TY - JOUR
T1 - How to Design a Stable Serial Knockout Competition
AU - Spieksma, Frits
AU - Pendavingh, Rudi
AU - Lambers, Roel
PY - 2022/11/4
Y1 - 2022/11/4
N2 - We investigate a new tournament format that consists of a series of individual knockout tournaments; we call this new format a Serial Knockout Competition (SKC). This format has recently been adopted by the Professional Darts Corporation. Depending on the seedings of the players used for each of the knockout tournaments, players can meet in the various rounds (eg first round, second round, ..., semi-final, final) of the knockout tournaments. Following a fairness principle of treating all players equal, we identify an attractive property of an SKC: each pair of players should potentially meet equally often in each of the rounds of the SKC. If the seedings are such that this property is indeed present, we call the resulting SKC stable. In this note we formalize this notion, and we address the question: do there exist seedings for each of the knockout tournaments such that the resulting SKC is stable? We show, using a connection to the Fano plane, that the answer is yes for 8 players. We show how to generalize this to any number of players that is a power of 2, and we provide stable schedules for competitions on 16 and 32 players
AB - We investigate a new tournament format that consists of a series of individual knockout tournaments; we call this new format a Serial Knockout Competition (SKC). This format has recently been adopted by the Professional Darts Corporation. Depending on the seedings of the players used for each of the knockout tournaments, players can meet in the various rounds (eg first round, second round, ..., semi-final, final) of the knockout tournaments. Following a fairness principle of treating all players equal, we identify an attractive property of an SKC: each pair of players should potentially meet equally often in each of the rounds of the SKC. If the seedings are such that this property is indeed present, we call the resulting SKC stable. In this note we formalize this notion, and we address the question: do there exist seedings for each of the knockout tournaments such that the resulting SKC is stable? We show, using a connection to the Fano plane, that the answer is yes for 8 players. We show how to generalize this to any number of players that is a power of 2, and we provide stable schedules for competitions on 16 and 32 players
KW - math.CO
U2 - 10.48550/arXiv.2211.02513
DO - 10.48550/arXiv.2211.02513
M3 - Article
SN - 2331-8422
VL - 2022
JO - arXiv
JF - arXiv
M1 - 2211.02513
ER -