gordontd, on 2015-February-12, 02:57, said:
You would use them in order to avoid a long mis-match having a disproportionate effect on the overall result. As such we typically use them in event with seven or more 7- or 8-board matches.
This is done by using the tables constructed for that purposes, whose aim is to make each award equally likely and so the range in match-points increases slightly the further away you get from average. Our tables are in section 3.1.7 of the
White Book.
Thanks. Very informative.
I guess I simply don't understand why one would want to play a MP pairs tournament (in a large field) with few long rounds. We are talking about tournaments with, say, 50 tables, where you play something like 6 rounds of 8 boards in a day of bridge.
So all the conditions for running a fair, balanced tournament are present. Then one chooses not to run a fair, balanced tournament. Since this is not fair one tries to fix the not fair, unbalanced tournament, in a complex and vague manner, to make it marginally fairer. Now, it is still unfair, but also complex and vague. I can't imagine why one would do that, unless I am missing a boundary condition somewhere.
One example of such a boundary condition is in a "pub drive". These are fun bridge events where each round is played in a different pub and you walk from pub to pub between rounds. Obviously, 16 rounds of 2 boards would not be realistic (they would lead to blistered feet and/or liver cirrhosis
) so you typically play 7-8 rounds of 4. This means that the rounds can be somewhat unbalanced, and, together with the very mixed field, this means that these "pub drives" are somewhat of a lottery when it comes to determining the winner. But they compensate that by a great atmosphere, good food and drinks, walks through a town that one might not know and fun conversations with opponents and friends. Winning the event, or scoring masterpoints, is of very little importance.
I think the two should be kept separate:
- There are serious bridge events. They are competitive, well balanced, fair competitions and the best pair wins, taking fame, glory, the money and the masterpoints.
- There are less than serious bridge events. They are social and fun, and bridge is merely a tool to get people to meet. Whoever wins is not important, and, hence, should not/hardly be rewarded.
Both are valuable, but trying to make a hybrid of the two and apply a range of "fixes" seems ugly to me.
Rik
Edit: I took a long time to post this, so I hadn't seen Gordon's explanation that this is "historical", which explains a lot. Perhaps even more in the UK, where history and tradition are valued more than elsewhere.
I want my opponents to leave my table with a smile on their face and without matchpoints on their score card - in that order.
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