jts wrote:
Well, you are the one who suggested "recognizes when all players are equally strong" as a test of a tournament set up.
Right, the point of the test was to illustrate that when players were closely rated, a knockout tournament is a poor judge of who is the best player.
How are we arguing about the fact that Round Robin is a better test of relative strength??
But in fact (I think you now agree?), this is not something that distinguishes various tournament formats. In all cases, the only way to increase our chances of getting the strongest player in a tight field is to play more games.
But this does distinguish formats. It is pathological in both cases, but the round robin is capable of allowing ties... So obviously, if the players are closely rated, it will do a better job of establishing this.
The Knockout tournament simply lacks depth perception.
As to tapir's comment; I think you've dodged his main point, which is "If you are going to be an extremist about accuracy, why not use official lifetime AGA rating as the tool for selecting pros?"
I don't think I'm being an extremist, I'm suggesting we follow the same pro format as Japan...
Because lifetime AGA rating is a test of past performance.
EDIT:
More generally, if someone is going to become a pro, they should need to fight against all the other opponents in the qualifier. Everybody gets a chance at the pinata.
Tactics yes, Tact no...