Hi,
I would like to seek the forum's opinion a matter. Our pool league has 12 teams, but only 5 sets of tables. We play round robin with a bye during the season. All teams make play-offs, but since we are limited to 3 matches per day and need to play over the weekend, the proposed format is as follows:
Final round 4 teams play round robin
1st place gets a bye to the final on Day 2
The rest play on Day 1 divided into 3 houses. Winner of each house goes to Day 2
1 house would have 3 teams, the other 2 would have 4 teams. Again, round robin.
Question is, what arrangement of teams is a better/fairer distribution (numbers are in order of ranking):
House 1: 2 7 10
House 2: 3 5 8 11
House 3: 4 6 9 12
or:
House 1: 2 9 12
House 2: 3 5 7 11
House 3: 4 6 8 10
That's the simple assessment. team 2 gets an advantage of one less team to play. Question is make them play the weakest teams or balance it across all three?
The other catch is there is a handicap system in place. Not sure if it really matters, but I'll try to explain.
Each match is 5 players play each of 5 from other team per leg. 10 pts for a winner and 1pt per ball down to loser, so max 50 per leg. Team's winning legs, not points determine overall winner.
Each player has carries average from previous matches, the team's averages are added up and the rounded difference is the handicap added to the weaker team.
So team A, Average is 40 (8.0 per player), team B is 30 (6.0 pp).
In a leg, say score is A:44 to B:35. Add the handicap (10 pts) to B and they win the leg.
This could seriously affect the outcome if the spread is very wide since it could make it tough to beat a lucky-on-the-day weak team. Right now the top 3 teams all are in the 40-41 range, the rest between 40 and 36, except the last team with 31. So a 9 pt spread. During the season we have seen as high as a 12 pt spread, which is like playing 5 against 6+ players.
If it helps, when we had 10 teams, top 2 got a bye to Day 2. Then Day 1 was:
House 1: 3, 6, 8, 10
House 2: 4, 5, 7, 9
Thanks for everyone's feedback on this.
Ian.