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#41 | ||
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Hall Of Fame
Join Date: Sep 2007
Location: NorCal Bay Area
Posts: 3,104
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Actually, no, you have convinced me, so I recant
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| OrangePower |
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#42 |
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Rookie
Join Date: Jan 2013
Posts: 131
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I think the key issue here is not the rating system, but the fact that there is an incentive to play at a lower rating for leagues. I took a long period of time off from tennis, and just started to play leagues last year. It is actually a lot of fun, but IMHO it has drastically changed the game. I don't mind the ratings games as much as the new "line is out" philosophy which is common on many teams. The rating system should and probably does do its job assuming its not gamed. In the greater scheme of things there isn't too much difference if a low 4.5 is on a 4.0 team or vice-versa. The real issue is people intentionally gaming the system. Even in this case I don't know that I get it too much. Winning a national 3.5 championship when your a 4.5 player seems pretty lame to me.
My particular case is probably somewhat common. I was a mid 5.0 when I was young, but took many years off and put on 70 pounds. I self rated as a 4.5 last year and had a winning record but got bumped down to 4.0 which was probably a mistake based on the way I was playing. Over the year I decided to get my game back into shape and lost 40 pounds. At this point I am nowhere near a 4.0 and improving. I've played a few matches so far this year, and based on the results I'm pretty sure my rating is nowhere near the 4.0 level anymore. I'm playing both 4.5 and 4.0, but mainly focusing on 4.5, but I guess as lame as it is I too am continuing the 4.0 play. |
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#43 | |
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Rookie
Join Date: Jan 2010
Posts: 238
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Your situation sounds like this is occurring "naturally", not through any gaming and this is to be expected, and may result in your 4.0 team having a better chance of doing well. IMHO, this is the natural ebb and flow that results in teams at a given level being better or worse. But you raised a good point about the incentive for someone to be rated lower than they should be which leads to gaming the system to accomplish that. As long as individuals get a rating and that dictates what level they can play at and teams can be formed more or less from any collection rated at the same level, you are going to have this problem. One idea (that I have not fully thought through, so just throwing it out for discussion) would be to have a system more like English Soccer (and other similar leagues) where it is a team that is "rated" and plays at a given level and may be promoted up or relegated down based on win/loss performance. Individuals would still have to have ratings and there would have to be rules about what level team new players can join and to the degree possible these would need to err on the side of having a player on a team at higher level rather than lower, and you'd want to limit roster turnover so a team at a lower level couldn't recruit too many ringers, or force a team to play at a higher level if a roster is a certain percentage new. Yes, the USTA has the move up or break up rule, but perhaps this needs to be revisited or tightened up. This may not work with USTA League tennis where teams are less formal than a soccer league, and I'm sure there are other issues, but it is something to think about. Last edited by schmke : 01-24-2013 at 10:23 AM. |
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#44 | |
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Rookie
Join Date: Jan 2010
Posts: 238
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For example, if in a 4.0 match, an about to be bumped to 4.5 (rated very near 4.5) plays a low-end 3.5 that is playing up (rating very near 3.5), he should in theory win 0 & 0. But if he happens to give up a game and wins 1 & 0 an unweighted system would ding the winning player pretty severely. This is a match that should be given less weight because the opponents are far apart. But you don't want to discredit the match entirely, so if the match does get closer or perhaps even the lower rated player wins, you want to give it more weight. BUT, you also need the "throw a match" check which would look at the "rating profile" of both players and if this match looks like an anomaly, either throw it out or give it less weight. |
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#45 | |
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Semi-Pro
Join Date: Jul 2009
Posts: 628
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back in the days we used to have triathlon of sort: tennis + speed chess + well, 'drinking certain substance that made you play either sport rather challenging' i completely agree that applying ELO to any competition is sort of an art. While it gives you a very well formula to calculate the results you still need to figure out what makes the most sense for input values. For example, i would not be terribly surprised if one found a close correlation between the length of the tennis match and the relative strength of the opponents. So it very well may be that the length should be used as a criteria. like 'if 4.5 plays 4.3 the expected length is 1h45min'. The possibilities are really endless. Incidentally, since we have touched on doubles vs. singles too. there are other algorithms used in on-line multiplier gaming that supposedly are better than ELO is assessing rankings of the players involved. These concepts are more applicable to doubles in tennis as players may play with different partners, against varying sets of opponents. glad we could have a nice discussion. |
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#46 | |
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Legend
Join Date: Jun 2006
Location: The Great NW
Posts: 5,608
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Wow, that looks like a lot of work (the adding of your estimation of the NTRPs, not the calculation itself). Of course to get the actual data (perhaps similar or identical to your estimate, or not...) it would not take nearly the effort for the USTA. A 2% difference by your estimate (using 50% as the standard), seems reasonable at first glance, of course the number is meaningless (or more meaningless, since it is your estimation of the true NTRP) without a mention of the error of the calculation. |
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