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MP Scoring Query

#1 User is offline   eagles123 

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Posted 2014-February-17, 08:07

I don't know if this is universal, but sometimes in our results there will be a random 0.1 for getting a bottom and 0.1 less than full marks for getting a top: example

Quote


Pairs Contract Scores MPs
NS EW Bid By Ld NS EW NS EW
6 6 3NT+1 E 430 5.5 16.5
5 4 2S W 110 21.9 0.1
4 2 3NT+1 E 430 5.5 16.5
3 13 5HX-3 N 500 0.1 21.9
2 11 2NT+1 E 150 17.5 4.5
1 9 2NT+1 E 150 17.5 4.5
12 5 3NT E 400 11 11
11 3 3NT+1 E 430 5.5 16.5
10 1 2NT+2 E 180 13.2 8.8
9 12 3NT+1 E 430 5.5 16.5
8 10 2NT+1 E 150 17.5 4.5



How come on the bolded scores its not 22 - 0?

and whats the difference to something like this when it is 22-0:

Quote

12 12 2H N 110 18 4
11 10 1NT N 90 11 11
10 8 1NT N 90 11 11
9 6 1NT N 90 11 11
8 4 1NT N 90 11 11
7 2 1NT+1 E 120 0 22
6 13 2H+1 S 140 22 0

5 11 1NT N 90 11 11
4 9 1NT N 90 11 11
3 7 1NT-1 N 50 3 19
2 5 1NT+1 N 120 20 2
1 3 1NT-1 N 50 3 19


obviously not a huge issue but just interested :)

thanks,

Eagles
"definitely that's what I like to play when I'm playing standard - I want to be able to bid diamonds because bidding good suits is important in bridge" - Meckstroth's opinion on weak 2 diamond
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#2 User is offline   Zelandakh 

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Posted 2014-February-17, 08:13

This happens when there is a sit-out table and the board is not played as many times as it should be. Incidentally that is probably also the reason that 13.2 is not 13 - the slight amendment applies across the board, not only for tops and bottoms. It is simply more noticeable there.
(-: Zel :-)
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#3 User is offline   eagles123 

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Posted 2014-February-17, 08:26

Thanks!
"definitely that's what I like to play when I'm playing standard - I want to be able to bid diamonds because bidding good suits is important in bridge" - Meckstroth's opinion on weak 2 diamond
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#4 User is offline   ArtK78 

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Posted 2014-February-17, 08:44

Z may be correct in describing the reason for the peculiar result, but in my opinion the scoring program is wrong to do this. There is no reason why normal matchpointing should not apply just because there is an extra EW pair that did not play the board. In my opinion, the correct scoring of the board should be:


Pairs Contract Scores MPs
NS EW Bid By Ld NS EW NS EW
6 6 3NT+1 E 430 5 15
5 4 2S W 110 20 0
4 2 3NT+1 E 430 5 15
3 13 5HX-3 N 500 0 20
2 11 2NT+1 E 150 16 4
1 9 2NT+1 E 150 16 4
12 5 3NT E 400 10 10
11 3 3NT+1 E 430 5 15
10 1 2NT+2 E 180 12 8
9 12 3NT+1 E 430 5 15
8 10 2NT+1 E 150 16 4

Note that the board was played 11 times, so top on a board should be 20 (for those in North America, the board is scored on a 10 top and then the scores are doubled to eliminate half points).

If some boards are played 12 times, then this board has to be "factored up" to a 22 top so that each board counts the same. This is accomplished by multiplying each score by 22/20. In that case, the scores should be:

6 6 3NT+1 E 430 5.5 16.5
5 4 2S W 110 22 0
4 2 3NT+1 E 430 5.5 16.5
3 13 5HX-3 N 500 0 22
2 11 2NT+1 E 150 17.6 4.4
1 9 2NT+1 E 150 17.6 4.4
12 5 3NT E 400 11 11
11 3 3NT+1 E 430 5.5 16.5
10 1 2NT+2 E 180 13,2 8.8
9 12 3NT+1 E 430 5.5 16.5
8 10 2NT+1 E 150 17.6 4.4

This is classic matchpointing. I have never understood why computer scoring uses some other method which results is peculiar scores like a "top" of 21.9 and a "bottom" of 0.1. If you get the best score on a board, without any ties, why should you get any score other than 100% of the available matchpoints?
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#5 User is offline   StevenG 

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Posted 2014-February-17, 08:56

There is a formula for multiplying up, when boards have not all been played the same amount of times.

http://en.wikipedia....Neuberg_formula

Results are flattened slightly leading to the 0.1 scores.
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#6 User is offline   PeterAlan 

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Posted 2014-February-17, 08:59

As Zel has said, it's what you get when there is a sit-out, but it also depends on you having the Neuberg formula in operation - this is a method of adjusting scores to a common matchpoint top when different boards are played by different numbers of pairs (the sit-out instance is the commonest special case of this).

