A tad too much McMahon?
-
Elom
- Lives in sente
- Posts: 827
- Joined: Mon Aug 11, 2014 1:18 am
- Rank: OGS 9kyu
- GD Posts: 0
- Universal go server handle: WindnWater, Elom
- Location: UK
- Has thanked: 568 times
- Been thanked: 84 times
A tad too much McMahon?
Wheb it comes to Go tournament systems in the UK, it doesn't get much better than the McMahon. Am ideal way to get even games while the bar, a crucial component, Still makes things fair. However, could we be using the McMahon execcively, and losing out because of that?
I will try to make this brief since my pandanet match is coming up, so:
1: Many people improve faster when given the chance to play strong opponents in serious games.
2: It puts too much emphasis on rank. The rank you put when entering a tournament for the first time suddenly becomes very important, and if you're a quickly improving kyu player? Man...
3: Ironically, too much McMahon causes the rating system to go hey-wild, especially when there are many handicap games.
I'll put this here for now and follow up later. But one idea: is it possible to implement layered-McMahon? One Mcmahon point for every three Kyu ranks, making a fairer tournament while simultaneously giving evenly-matched games.
I will try to make this brief since my pandanet match is coming up, so:
1: Many people improve faster when given the chance to play strong opponents in serious games.
2: It puts too much emphasis on rank. The rank you put when entering a tournament for the first time suddenly becomes very important, and if you're a quickly improving kyu player? Man...
3: Ironically, too much McMahon causes the rating system to go hey-wild, especially when there are many handicap games.
I'll put this here for now and follow up later. But one idea: is it possible to implement layered-McMahon? One Mcmahon point for every three Kyu ranks, making a fairer tournament while simultaneously giving evenly-matched games.
On Go proverbs:
"A fine Gotation is a diamond in the hand of a dan of wit and a pebble in the hand of a kyu" —Joseph Raux misquoted.
"A fine Gotation is a diamond in the hand of a dan of wit and a pebble in the hand of a kyu" —Joseph Raux misquoted.
- RBerenguel
- Gosei
- Posts: 1585
- Joined: Fri Nov 18, 2011 11:44 am
- Rank: KGS 5k
- GD Posts: 0
- KGS: RBerenguel
- Tygem: rberenguel
- Wbaduk: JohnKeats
- Kaya handle: RBerenguel
- Online playing schedule: KGS on Saturday I use to be online, but I can be if needed from 20-23 GMT+1
- Location: Barcelona, Spain (GMT+1)
- Has thanked: 576 times
- Been thanked: 298 times
- Contact:
Re: A tad too much McMahon?
Huh? Don't get it. In a MacMahon tournament, you win and move up, playing against stronger opposition. It's one of the best organisational methods for that.
Geek of all trades, master of none: the motto for my blog mostlymaths.net
-
Elom
- Lives in sente
- Posts: 827
- Joined: Mon Aug 11, 2014 1:18 am
- Rank: OGS 9kyu
- GD Posts: 0
- Universal go server handle: WindnWater, Elom
- Location: UK
- Has thanked: 568 times
- Been thanked: 84 times
Re: A tad too much McMahon?
RBerenguel wrote:Huh? Don't get it. In a MacMahon tournament, you win and move up, playing against stronger opposition. It's one of the best organisational methods for that.
In a 3-round McMahon, the strongest opponent a 10 kyu might gey to play is a 7kyu. In a triple-layered McMahon, that number becomes 1 kyu. In any case, winning one game lets a 10kyu play a 9-7 kyu opponent.
On Go proverbs:
"A fine Gotation is a diamond in the hand of a dan of wit and a pebble in the hand of a kyu" —Joseph Raux misquoted.
"A fine Gotation is a diamond in the hand of a dan of wit and a pebble in the hand of a kyu" —Joseph Raux misquoted.
- RBerenguel
- Gosei
- Posts: 1585
- Joined: Fri Nov 18, 2011 11:44 am
- Rank: KGS 5k
- GD Posts: 0
- KGS: RBerenguel
- Tygem: rberenguel
- Wbaduk: JohnKeats
- Kaya handle: RBerenguel
- Online playing schedule: KGS on Saturday I use to be online, but I can be if needed from 20-23 GMT+1
- Location: Barcelona, Spain (GMT+1)
- Has thanked: 576 times
- Been thanked: 298 times
- Contact:
Re: A tad too much McMahon?
Elom wrote:RBerenguel wrote:Huh? Don't get it. In a MacMahon tournament, you win and move up, playing against stronger opposition. It's one of the best organisational methods for that.
In a 3-round McMahon, the strongest opponent a 10 kyu might gey to play is a 7kyu. In a triple-layered McMahon, that number becomes 1 kyu. In any case, winning one game lets a 10kyu play a 9-7 kyu opponent.
I have played some chess, and I wouldn't change MacMahon for Swiss. Playing your first game against a first seed is pretty demoralising
Geek of all trades, master of none: the motto for my blog mostlymaths.net
-
Elom
- Lives in sente
- Posts: 827
- Joined: Mon Aug 11, 2014 1:18 am
- Rank: OGS 9kyu
- GD Posts: 0
- Universal go server handle: WindnWater, Elom
- Location: UK
- Has thanked: 568 times
- Been thanked: 84 times
Re: A tad too much McMahon?
