bluejak, on 2012-February-11, 17:00, said:
I think this is a very unfair presumption. The reason that I polled them is that I realised that two teams-of-four would make the game what some people seem to call 'logical', ie more in line with playing teams-of-four, and because the scoring of the event [which was done by hand in those days] would be far simpler. Since I was the organiser [at the time] and the TD, it did not matter one brass farthing to me personally which way they decided really, and I would not let it affect me if it did.
Since no-one polled wanted a change I fail to see how you can presume the poll was because someone did.
There is nothing unfair about my presumption. For starters, I was very clear that this was merely an indication.
If you "realised" that two teams of four would make the game more logical, you missed an important point of this discussion: It is complicated to come up with a single result when you split it in two teams of four matches. After all, you can match up:
- Table 1 and 2 in match 1 and table 3 and 4 in match 2
- Table 1 and 3 in match 1 and table 2 and 4 in match 2
- Table 1 and 4 in match 1 and table 2 and 3 in match 2
Each of these match-ups will lead to different results.
So there are two things you can do:
- Split up the team of 8 into two teams of 4 people. The consequence is that people won't play in a team of 8 anymore, but in a team of 4 whose result depends on that of another team of 4. That is principally different from team of 8.
- Calculate the results for the three different match-ups separately and add (or average) them. Now you have true teams of 8, with each pair in a team depending equally on each other pair. The only thing is that this is a lot harder to calculate than the method that uses an adjusted IMP scale.
And, as I explained earlier, it is pretty obvious that no one wanted to change if the only change that they can chose for is changing things for the worse.
bluejak, on 2012-February-11, 17:00, said:
Now I think that Butler has a lot to recommend it. At lower levels especially I think it is a better scoring method. Why? Because I think it better for the customers being more comprehensible to poor players.
Can you tell me why "first averaging results and then IMP" (Butler) is easier to comprehend than "first IMPing and than average results" (Cross-IMPs)? I would think the second is much easier to explain, since it is the correct order of doing things in every aspect of life: you average at the end, not at the beginning.
I think it is very hard to explain to poor players (and to good players) why the EW pairs on board 1 on average got an IMP more than the NS players (just to name only one oddity of Butler). What do you say when they come to you and tell that there must be a scoring error?
Rik
I want my opponents to leave my table with a smile on their face and without matchpoints on their score card - in that order.
The most exciting phrase to hear in science, the one that heralds the new discoveries, is not “Eureka!” (I found it!), but “That’s funny…” – Isaac Asimov
The only reason God did not put "Thou shalt mind thine own business" in the Ten Commandments was that He thought that it was too obvious to need stating. - Kenberg