fromageGB, on 2014-February-18, 14:31, said:
I'm happy with generated fractions because I look at it in a different way. I don't think one top is worth as much as another. If you played in a 4 player movement, and score 6 UK mps, by beating the other 3 pairs, then that's a top. But if you played a board against 5000 pairs and beat all 4999 of them, isn't this a more convincing victory?
I don't know what the Neuberg formula would make of this scenario, but it would probably agree with me. (Or I with it!)
I don't know what the Neuberg formula would make of this scenario, but it would probably agree with me. (Or I with it!)
Your example is a bit extreme. In almost all instances, the difference in the number of comparisons will be very small. In a club game, it is unlikely to be more than one (except in the case of fouled boards). Online, there can be a larger difference in the number of comparisons, and the Neuberg formula is not used.
Maybe you would think differently if you lost a major event (or failed to advance to the next stage of a major event) by .01 matchpoint because of the Neuberg formula.
By the way, in worldwide bridge competitions which do not have fixed matchpoint results, gaining a world-wide top is typically the result of getting some huge number. There is very little practical difference between getting a top on a 5001 comparison board and getting a top minus .01 matchpoints when top on a board is 5000 (or 10000 European style). When the top on a board is much lower - say, 12 or less (24 or less European style), the chance that .01 matchpoints will break a tie is much higher, as the chance of a tie is much higher.
I have witnessed tie breaks between pairs for the final qualifying position in a 4-session pair event with the top 3 qualifying for the National finals (District North American Pairs - two sessions qualifying, two sessions final). It would be difficult to explain how the Neuberg formula broke a tie by arbitrarily awarding an extra .01 matchpoints to a pair that otherwise would have gotten a zero, or .01 less matchpoints to a pair that would have otherwise gotten a top. Of course, the tie-breaking procedures in use are also difficult to justify. Quite frankly, I don't know what they are. I believe that the first tie break is on a board a match style comparison if the pairs played in the same direction, but I am not sure about that.