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| Tags: chess, outside, pairing, swiss |
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#1
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Is anyone familiar with the use of the concept of Swiss pairing (playing
opponents having the same score) for non-chess activities? I'm wondering if there might be some who have applied the ideas to other sorts of sports leagues. I'm thinking about a soccer league. Obviously, not every team plays at the same time and location, so there would be many complications not present in a chess tournament. But it seems that it might still produce more competitive match-ups overall than more traditional scheduling methods. DK |
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#2
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David Kane wrote:
Is anyone familiar with the use of the concept of Swiss pairing (playing opponents having the same score) for non-chess activities? I'm wondering if there might be some who have applied the ideas to other sorts of sports leagues. I'm thinking about a soccer league. The problem with using a swiss system for a spectator sport is that you don't get the typical buildup of quarterfinals, semifinals, finals, etc. That lack of having the two top teams playing each other in the finals takes away a lot of the drama and interest in watching the events. That's why knockout tournaments have been the norm in spectator sports and also why so many recent attempts to make Chess more like a spectator sport have gone over to the knockout format. -- Ken Blake Please reply to the newsgroup -- Ken Blake Please reply to the newsgroup Obviously, not every team plays at the same time and location, so there would be many complications not present in a chess tournament. But it seems that it might still produce more competitive match-ups overall than more traditional scheduling methods. DK |
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#3
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"Ken Blake" wrote in message ... David Kane wrote: Is anyone familiar with the use of the concept of Swiss pairing (playing opponents having the same score) for non-chess activities? I'm wondering if there might be some who have applied the ideas to other sorts of sports leagues. I'm thinking about a soccer league. The problem with using a swiss system for a spectator sport is that you don't get the typical buildup of quarterfinals, semifinals, finals, etc. That lack of having the two top teams playing each other in the finals takes away a lot of the drama and interest in watching the events. That's why knockout tournaments have been the norm in spectator sports and also why so many recent attempts to make Chess more like a spectator sport have gone over to the knockout format. This is just youth soccer. The audience is captive. ![]() My interest is not that it will produce a winner (there are no official standings or champions at the levels I'm thinking of) but that on average it could produce closer, more competitive games throughout the season. Obviously, not every team plays at the same time and location, so there would be many complications not present in a chess tournament. But it seems that it might still produce more competitive match-ups overall than more traditional scheduling methods. DK |
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#4
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On Sat, 21 Oct 2006 17:21:17 -0700, "David Kane"
wrote: Is anyone familiar with the use of the concept of Swiss pairing (playing opponents having the same score) for non-chess activities? It is used in some contract bridge events. --- Replace you know what by j to email |
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#5
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22.10.2006 02:43, Ken Blake:
The problem with using a swiss system for a spectator sport is that you don't get the typical buildup of quarterfinals, semifinals, finals, etc. That lack of having the two top teams playing each other in the finals takes away a lot of the drama and interest in watching the events. Most national soccer leagues also don't have a knock out system but a full and plain round robin. The big disadvantage of swiss pairing is: it's way too complicated, people just can't follow why team A plays against team B, or it is difficult to make predictions: if team A wins, it will play against team B and so on. It just not transparent. That makes it extremely difficult to "sell" to spectators. But not every sport on every level is a spectator's sport. So, this wouldn't be an explanation. I think it is just tradition, why the different sports stick to their system. Greetings, Ralf |
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#6
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"David Kane" wrote in message . .. Is anyone familiar with the use of the concept of Swiss pairing (playing opponents having the same score) for non-chess activities? I'm wondering if there might be some who have applied the ideas to other sorts of sports leagues. I'm thinking about a soccer league. Obviously, not every team plays at the same time and location, so there would be many complications not present in a chess tournament. But it seems that it might still produce more competitive match-ups overall than more traditional scheduling methods. David, I think Don Shultz wrote in his book /Chess Don/ that on introducing ELO's idea to chess, a further consideration was to horse racing. Phil DK |
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#7
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"Chess One" wrote in message news:1J4%g.1291$6f4.289@trndny01... "David Kane" wrote in message . .. Is anyone familiar with the use of the concept of Swiss pairing (playing opponents having the same score) for non-chess activities? I'm wondering if there might be some who have applied the ideas to other sorts of sports leagues. I'm thinking about a soccer league. Obviously, not every team plays at the same time and location, so there would be many complications not present in a chess tournament. But it seems that it might still produce more competitive match-ups overall than more traditional scheduling methods. David, I think Don Shultz wrote in his book /Chess Don/ that on introducing ELO's idea to chess, a further consideration was to horse racing. Phil I am not talking about the Elo ratings, but about the Swiss pairing system first used in Zurich in 1895. |
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#8
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Ken Blake wrote:
That's why knockout tournaments have been the norm in spectator sports They have? All the sports I can think of either don't fit into the knockout/league model (golf, athletics, Formula 1) or have a substantial league component as well as any knockout cup (soccer, rugby, cricket). Perhaps you have forgotten that there are parts of the world outside the USA? Dave. -- David Richerby Impossible Happy Apple (TM): it's like www.chiark.greenend.org.uk/~davidr/ a tasty fruit that makes your troubles melt away but it can't exist! |
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#9
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David Kane wrote: I am not talking about the Elo ratings, but about the Swiss pairing system first used in Zurich in 1895. I have never seen the topic of 1st introduction of a system in which each player played others in their score group. The NY State Chess Association tournament of 1890 might have used a slighlty similar system. A newspaper report is given in the Brooklyn Eagle of Feb 23, 1890 (available online). 32 players entered. After the 1st round, winners were paired, and also losers. Losers of 2 games were eliminated (in case of draw, the player who had black had the right to claim the game, but could give the game to their opponent if they wanted to); thus 24 competitors were left after round 2. Unfortunately, they only give results of the 1st 2 rounds in the report, so the complete mechanism is not clear. The report in the NY Times on the same day makes it seem more like a standard knockout system, at least for 1st and 2d, though they mention that losers in the first two rounds were paired and played for minor prizes. Incidentally, an odd arrangement was made in the championship showdown between Delmar and Hanham; Hanham agreed to cede the championship to Delmar along with splitting the 1st and 2d prizes of $40 and $20. It might be an interesting project to see if there was any "Swiss" system before Zurich 95, but it isn't completely clear what qualifies as Swiss. Would a double elimination tournament with players with perfect scores always matched against each other count? Jerry Spinrad |
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