[tournament-org] WhereIsTheBar
Neil Sandford
neil.sandford at neilsandford.co.uk
Tue Oct 2 13:10:07 BST 2018
What this means is that there are actually two competitions being fought at the same time. One will be won (almost certainly) by the 5D. The other is for recognition of the highest placed person who was not entered into the above-bar competition. If you have a large number of equally ranked strong-ish (say 2D-1K) entrants, some will not be able to play their stronger peers unless there are exactly (rounds + 1) players above the bar - four in a typical one-day comp, seven for a weekend. Can the split be done by GoR?
Neil
From: TobyManning via tournament-org <tournament-org at lists.britgo.org>
Sent: 02 October 2018 12:12
To: tournament-org at lists.britgo.org
Subject: Re: [tournament-org] WhereIsTheBar
Neil:
The purpose of the "bar" is predicated on the premise that the strongest players would prefer to play even games not handicap games, even if their proability of winning was less than 50%.
Once you accept this hypothesis (which has been well tested), the bar follows almost automatically.
In Geoff's example, if the bar is at 5 dan (but all games at the top are to be even) then the 5 dan will win the tournament even if he (she) loses all 3 games.
To (mis)quote the Organiser's Handbook, without the bar the strongest players get an unreasonable (and uneccessary) advantage.
In a tournament with a more normal entry at the top, say 2d/2d/1d/1d/1d/1k/1k/1k, with the bar at 1 kyu gives all 8 people an equal chance of winning the tournament - all they have to do is to win 3 games. If there was no bar then it would be practically impossible for a 1 kyu to win the tournament, and the 1 dans would be at a disadvantage compared with the 2 dans despite having to play them.
Toby
On 02/10/2018 11:51, Neil Sandford via tournament-org wrote:
The bar has always mystified me. Why should the strongest player(s) be given a less challenging draw than the rest of the field? And why the next-to-strongest be penalised by not being given a handicap when playing another (stronger) player from above the bar?
The purpose of the bar and the mechanism of handicap are two separate discussions. Perhaps we can learn from the golf approach to handicapping?
Players are given an initial handicap (ranking) from assessment based on performance in three games. They can only play in a competition without a handicap by playing off zero (i.e. by being given the same rating as the strongest player in the competition - in Geoff’s case, 5D).
Given that that is unlikely to be very pleasant for either player, there is a provision for assessing three results from games at your own club _before_ the tournament. This is most frequently done through a discussion like “You are playing to 8kyu at the club but getting stronger. I suggest you enter as 7kyu”.
Then there is also https://senseis.xmp.net/?RankWorldwideComparison
This attempts to normalise the various rating systems, including the main online servers. I used it in an inter-club competition on Saturday and was at best apprehensive. An AGA 1D was entered at 3kyu, for example. At the end of the day, everyone agreed that the match had been very close (8 games, typically within 10 points). The AGA 1D won both his games. But someone who regularly plays club games at his EGD rating (6kyu) lost both games. Geoff processed the results and only came up with one recommendation (for an unrated player entered as 4kyu):
Beats NG(10.2k -5st) loses RP(5.8k - 2st) So 4k OK but 5k probably more realistic.
Neil
From: Gerry Gavigan via tournament-org <mailto:tournament-org at lists.britgo.org> <tournament-org at lists.britgo.org>
Sent: 01 October 2018 16:35
To: ptm at tobymanning.co.uk <mailto:ptm at tobymanning.co.uk>
Cc: TobyManning via tournament-org <mailto:tournament-org at lists.britgo.org> <tournament-org at lists.britgo.org>
Subject: Re: [tournament-org] WhereIsTheBar
That's an extreme interpretation of my comment. I'm not sure why you are inferring "no bar ever"
In this example, as with Cork, there is a sparse entry.
With no handicap the 5 dan will be shooting fish in a barrel and everyone else will be a fish.
My understanding of the McMahon system is that it is designed to give evenly ranked games where possible. In a sparse entry that is not possible and to play without handicaps seems to negate the rating system.
One lemma and two asides
The lemma: if I cannot choose to enter at a grade above my current strength there seems to be a conjugate that I should not be required to play above my current strength (implicit in having a bar in a sparse tournament)
Aside 1: At the EGC I was badly sandbagged by a Chinese player entering his first European tournament way below his actual strength (as he confessed to me after) It's no fun and if one took a simplistic calculation of total cost of attendance divided by number of games inmai tournament, expensive too.
On 01 October 2018 at 15:57 ptm at tobymanning.co.uk <mailto:ptm at tobymanning.co.uk> wrote:
Gerry:
Are you seriously saying there should NEVER be a bar, or are you saying that in this extreme case, the bar should be at 5 dan?
Toby
On 2018-10-01 14:40, Gerry Gavigan wrote:
As set it sounds to me, on behalf of all of those several stones weaker than the 5 dan, that there should not be a bar
By any measure the 5 dan has already won.
As a 1 kyu (I wish) without a handicap I am going to have a rubbish time.
The purity of some tournament protocol should be secondary
If the tournament police are going to insist on a bar the TD should consider bribing the 5 dan not to enter for the greater good and encouraging the potential lambs-to-the-slaughter to turn up next year.
On 01 October 2018 at 12:20 TobyManning via tournament-org < tournament-org at lists.britgo.org <mailto:tournament-org at lists.britgo.org> > wrote:
I set it at 1 kyu, but if an organiser set it at 2kyu I would not complain.
Setting it at 3 kyu would be wrong.
Toby
On 01/10/2018 11:45, Geoff Kaniuk via tournament-org wrote:
You have just registered your last player who happens to be 1d and
people are waiting impatiently, wanting to get on with your 3 round
McMahon tournament.
You are now faced with with the problem of where to set the the bar.
Suppose in this tournament the top players are:
5d 1d 1d 1k 1k 2k 2k 3k 3k 4k 4k 5k .....
Assuming all players enter at a realistic grade, where would you set
the bar?
It would be interesting to see your instinctive answer, rather than
consulting the Tournament Organiser's Handbook.
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