McBruce, on 2012-April-03, 01:01, said:
...another thread that has morphed past its title...
Yes, my fault sorry.
McBruce, on 2012-April-03, 01:01, said:
It might have something to do with the fact that in District 19, the same person (me) is responsible for producing Daily Bulletins, putting the Bulletins and results pages on the web, and preduplicating all the deals for the pair games ... and that there are only 24 hours in a day.
To heck with dealing machines, we must clone McBruce.
Seriously, why is it only you who has the job of duplicating boards? How do others (UK, OZ, NZ...) manage the logistics?
McBruce, on 2012-April-03, 01:01, said:
Most players here tend to read a lot into the words "Swiss Teams." They expect caddies, shuffling each round, the occasional round-robin (but they are prepared to storm the TDs table if they are made to play two of them), but not hand records. It took the better part of two decades for us to remove the terms "winning tie" and "losing tie" from the vocabulary. It will take a similar time, assuming we start now, to teach players that it's a 7 or 8-board match but they only get two to start, they'll get the boards they need eventually (some might be a different colour), and that it is important to pass boards as soon as they've played them, instead of dropping them on the floor or putting them under the other boards (usually upside-down so they don't accidentally replay them). Trying to make this sea change now simply results in chaos and anger. I know, I've tried, and quite frankly I'm tired of the abuse I get from players who want things as they've always been until they die.
Ok, I'm naive thinking I can stomp my feet and change the entire approach to the game in NA but if nothing changes, nothing changes. How wonderful it would be to have teams events with duplicated boards, a level playing field. Not only could I pore over the hands with my teammates but I could also compare my results to the teams in flight A. Promote the benefits, get people on board and it will happen.
It won't happen overnight, it will take time and there will be problems and disgruntled players, some players seem to enjoy griping more than they enjoy playing the cards. I'm sure people grumbled like mad when hand held scoring machines (BridgePads) were introduced but now you only hear them complain when the directors are slow to get the system started, or if it goes down during a game.
McBruce, on 2012-April-03, 01:01, said:
I think the compromise at the moment for District 19's Regionals is that some of the AX Swisses are running preduplicated boards for the second session, if you are in the top four or five matches (just which matches actually are the top four or five, is a guess -- the results do not come out simultaneously in an ACBL Swiss: ACBLScore matches pairs with similar scores when results are entered). For these AX Swisses they ask me to preduplicate four or five complete sets of 32 for four 8-board matches. In reality, if the players would stop complaining about anything new (or, more likely, blaming it, when their results are not as good as they'd hoped), we could preduplicate two sets of eight for each round to cover the top four matches. But the district has already spent over $5K on two duplicating machines (which for some reason cannot cross the US-Canada border), more extra money to ensure there are enough sets of boards at tournaments (preduplicating in advance requires more boards), and more extra money to compensate me for what I assure you is a very difficult and exhausting week, one which pays me less than directing would. In Penticton last year (a 3200-table Regional) I preduplicated over 120 36-board sets in six days, sometimes eight hours of work, AFTER an overnighter of preparing Daily Bulletins and posting results to the web. Oh yes, and I was sick as a dog all week, too. Adding Swiss Teams to the list of events that are preduplicated would require even more board sets (along with our suppliers entire stock, we needed eight sets of Vancouver's boards last year to have enough) and would require more trained operators to do the job.
It is great that these games get duplicated boards.
The people playing in the top 4-5 teams of the AX swiss are smart people, with a just few cantankerous old codgers so introducing a new board movement shouldn't be insurmountable. Would a couple of "on the ball caddys" hovering around the tables be useful in faciliting this?
The requirement for extra work, equipment and boards would be reduced if we got smarter about sharing boards. I understand that it is unworkable to duplicate boards for individual teams.
Is the cross border dealing machine blockage a problem at the border or a problem between the units?
BTW, I am not suggesting you should or could do this yourself, I know you already go way beyond that of any other director I know.
McBruce, on 2012-April-03, 01:01, said:
At local sectionals we face pretty much the same problem: we need someone else to do the duplicating. I can handle the 12-16 sets for pair games that we need on a sectional weekend by making about half of them in advance and the other half on Saturday morning and between sessions. But during a weekend where I am directing 4-7 sessions, that's about all I can do. For a 40-table Swiss we would need ten sets of boards and significant time to preduplicate them, once for each session. We have just that many sets, but 5-8 of them are in use until we leave on Saturday night. Someone (not me) could come in very early on Sunday morning and preduplicate ten sets of 1-8 in about an hour or so. If they got the first three or four matches preduplicated before the game began, they would probably be able to keep up. But now you have more complications.
I see this would be very difficult as things stand.
McBruce, on 2012-April-03, 01:01, said:
What if ten extra teams show up?
They must have heard that you are providing duplicated boards and hand records?
How likely is this to happen and how do others cater for it?
McBruce, on 2012-April-03, 01:01, said:
What do we do when inevitably someone shuffles and one-quarter of the room follows suit before we figure out what's happening?
I assume the board would be compared as normal and the players would not get a hand record at the end.
Could and probably will happen a few times. This is the same problem as when duplicated boards were introduced to the club games but I think all of the players have caught on now.
McBruce, on 2012-April-03, 01:01, said:
How are we going to handle the huge job of picking up all the boards from all the tables AND putting out the next rounds' worth, in that hectic time when we are waiting forever for the final team to report? I have tried this at the club level in a smaller one-session team game (or Swiss Pairs) at the club, and the collecting of the boards and putting out of the next ones can be a daunting task.
Have the captains to bring the boards to you in exchange for the hand records.
There won't be a huge amount of boards if we are sharing boards, will there?
McBruce, on 2012-April-03, 01:01, said:
Another reason we in this area of the world have not embraced the duplicating machine as much as other areas is that our local supplier makes very nice quality old-style metal boards in beautiful colours that last. Understandably, neither he nor the district is interested in replacing these with the new type that is inserted into the duplicating machine, saving the operator time. When I have to both unload the cards and reload them one hand at a time, the best I can do, and it took a lot of practice to get this far, is about 100 boards an hour. Probably with the newer duplicate boards this can be improved to 125-150 per hour. Although I must admit that I wonder about these boards that open up so the cards can drop into them. Do they last as long as metal boards do? Hinges tend to wear out over time. Ask anyone who ever owned a dot-matrix printer (another feature of ACBL tournaments).
I was going to ask about the dot-matrix printer.
McBruce, on 2012-April-03, 01:01, said:
You really need to give the District time to adapt. They are looking at this new acquisition and noting that it is costing them a fair chuck of money, and while people who play pair games at tournaments appreciate it, it is not exactly producing more revenue in terms of increased attendance, at least not yet. Hand records in team games are not something you can wave a magic wand at and make happen: a combination of player resistance to new things, significant extra costs in equipment and operator labour for the organizers, and understandable resistance by Directors of new and potentially disastrous ways of organizing games, all create some large obstacles.
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There are many problems and I'm sure other considerations and obstacles that I am unaware of. I also can't comment on the financial and staffing aspect.
"And no matter what methods you play, it is essential, for anyone aspiring to learn to be a good player, to learn the importance of bidding shape properly." MikeH