The Trophy this year was conducted in a different format altogether, with pairs-based qualifiers and a team-of-four Swiss-league finals.
I believe that the tournament was much fairer, since there were no short knockout matches. And for a field that consists predominantly of players who barely know the basic laws of bridge and, when asked about partnership understandings, don't even say “I don't know” but stare in bewilderment and incomprehension, the tournament was highly technologically advanced.
For one, all deals were computer-dealt, and based on true random numbers downloaded from random.org. And for another, scoring was on the IMP format and comparison was made not with the field but with the double-dummy par result on the board (which fact all but three or four of the players were blissfully unaware of, of course).
All deals, all results (of the qualification rounds), and all double-dummy analyses, are available for download.
- Group 1 Qualifiers
- All results in a spreadsheet
- The eighteen deals used, as a PDF
- The eighteen deals used, in the Portable Bridge Notation (PBN) format
- Double-Dummy analysis of all deals
- Group 2 Qualifiers
- All results in a spreadsheet
- The fifteen deals used, as a PDF
- The fifteen deals used, in the Portable Bridge Notation (PBN) format
- Double-Dummy analysis of all deals
- Finals
- Summary of results of the qualifiers
- The twenty-four deals used, as a PDF
- The twenty-four deals used, in the Portable Bridge Notation (PBN) format
- Double-Dummy analysis of all deals
- Summary of the results of the finals
- All these files, zipped into one
1 comment:
Good job guys, keep it up. Now that you've set new standards in bridge captaincy ;) try to make sure that future captains also put up the boards and the double dummy analysis in this manner.
However, I have my doubts about using the double dummy analysis for scoring purposes, as it gives *EXTREMELY* weird results. Saying that it averages over a large number of boards doesn't make sense because you are not playing infinite boards, and slam games generate huge swings.
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