On Go proverbs:
"A fine Gotation is a diamond in the hand of a dan of wit and a pebble in the hand of a kyu" —Joseph Raux misquoted.
"A fine Gotation is a diamond in the hand of a dan of wit and a pebble in the hand of a kyu" —Joseph Raux misquoted.
-
Uberdude
- Judan
- Posts: 6727
- Joined: Thu Nov 24, 2011 11:35 am
- Rank: UK 4 dan
- GD Posts: 0
- KGS: Uberdude 4d
- OGS: Uberdude 7d
- Location: Cambridge, UK
- Has thanked: 436 times
- Been thanked: 3718 times
Re: A tad too much McMahon?
Elom wrote: The rank you put when entering a tournament for the first time suddenly becomes very important, and if you're a quickly improving kyu player? Man...
You can reset your rank if you improve quickly. I reset from 10k to 8k, 8k to 5k, 5k to 3k, and 1k to 2d.
Elom wrote:1: Many people improve faster when given the chance to play strong opponents in serious games.
Yes, but under your proposal when the weaker player plays someone 3 rather than 1 stone above them (or 6 rather than 2) then your opponent is playing someone 3 stones rather than 1 stone weaker so they don't improve so fast and could get bored beating you up. Swings and roundabouts.
Elom wrote:3: Ironically, too much McMahon causes the rating system to go hey-wild, especially when there are many handicap games.
[citation needed]
Elom wrote:But one idea: is it possible to implement layered-McMahon? One Mcmahon point for every three Kyu ranks, making a fairer tournament while simultaneously giving evenly-matched games.
Evenly-matched? If a 10k who wins plays a 7k who lost rather than a 9k who lost then that game is less evenly matched and there will be fewer close games. Fairer? How so? Do you think lots of people who enter at 10k are really 3k? My experience of UK tournaments (and I've been to dozens) is that whilst there are occasionally new players with wrong entry grades, they and the organisers usually do a pretty good job of picking a sensible initial rating, and most people are solidly graded players anyway.
-
Mef
- Lives in sente
- Posts: 852
- Joined: Fri Apr 23, 2010 8:34 am
- Rank: KGS [-]
- GD Posts: 428
- Location: Central Coast
- Has thanked: 201 times
- Been thanked: 333 times
Re: A tad too much McMahon?
Elom wrote:3: Ironically, too much McMahon causes the rating system to go hey-wild, especially when there are many handicap games.
As an aside, if the ultimate goal of your rating system is to properly handicap games, then ideally a majority of your games would be handicap games.
-
Krama
- Lives in gote
- Posts: 436
- Joined: Mon Jan 06, 2014 3:46 am
- Rank: KGS 5 kyu
- GD Posts: 0
- Has thanked: 1 time
- Been thanked: 38 times
Re: A tad too much McMahon?
Sadly I don't have too much to say for McMahon.
I remember playing club tournaments with 3 rounds and winning all 3 games only to turn out in the 3rd or 4th place in the tournament.
Realistically speaking in big tournaments like Euro go congress where you have 400+ players with 5 rounds if you are a 10 kyu who plays on high dan level you can win all 5 games only to end up on 10th place or something.
I remember playing club tournaments with 3 rounds and winning all 3 games only to turn out in the 3rd or 4th place in the tournament.
Realistically speaking in big tournaments like Euro go congress where you have 400+ players with 5 rounds if you are a 10 kyu who plays on high dan level you can win all 5 games only to end up on 10th place or something.
-
jeromie
- Lives in sente
- Posts: 902
- Joined: Fri Jan 31, 2014 7:12 pm
- Rank: AGA 3k
- GD Posts: 0
- Universal go server handle: jeromie
- Location: Fort Collins, CO
- Has thanked: 319 times
- Been thanked: 287 times
Re: A tad too much McMahon?
That seems fine to me. Otherwise people would have too much incentive to under report their rank.Krama wrote:Sadly I don't have too much to say for McMahon.
I remember playing club tournaments with 3 rounds and winning all 3 games only to turn out in the 3rd or 4th place in the tournament.
Realistically speaking in big tournaments like Euro go congress where you have 400+ players with 5 rounds if you are a 10 kyu who plays on high dan level you can win all 5 games only to end up on 10th place or something.
-
Uberdude
- Judan
- Posts: 6727
- Joined: Thu Nov 24, 2011 11:35 am
- Rank: UK 4 dan
- GD Posts: 0
- KGS: Uberdude 4d
- OGS: Uberdude 7d
- Location: Cambridge, UK
- Has thanked: 436 times
- Been thanked: 3718 times
Re: A tad too much McMahon?
I think McMahon is a pretty darned good system for Go tournaments. But you can get the unfortunate situation though in which a player just below the bar wins all their games, including against the winner of the tournament: http://www.europeangodatabase.eu/EGD/To ... n=10225083. So there Matt Crosby 2d (bar at 3d) beat Christian Scarff 2d (1 win), Chang Li 4d (dubious rank, 0 wins) and finally Alex Selby 4d (2 wins), whilst Alex beat Paul Christie 3d (1 win), then Alastair Wall 4d (1 win), then lost to Matt. So Alex did have slightly harder first 2 games, but not much, so it does seem rather harsh on Matt to not be able to win the tournament by beating the winner in his final game!
