awm, on 2011-May-03, 17:18, said:
This is not really a valid comparison though. First, when he says "matchpoints" he really means "pairs." His complaint is basically that in a large pairs field including a wide range of skill levels, beating up on the bad players becomes key to a good result. This is somewhat random and less a test of skill than beating up on good players.
That's fine as far as it goes, but IMP pairs are still way more random than MP pairs. Further, when you look at a top-class pairs event like the World Open Pairs or the Platinum Pairs or the Cavendish, there aren't really a lot of "bad pairs" (at least in the late stages of the event). In fact a short IMP Swiss teams event has a lot of the same problems that Hamman complains about too.
I agree that knockout teams with really long matches and a strong field are a better test of skill than any pairs event. But it's not because of IMP scoring... if anything a really long BAM KO (no such thing exists, to my knowledge) would be an even better test of skill. The Reisinger (BAM event) is known as the toughest event on the ACBL calendar; I don't think Hamman would argue that the Reisinger is substantially easier or more about "luck" than the big IMP KOs of the Spingold or Vanderbilt.
That's fine as far as it goes, but IMP pairs are still way more random than MP pairs. Further, when you look at a top-class pairs event like the World Open Pairs or the Platinum Pairs or the Cavendish, there aren't really a lot of "bad pairs" (at least in the late stages of the event). In fact a short IMP Swiss teams event has a lot of the same problems that Hamman complains about too.
I agree that knockout teams with really long matches and a strong field are a better test of skill than any pairs event. But it's not because of IMP scoring... if anything a really long BAM KO (no such thing exists, to my knowledge) would be an even better test of skill. The Reisinger (BAM event) is known as the toughest event on the ACBL calendar; I don't think Hamman would argue that the Reisinger is substantially easier or more about "luck" than the big IMP KOs of the Spingold or Vanderbilt.
I would certainly agree that in a fairly mixed ability pairs field, (which every field I've seen certainly is) the one decision which will have the most effect on your result is which table slip you pick up/where you sit down. The effect of playing a few flat boards against the best pairs in the room and some difficult boards against the LOLs, versus playing them the other way round, is huge. Moreover, a lot of the time the top or bottom you get has nothing to do with your skill; everyone in the room would get 10% if they play the difficult to find 6D against the good pair while everyone else happily scores up 3N+2.
Then you come to beating up the bad pairs, as you say; that certainly rewards skill, but can be pretty random precisely because they behave so unpredictably (assuming you're unlikely to know the foibles of all the pairs).
As to scoring systems, does anyone even play IMP pairs under a sensible scoring system like cross-imps, or is everything under something obviously flawed like Butler?
We have very little BAM in the UK (as far as I know?) so I don't know how that behaves with mixed fields.