlayer A has to be declared the winner. A has the most lost souls and beat B head to head.I understand that argument. But it isn't surprising that A has the most LSs considering that he only played 1 game against the top players. Player B played more games against top opponents and has a higher quality loss than A. I think there can be a good case that Player B had the better tournament. Can you see my side of things as well?