Hi all,
I never made a tourney on BBO and I'm thinking about possibilities of organizing Serbian national championships online.
One of our main events in a year is a tournament where (up to) 16 pairs play long IMP matches (say 14 boards) in a round-robin.
Would it be possible to make a tournament where a pair would play only against single pair in one long round?
Cheers,
Veljko
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would it be possible? a tournament with N boards against one pair only
#2
Posted 2020-August-04, 09:49
Sambolino, on 2020-August-03, 18:52, said:
Hi all,
I never made a tourney on BBO and I'm thinking about possibilities of organizing Serbian national championships online.
One of our main events in a year is a tournament where (up to) 16 pairs play long IMP matches (say 14 boards) in a round-robin.
Would it be possible to make a tournament where a pair would play only against single pair in one long round?
Cheers,
Veljko
I never made a tourney on BBO and I'm thinking about possibilities of organizing Serbian national championships online.
One of our main events in a year is a tournament where (up to) 16 pairs play long IMP matches (say 14 boards) in a round-robin.
Would it be possible to make a tournament where a pair would play only against single pair in one long round?
Cheers,
Veljko
I think it is possible to create a tournament with just 1 round in theory but you can't choose who plays who so it wouldn't work for setting up a round-robin. Most championships of this sort are arranged with multiple team matches (the IMP score that appears is irrelevant, they are then extracted to your normal scoring program and X-IMPs calculated separately).
#3
Posted 2020-August-06, 15:15
m00036, on 2020-August-04, 09:49, said:
I think it is possible to create a tournament with just 1 round in theory but you can't choose who plays who so it wouldn't work for setting up a round-robin. Most championships of this sort are arranged with multiple team matches (the IMP score that appears is irrelevant, they are then extracted to your normal scoring program and X-IMPs calculated separately).
Thanks, that's a very sensible way to do it.
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