So-called "normal matchpointing" was a computational convenience in the days of hand scoring, but with computerised scoring there is little reason not to use the Neuberg approach and, as the article explains, this is increasingly what is adopted. There's usually a parameter in most scoring programs to switch between the two approaches.

Edit: I see this has crossed with StevenG's reply - since you're UK based, I've given you a link to the EBU's (Max Bavin's) article on the topic.
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#7 User is offline   aguahombre 

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Posted 2014-February-17, 10:40

In the old days a difference of less than .25 was considered a tie for that position. It would seem that today a difference in final score of .01 (or some number which could be attributed to rounding) should be considered a tie.
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#8 User is offline   gordontd 

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Posted 2014-February-17, 12:28

View Postaguahombre, on 2014-February-17, 10:40, said:

In the old days a difference of less than .25 was considered a tie for that position. It would seem that today a difference in final score of .01 (or some number which could be attributed to rounding) should be considered a tie.

Don't we want to split ties, not create more of them?
Gordon Rainsford
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#9 User is offline   mycroft 

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Posted 2014-February-17, 13:46

The reason the 22/20 factoring method (which is what was used pre-computers to do formulas) is flawed is that who knows if the "phantom" 12th pair to play it has the system to find 2210 on that hand that everybody else in the room got 1460 on - or conversely, if the defence is good enough/declarer is bad enough to go -800 on the hand that everyone else is either -500 or -620 on? There's a non-zero chance of this.

Take it down farther. Assume all boards are played 12 times, so top is 22; but one board had to be replaced halfway through because of fouling, and it was played 6 times (as was the unfouled board). Now top on the board is 10; now we have to multiply the scores by 22/10. Seriously, is there not a chance that the top (and there are two of them, one for each fouling state) isn't going to get beat if it were played another 6 times? So, shouldn't your "top" reflect that chance?
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#10 User is offline   barmar 

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Posted 2014-February-17, 13:59

This can also happen if the board is fouled part-way through the session. The rule for scoring a fouled board is to put the tables that played each version of the board into separate groups, and matchpoint them each separately. Then each group is factored up to the normal top.

With computer scoring, is there really any need for traditional raw matchpoints? I don't think they've ever been used in online bridge (at least not on OKbridge or BBO, the two sites I've used), which just reports percentages.

#11 User is offline   aguahombre 

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Posted 2014-February-17, 18:01

View Postgordontd, on 2014-February-17, 12:28, said:

Don't we want to split ties, not create more of them?

Maybe. But, I don't think a .01 rounding fluke should decide a significant event.
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#12 User is offline   ArtK78 

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Posted 2014-February-17, 20:16

View Postmycroft, on 2014-February-17, 13:46, said:

The reason the 22/20 factoring method (which is what was used pre-computers to do formulas) is flawed is that who knows if the "phantom" 12th pair to play it has the system to find 2210 on that hand that everybody else in the room got 1460 on - or conversely, if the defence is good enough/declarer is bad enough to go -800 on the hand that everyone else is either -500 or -620 on? There's a non-zero chance of this.

Take it down farther. Assume all boards are played 12 times, so top is 22; but one board had to be replaced halfway through because of fouling, and it was played 6 times (as was the unfouled board). Now top on the board is 10; now we have to multiply the scores by 22/10. Seriously, is there not a chance that the top (and there are two of them, one for each fouling state) isn't going to get beat if it were played another 6 times? So, shouldn't your "top" reflect that chance?

With all due respect, factoring up the score on the board by multiplication to bring the top on the board up to the top on the rest of the boards is not flawed. It is mathematically accurate and absolutely appropriate.

The board was played with a field consisting of one less comparisons than the field the other boards were played in. There is no "phantom" pair, and any speculation about what the score would be if there were another comparison is just that - speculation. There is no need to account for it, and any method that does so is just making a guess with no substantiation.

The fact that anyone came up with some sort of computational algorithm that results in a low score of .01 and a top score of .01 less than the typical top is mere hocus pocus. There is no rationality to it. I accept that fact that the powers that be have chosen to use this scoring system when there are boards with different numbers of comparisons. I don't have to agree with it, and I don't have to like it.

I note that in match point pair games on BBO, each board is scored using the number of comparisons on the board and the scores are converted to percentages of the top score on that board. That eliminates the need for any other computational algorithms to compute matchpoint scores on different tops - each board is scored with a top of 100% to two decimal places. That works, and it is accurate to two decimal places.

As for fouled boards, Barmar correctly reports the procedure for dealing with fouled boards using manual scoring. And I agree with that method for the same reasons that I agree with the pure factoring up method. There is some other method used with computer scored fouled boards, and I have no idea what the rationale is. I know that, "in the old days," there was a different method for dealing with fouled boards at sectional and higher rated tournaments, even when scoring was done manually.

