I never have a problem with sharing places. If, however, we do wish to distinguish places, then even Swiss + lottery is better than the sorting provided by a continued KO.RobertJasiek wrote:You mention an aspect for which Swiss is better than KO. You do not mention another aspect for which Swiss is usually worse than KO: final placement tiebreakers. If, however, you can agree on sharing Swiss final places instead of using tiebreakers and if Swiss contains an implicit KO for place 1, then we can agree on such a usage of Swiss being better than KO for a determination of places 2 to 8 as meaningful as possible within the given number of (here: 3) rounds.HermanHiddema wrote: Swiss is better pretty much by definition. [...] The KO system, on the other hand, guarantees that place 4 (1 win, 2 losses) ends above place 5 (2 wins, 1 loss).
Continued KO is just a really really really bad system. Consider the case of more than 3 rounds, e.g. suppose 5 rounds continued KO with 32 players. Then the player in place 16 has 1 win 4 losses and ends above a player with 4 wins, 1 loss. Having one game weight heavier than all other games combined is terrible. Continued KO is an absolutely indefensible system.
I am making the claim than "player's personal preference in opponents" is a bad pairing criterium. Do you agree or disagree?I prefer to make a weaker claim: there is a partial conflict in aims.By removing strong players from the main tournament, you work against purpose 2 [determination of European Open Champion], because you make it easier for Asian players to be Open Champion by removing the toughest opposition.