Spingold Round of 65
#1
Posted 2010-July-27, 01:36
Or did they find a team happy not to play in the event?
#2
Posted 2010-July-27, 01:52
The interesting question was which 3 teams should be in it. 1, 64, and 65 was my first thought but I soon decided that was dumb despite the mathematical symmetry (with 65 through 128 teams entered and only heads up matches with byes, 64 would play 65 and the winner would play 1). The priority should be avoiding high seeds having to play in 3 ways. So I then thought it should be 32, 33, and 65. Just add the lowest team to the 64-team-tournament match with the least-high favorite. The actual choice of 32, 64, and 65 seems weird to me. It changed every matchup since then 1 played 63, 2 played 62, etc. But I can understand that if 32 is punished by having to be in a 3 way it's only fair both teams should be rated low, so maybe what they did was right. I guess if they had 66 teams the 3 ways would be 32-64-65 and 31-63-66 with 1-62, 2-61, etc.
#3
Posted 2010-July-27, 01:54
Our district had 17 teams for a 4 session KO in GNT B qualifications and decided to do a last round (finals) 3-way with one survive (with earlier 3-ways with 2 survive) instead which is clearly sub-optimal.
The 5K spingold played down to 24 teams today and will do 8 3-ways with 2 survive so both the 5K and full spingold will have 16 teams on Wednesday and should both finish Saturday. The 1.5K spingold played down to 16 teams today and should finish Friday.
#4
Posted 2010-July-27, 08:45
Mbodell, on Jul 27 2010, 02:54 AM, said:
Our district had 17 teams for a 4 session KO in GNT B qualifications and decided to do a last round (finals) 3-way with one survive (with earlier 3-ways with 2 survive) instead which is clearly sub-optimal.
The 5K spingold played down to 24 teams today and will do 8 3-ways with 2 survive so both the 5K and full spingold will have 16 teams on Wednesday and should both finish Saturday. The 1.5K spingold played down to 16 teams today and should finish Friday.
Not sure what happened here. The bulletin showed 27 teams but chart showed 28. So not sure if we dropped 11 or 12 teams. Anyway as the 27th seed we survived the first day. Probably my experience with pick up players helped as I met my partner, C. J. Jameson, a Stanford collegiate player, Sunday night.
the Freman, Chani from the move "Dune"
"I learned long ago, never to wrestle with a pig. You get dirty, and besides, the pig likes it."
George Bernard Shaw
#5
Posted 2010-July-27, 08:56
Mbodell, on Jul 27 2010, 02:54 AM, said:
The question becomes: would you rather be the 32 seed and face a 3-way with one survivor with the 64 and 65 seeds, or would you want to be the 31 seed and face the 33 seed in a head-to-head match?
My intuition tells me that the 32 seed would have a (much) easier path to round two. And, that seems counter to the objective of seeding.
#6
Posted 2010-July-27, 09:08
#7
Posted 2010-July-27, 09:22
TimG, on Jul 27 2010, 07:56 AM, said:
Mbodell, on Jul 27 2010, 02:54 AM, said:
The question becomes: would you rather be the 32 seed and face a 3-way with one survivor with the 64 and 65 seeds, or would you want to be the 31 seed and face the 33 seed in a head-to-head match?
My intuition tells me that the 32 seed would have a (much) easier path to round two. And, that seems counter to the objective of seeding.
Not clear to me that it's better to be 32 than 31. Even if you were known to be exactly a 65% favorite to win a match against each of the other teams in your 3-way, the probability of winning both matches as a 65-35 favorite is just 42%. I don't feel a 32 is more than 65% likely to beat a 64/65 -- the mini-Spingold takes out a lot of chaff. Adding in the greater chance of winning on IMP quotient makes it better than 42%, but it hardly seems significantly better than the roughly 50% chance you have as the 31 seed vs. the 33.
Anyway, even if there were some inequity in being 31 vs. 32, it doesn't really matter when you consider that nobody really cares about round 1 victories, but about who wins the event. 32 plays 1 and 31 plays 2 in round 2, and both are likely to lose, so it's good to put the 3-way in a place where it's unlikely to matter. I would say that a slight inequity in having a mid-seed advance to day 2 is far better than having an inequity with a top seed advancing to day 2.