- HermanHiddema
- Gosei
- Posts: 2011
- Joined: Tue Apr 20, 2010 10:08 am
- Rank: Dutch 4D
- GD Posts: 645
- Universal go server handle: herminator
- Location: Groningen, NL
- Has thanked: 202 times
- Been thanked: 1086 times
Re: A tad too much McMahon?
There's actually two players there from the second group that won all their games. There's no fair way of saying whether Alan Thornton should be above or below Matt Crosby.Uberdude wrote:I think McMahon is a pretty darned good system for Go tournaments. But you can get the unfortunate situation though in which a player just below the bar wins all their games, including against the winner of the tournament: http://www.europeangodatabase.eu/EGD/To ... n=10225083. So there Matt Crosby 2d (bar at 3d) beat Christian Scarff 2d (1 win), Chang Li 4d (dubious rank, 0 wins) and finally Alex Selby 4d (2 wins), whilst Alex beat Paul Christie 3d (1 win), then Alastair Wall 4d (1 win), then lost to Matt. So Alex did have slightly harder first 2 games, but not much, so it does seem rather harsh on Matt to not be able to win the tournament by beating the winner in his final game!
-
Uberdude
- Judan
- Posts: 6727
- Joined: Thu Nov 24, 2011 11:35 am
- Rank: UK 4 dan
- GD Posts: 0
- KGS: Uberdude 4d
- OGS: Uberdude 7d
- Location: Cambridge, UK
- Has thanked: 436 times
- Been thanked: 3718 times
Re: A tad too much McMahon?
Well, there's SOS, which they drew on (bad luck for Matt that Chang Li lost all games). But Alan didn't beat the tournament winner like Matt so I think it's understandable for Matt to feel more aggrieved than Alan to not win. With only 3 rounds this kind of unfortunate situation will arise occasionally, I'm not sure there's much one can do to avoid it. Other tournament systems without this disadvantage would probably have bigger other ones.HermanHiddema wrote: There's actually two players there from the second group that won all their games. There's no fair way of saying whether Alan Thornton should be above or below Matt Crosby.
-
gamesorry
- Lives with ko
- Posts: 149
- Joined: Thu Jan 22, 2015 6:03 pm
- Rank: 3d
- GD Posts: 0
- KGS: 3d
- DGS: 3d
- OGS: 3d
- Has thanked: 276 times
- Been thanked: 49 times
Re: A tad too much McMahon?
I manually applied this to the current OGS Simultaneous McMahon title tournaments. For 19*19 tournaments, one McMahon point = 2 kyu difference; For smaller boards, 1 McMahon point = 2.5 or 3 kyu difference.Elom wrote: But one idea: is it possible to implement layered-McMahon? One Mcmahon point for every three Kyu ranks, making a fairer tournament while simultaneously giving evenly-matched games.
Example
-
Javaness2
- Gosei
- Posts: 1545
- Joined: Tue Jul 19, 2011 10:48 am
- GD Posts: 0
- Has thanked: 111 times
- Been thanked: 322 times
- Contact:
Re: A tad too much McMahon?
It is possible and it has been done. My own preference for tournaments in Europe is to make a layer by rating, and ignore the ranks, apart from displaying them at the end of the tournament. That's what the poorly written software I made does anyway, unless it crashes first.Elom wrote: But one idea: is it possible to implement layered-McMahon? One Mcmahon point for every three Kyu ranks, making a fairer tournament while simultaneously giving evenly-matched games.
- HermanHiddema
- Gosei
- Posts: 2011
- Joined: Tue Apr 20, 2010 10:08 am
- Rank: Dutch 4D
- GD Posts: 645
- Universal go server handle: herminator
- Location: Groningen, NL
- Has thanked: 202 times
- Been thanked: 1086 times
Re: A tad too much McMahon?
I'd say that since Alan never got the chance to play Alex, its hardly fair to mark him down for it.Uberdude wrote:Well, there's SOS, which they drew on (bad luck for Matt that Chang Li lost all games). But Alan didn't beat the tournament winner like Matt so I think it's understandable for Matt to feel more aggrieved than Alan to not win. With only 3 rounds this kind of unfortunate situation will arise occasionally, I'm not sure there's much one can do to avoid it. Other tournament systems without this disadvantage would probably have bigger other ones.HermanHiddema wrote: There's actually two players there from the second group that won all their games. There's no fair way of saying whether Alan Thornton should be above or below Matt Crosby.
But yeah, with only 3 rounds, and such a large group of evenly matched players (I'm counting nine 2d players just below the bar), you're going to get strange results sometime.
I ran a 5 round tournament once (http://www.europeangodatabase.eu/EGD/To ... y=T090905B) where a player from just below the bar won all 5 games and got second place behind a top group player with 4/5. But in that case, they didn't even play each other...
Sometimes, fate conspires against us