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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?
Player A has to be declared the winner. A has the most lost souls and beat B head to head.
I might be able to see your side of things as well if players A,B,C were the only top players in the tournament. Their were at least 8 players that could have won the tournament. If your only loss comes from a Maly, Alstad, Earley, Brinkman or Wester you did loss to a top player. Player A played more than one game against the top players because of the way Swiss style works, especially when you play one more than the required rounds.
Imagine a tournament where you have 5 players tied for the lead at the end:A - went 1-0 against the other 4B - went 3-1 against the other 4C - went 2-2 against the other 4D - went 1-3 against the other 4E - went 0-1 against the other 4Who deserves to win? Sure A has a higher win % against top opponents, but they only played 1 game against those others. Player B won 3 games against the other people placing. I think everyone would agree that Player B had the best tournament. The only way I see of making this work is the proposal that I've posted on this and a couple other threads.
If they all had equal points then tht means the other players lost to people outside of top 5 players
That would require all your top players to have lost 2 games an that doesn't even happen at Nats the tournament would have to be huge.
Quote from: Prof Underwood on July 24, 2012, 03:00:24 PMImagine a tournament where you have 5 players tied for the lead at the end:A - went 1-0 against the other 4B - went 3-1 against the other 4Who deserves to win? Sure A has a higher win % against top opponents, but they only played 1 game against those others. Player B won 3 games against the other people placing. I think everyone would agree that Player B had the best tournament.But what if B was 1-1?
Imagine a tournament where you have 5 players tied for the lead at the end:A - went 1-0 against the other 4B - went 3-1 against the other 4Who deserves to win? Sure A has a higher win % against top opponents, but they only played 1 game against those others. Player B won 3 games against the other people placing. I think everyone would agree that Player B had the best tournament.
Or what if A was 1-0 and B was 2-0, but A never got a chance to play the second person B beat because it was randomly chosen in the final round that A would play F (someone who didn't get in the top 5) and B would play E?
There is no system that will be perfect, so I think the best solution is the simplest solution:
So when are we going to implement a top cut in Redemption?
Quote from: EmJayBee83 on July 24, 2012, 07:16:45 PMSo when are we going to implement a top cut in Redemption?What is "top cut?" You keep using that phrase. I do not think it means what you think it means.
If the BCS can relent, so can we. Implement a 4-player playoff.
I can tell you why: Redemption is not about winning or losing like other card games. Yes, that is one factor that comes up in any competitive situation. However, the purpose behind Redemption is to foster fun and fellowship.
This is the reason that top-cut hasn't been implemented, I'm sure, as well as why we don't just use elimination-style tournaments.
From my understanding (from this thread), the majority of the players would only play for 3/4 of the tournament, rather than everyone being able to play every game.
Using the idea of the others still playing and just not included in the possibility for placing could continue to foster fun and fellowship, but I'm guessing that one bad game would be more likely to exclude a person from the top-cut than it would be to exclude them from placing in the current way of playing. If I'm wrong, feel free to explain.
For example, the tournament that was already brought up where Gabe won after losing his first two games - would he have been in the top-cut?
Matt, that's a really good idea! Since having a tie is allowed and happens sometimes anyway, perhaps we should just leave it at that since it would stop all the arguments for the different systems.
It's a game. It's meant to have a winner and a loser. Ties are like kissing your sister...
Or really do the Christ like thing and let the person who does care beat you.