The question arose during discussions about the rules for regional tournaments. We were discussing about the handicap of the games. Some people have the feeling that making the players play with full handicap is too much, because the real difference between players separated by 5 ranks, for example, is less than 5 stones in reality.gennan wrote:It's possible to extract statistics for that, but the question would have to be specified more precisely.
That's the question we are wondering about : what's the win/loss ratio when two players of different rank at the french federation are playing with full handicap ?
In fact, most of the handicap games in France are played with handicap minus one, so the stats about these are maybe the most relevant.
Also, these local tournaments are made so that people from various clubs can play together. So we preferably pair together players with a small difference in rating. A good question for us, for example, is "is it fair to give three stones if the players are three ranks apart" ?
6 stones for players 7 ranks apart is the highest gap I've seen this year in my club.
I don't know the workings of the EGDgennan wrote:But I don't think the EGD ratings should even be used to determine ranks. Ranks are in principle determined by handicap games and I guess that most handicap games are informal games that never enter the EGD. The EGD collects mostly even game results from tournaments and then it guestimates ranks from even game statistics with a formula that doesn't even match with the EGD statistics.
In France, rank, rating and grade are the same thing. The rank is given by the rating, and there are no grades.
Players are not allowed to register a tournament with a rating different from their official one. If the gap is too high, a special request must be sent to the managers of the rating list at least two weeks before the tournament in order to correct the rating.
After the tournament, the new french rating is calculated, then the results are sent to the EGF. When the results reach the EGF, the initial ratings (before the tournament) overwrite the european ratings.
For example, let's take the example of a player with a rating of 1500 in both french and european lists. After a first tournament, both the french federation and the european federation make their own calculations, and the player becomes, say, 1580 in the european list, and 1650 in the french list.
The next tournament, the same player must register at 1650 (that's the rule). When the results of this second tournament are sent to the european rating list, the player is first moved from 1580 to 1650 in the european list (*), then his new rating is calculated separately in both lists.
So the EGF rating of a player is always the same as his french rating, except for the calculations for his last tournament.
(*) In fact, the french rating is converted to a rank, then this rank is sent to the EGF, that converts it back to a rounded rating.