By the way, when factoring was done "in the old days" it was always factoring up - never factoring down. This was due to the fact that making the scores larger increased the chance of breaking ties due to fractional matchpoints resulting from the factoring. As agua noted, the old rule was that score differentials of less than .25 matchpoints were considered to be tied results. The .25 rule sometimes created really peculiar results. For example, suppose three pairs scored 145.60 MPs, 145.40 MPs and 145.20 MPs, and suppose these were the 2nd, 3rd and 4th best scores. Using the .25 rule, the top pair tied for 2/3, the middle pair tied for 2/3/4, and the bottom pair tied for 3/4.

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#13 User is offline   gordontd 

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Posted 2014-February-18, 02:10

View PostArtK78, on 2014-February-17, 08:44, said:

This is classic matchpointing. I have never understood why computer scoring uses some other method which results is peculiar scores like a "top" of 21.9 and a "bottom" of 0.1. If you get the best score on a board, without any ties, why should you get any score other than 100% of the available matchpoints?

Actually classic matchpointing as performed before computers were used for scoring would remove a whole matchpoint (half if you are American) from the top and add one to the bottom, so that the total matchpoints available on the board remained the same but you didn't have problems with tied results, as in this example:

+150____9
+120____6
+120____6
Ave_____5
-50_____3
-100____1

Neuberg scoring is just a more subtle implementation of this.
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#14 User is offline   ArtK78 

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Posted 2014-February-18, 07:46

View Postgordontd, on 2014-February-18, 02:10, said:

Actually classic matchpointing as performed before computers were used for scoring would remove a whole matchpoint (half if you are American) from the top and add one to the bottom, so that the total matchpoints available on the board remained the same but you didn't have problems with tied results, as in this example:

+150____9
+120____6
+120____6
Ave_____5
-50_____3
-100____1

Neuberg scoring is just a more subtle implementation of this.

All I can say to this post is "Huh??" I have been playing since 1972, and I have been an ACBL Certified Director since about 1976. I have never heard of this. And, frankly, it makes no sense.
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#15 User is offline   Trinidad 

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Posted 2014-February-18, 07:53

View PostArtK78, on 2014-February-18, 07:46, said:

All I can say to this post is "Huh??" I have been playing since 1972, and I have been an ACBL Certified Director since about 1976. I have never heard of this. And, frankly, it makes no sense.

I think Gordon meant to add the clause "if the number of times the board has been played is one less than the number of times that the other boards have been played" somewhere in his post.

Rik
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#16 User is offline   gordontd 

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Posted 2014-February-18, 07:54

View PostArtK78, on 2014-February-18, 07:46, said:

All I can say to this post is "Huh??" I have been playing since 1972, and I have been an ACBL Certified Director since about 1976. I have never heard of this. And, frankly, it makes no sense.

So how would you matchpoint a board with those six scores?
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#17 User is offline   gordontd 

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Posted 2014-February-18, 07:55

View PostTrinidad, on 2014-February-18, 07:53, said:

I think Gordon meant to add the clause "if the number of times the board has been played is one less than the number of times that the other boards have been played" somewhere in his post.

Rik

Well that's what the Ave result is.
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#18 User is offline   campboy 

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Posted 2014-February-18, 08:31

View PostArtK78, on 2014-February-17, 20:16, said:

The fact that anyone came up with some sort of computational algorithm that results in a low score of .01 and a top score of .01 less than the typical top is mere hocus pocus. There is no rationality to it. I accept that fact that the powers that be have chosen to use this scoring system when there are boards with different numbers of comparisons. I don't have to agree with it, and I don't have to like it.

It's not hocus pocus, it's statistics. It's exactly the same reason that you should use Bessel's correction for the sample variance. If you don't like it, fine, but the mathematics is correct.
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#19 User is offline   ArtK78 

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Posted 2014-February-18, 09:06

View Postgordontd, on 2014-February-18, 07:54, said:

So how would you matchpoint a board with those six scores?

Sorry. For some reason I did not notice the Ave score that was in the middle. Yes, the classic way of adjusting a board with an Ave score is that the Ave score ties every other result, and the matchpoints shown are correct.
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#20 User is offline   fromageGB 

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Posted 2014-February-18, 14:31

I'm happy with generated fractions because I look at it in a different way. I don't think one top is worth as much as another. If you played in a 4 player movement, and score 6 UK mps, by beating the other 3 pairs, then that's a top. But if you played a board against 5000 pairs and beat all 4999 of them, isn't this a more convincing victory?

I don't know what the Neuberg formula would make of this scenario, but it would probably agree with me. (Or I with it!)
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