#8
Posted 2010-July-27, 09:24
pooltuna, on Jul 27 2010, 07:45 AM, said:
A team was added to the 0-1500 Spingold bracket after they carelessly forgot to pre-register. So 12 were eliminated.
#9
Posted 2010-July-27, 09:38
#10
Posted 2010-July-27, 09:49
Plus in Tim's calculation I bet it's more like 60% to 65% since if every team wins 1 match then it's most likely the 32 seed had the best quotient.
I still think 32, 33, 65 is the right lineup for the 3 way.
#11
Posted 2010-July-27, 10:01
Someone wrote that the top seed shouldn't be in a 3-way, but why not? Whether they play #63 or both #64 and #65, they're a heavy favorite to win. And this gives both bottom seeds an opportunity to play a great team, although only half as long, which is probably why they entered.
Then again, they created the minis so that the champions wouldn't have to waste time playing against the hoi poloi for the first round.
#12
Posted 2010-July-27, 10:18
jdonn, on Jul 27 2010, 10:49 AM, said:
Why? That makes it ridiculously better to be 34-seed than to be 33-seed.
#13
Posted 2010-July-27, 11:22
barmar, on Jul 27 2010, 11:01 AM, said:
I doubt this was the motivation. I expect ACBL recognized that some people did not enter the Spingold because they felt like it was a losing masterpoint proposition and also recognized that these same players would enter a restricted event.
#14
Posted 2010-July-27, 11:29
cherdanno, on Jul 27 2010, 11:18 AM, said:
jdonn, on Jul 27 2010, 10:49 AM, said:
Why? That makes it ridiculously better to be 34-seed than to be 33-seed.
If Josh's guess of the 32 seed being an 85% favorite against the 65 seed is correct, what chance is there that the 65 seed will advance?
The 65 seed will win both matches 2.25% of the time. If they advance 15% of the time quotient is used, that only leaves them advancing 4.2% of the time. Taken evenly from the 32 and 33 seeds, that means each of those teams has a 47.9% chance of advancing. That doesn't seem "ridiculously" worse.
Of course if eyhung's 65% is correct, then the 33 seed has only a 40% chance of advancing. That does seem to me to qualify as a ridiculous difference.
#15
Posted 2010-July-27, 12:11
cherdanno, on Jul 27 2010, 11:18 AM, said:
jdonn, on Jul 27 2010, 10:49 AM, said:
Why? That makes it ridiculously better to be 34-seed than to be 33-seed.
Disagree, the 65 seed advancing is very slim odds so the 33 seed is not severely impacted.
Also I'm thinking if there were more teams. Say there were 70. I wouldn't want it to be 27, 69, 70, then 28, 67, 68, etc. I would want it to be 32, 33, 65, then 31, 34, 66, etc down to 27, 38, 70.
#16
Posted 2010-July-27, 14:09
So maybe something like Josh's suggestion but with slightly lower seeds, e.g. 35,36,65.
#17
Posted 2010-July-27, 14:17
nigel_k, on Jul 27 2010, 03:09 PM, said:
I don't think any solution which does not allow for each of the top 32 seeds to advance is a good one.
#18
Posted 2010-July-27, 14:22
TimG, on Jul 27 2010, 03:17 PM, said:
nigel_k, on Jul 27 2010, 03:09 PM, said:
I don't think any solution which does not allow for each of the top 32 seeds to advance is a good one.
In fairness obviously it will never be anywhere near perfect unless you eliminate the 3-way and give 63 byes in the first round.
#19
Posted 2010-July-27, 14:23
nigel_k, on Jul 27 2010, 03:09 PM, said:
So maybe something like Josh's suggestion but with slightly lower seeds, e.g. 35,36,65.
Based on your first paragraph you should want it to be 1, 64, 65 then?
#20
Posted 2010-July-28, 00:59
Also, see the very last post by rogerclee of this thread :
http://forums.bridge...topic=37625&hl=
This formula results in a ~75% chance for a team with a 0.5 IMP/bd advantage to win in a 64-board match. A 1 vs a 65 seems like a 1.0 IMP/bd advantage, but I am not certain a 32 is really 0.5 better than a 65.