What is my current score? Should teams know how they are scoring?
#1
Posted 2009-September-28, 11:45
I can't think of many sports where players don't know their scores until the very end of the game. And the ones that come to my mind involve judges deciding how a competitor scored.
If players know board per board what their actual score is, they can adjust their style and strategy to the state of the match. Isn't that the way it works in sports?
I can also think of a good reason for not knowing in advance.
Today's technology makes delivering current scores a no-brainer, so that's not an issue.
These thoughts have already been submitted to the WBF but I'd like some feedback from players as well.
#2
Posted 2009-September-28, 13:05
a.k.a. Appeal Without Merit
#3
Posted 2009-September-28, 13:23
Why should everything be like another sport? Only the unfair stuff should be compared and adjusted imo. It's something specific for bridge, and there's nothing unfair about it.
#4
Posted 2009-September-28, 14:38
Free, on Sep 28 2009, 02:23 PM, said:
Why should everything be like another sport? Only the unfair stuff should be compared and adjusted imo. It's something specific for bridge, and there's nothing unfair about it.
I agree with you, and would add that it's why I dislike the 30 victory point scale that places such a premium on winning the round, even by the narrowest of margins. That premium should only apply in sports or games where you know the score and can go to great lengths to do just what is needed to pull out the win.
#5
Posted 2009-September-28, 15:04
good players try to estimate their scores in a long tournament/match to have an idea of how much they need to press -- it's another skill that one ought to develop as a bridge player (imo), and spoonfeeding scores every round or every board doesn't seem good. (skill that i am sorely lacking...)
#6
Posted 2009-September-28, 17:32
#7
Posted 2009-September-28, 18:28
I think current score is fine for some internet matches but in RL they would make for a very different kind of bridge.
wyman, on 2012-May-04, 09:48, said:
rbforster, on 2012-May-20, 21:04, said:
My YouTube Channel
#8
Posted 2009-September-28, 21:14
- it would probably increase the extent of port morteming and slow the game down even further;
- unauthorised information could potentially emerge from the tempo of play at the other table (I've seen this happen in BBO matches where you read in quite a bit from how long it's taking a score to emerge from the other room);
- tournament organisers would probably need to duplicate more boards to ensure that everyone is playing their boards in the same sequence at more or less the same time;
- it would take the fun out of the post-match score-up.
I ♦ bidding the suit below the suit I'm actually showing not to be described as a "transfer" for the benefit of people unfamiliar with the concept of a transfer
#9
Posted 2009-September-28, 22:51
I don't know why they don't do any KO events like this. I guess they like the idea of players basing their play on their estimated running score rather than their actual score.
#10
Posted 2009-September-29, 00:16
For teams the thing I'd prefer, over any "what is my score", is using prepared hands so that all the teams in an event play the same boards. And then I'd like to see butlers and hand records for post mortums. This also helps in something like a swiss team to keep the "swinginess" even.
But in a long important team match people do know the running score, by stanza, just not the running score by board. I think that is an appropriate trade off.
#11
Posted 2009-September-29, 01:17
Mbodell, on Sep 29 2009, 07:16 AM, said:
Where do you come from? Team events in England are always played with duplicated hands and hand records. We don't usually have the Butler IMPs posted though; and I would prefer that we did.
#12
Posted 2009-September-29, 02:53
Vampyr, on Sep 28 2009, 11:17 PM, said:
Mbodell, on Sep 29 2009, 07:16 AM, said:
Where do you come from? Team events in England are always played with duplicated hands and hand records. We don't usually have the Butler IMPs posted though; and I would prefer that we did.
It is extremely uncommon in the ACBL. For the later rounds of the biggest tournaments you may get prepared hands. But even for some national level events you may not get any. And for "normal" club/sectional/regional events it is extremely rare to have a swiss team event with prepared hands. They are almost all shuffle and deal.
You'll usually get hand records for pairs, but not for teams.
#13
Posted 2009-September-29, 08:28
The number of boards played will not have to be announced.
Team strategy will be different.
Barometer scoring is fun. Hiding the scores from the players is a handicap.
Tactical and situational bidding strategy will develop based on the current running scores. This is good.
#14
Posted 2009-September-29, 09:12
If you want to reward consistent, steady, top-notch play, then keeping with the current score reporting makes sense. We have mile-markers to know whether we're up or down, and can adjust our play (to some degree) accordingly.
If you want to create excitement and gambling, announce scores more frequently. We're able to tighten/loosen our play more dynamically based on the situation. And, when behind, we can start 'swinging for the fences'.
Personally, I think the 'low-variance' approach of less score updates is better. I would think it sad to a BB/VC/SB decided in the final few boards because one team took a handful of wild shots that, against the odds, happen to make.
I recognize, however, that I'm not a very good player... And so, my expectation of the risk/reward in that kinda scenario may be off. *shrug*
#15
Posted 2009-September-29, 14:39
There could easily be some crazy psyching, and I would fear about ethics. Consider someone winning by smelling out partner's bluff in the last hand. Who can blame him really, if we deliberately makes it a part of the game to gamble? But it would surely be so ugly to watch.
I'm very doubtful about this suggestion.
#16
Posted 2009-October-15, 05:10
So if you are playing faster than the other table in the match, this suggests you should slow down to wait to get the score. Otherwise it just isn't fair. Why should the other table benefit from an up-to-date score when you haven't got it? We really don't want players hanging around to get a score update, especially if the reason they haven't got one is slow play in the other room.
So I think it is very important in teams play that running scores are not revealed until they can be revealed for everyone equally, ie, end of the session or round or something.
I think bicycle races would be more exciting if the peloton was unaware of how far ahead the breakaway cyclists were. As it is, they can usually time hunting them down to perfection, reducing the effectiveness of breakaway as a strategy, making for more boring races. But I suspect the reality is that it is difficult to keep the information reliably secure from them, so they go for the opposite position of free transfer of information.
#17
Posted 2009-October-15, 08:07
#18
Posted 2009-October-16, 11:54
barmar, on Sep 29 2009, 06:51 AM, said:
In Norway, nearly all tournaments, and quite a lot of the clubs too, run barometer scoring. Most tournaments have done for more (probably a lot more) than 30 years.
Harald
#19
Posted 2009-October-16, 13:37
iviehoff, on Oct 15 2009, 07:10 AM, said:
I don't think anyone has ever suggested otherwise. Fairness is of course paramount.
#20
Posted 2009-October-19, 05:22
I don't care but if people think it adds to the entertainment then by all means let the barometer stay.
It is an interesting question, though, how to make a meaningful barometer for a paris event. Obvivously 100% on a board with a top of two MPs should not have the same weight as 100% of a top of say 14 MPs. I think the barometer of the bridgemate software does give it the same weight, though.

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