Movement Problems
#1
Posted 2016-January-12, 19:34
#2
Posted 2016-January-12, 19:56
See http://www.sheffield...20movements.pdf
I don't know where our movements for 15-20 tables come from. Chien Fou thought they may be from Scandinavia when I asked him some years ago. They might otherwise have been devised by a late SBC member. But they are excellent for us. You would need to input these movements into EBU Score or Score Bridge.
#3
Posted 2016-January-12, 20:12
Or if conditions of contest allow, shuffle and deal boards 33 and 34. Surely better than sending a pair home.
#4
Posted 2016-January-12, 20:15
Pig Trader, on 2016-January-12, 19:56, said:
It would actually be eight rounds, but the club runs duplicate bridge games, so this wouldn't work.
#5
Posted 2016-January-12, 20:18
chrism, on 2016-January-12, 20:12, said:
Or if conditions of contest allow, shuffle and deal boards 33 and 34. Surely better than sending a pair home.
The conditions do not allow this last.
The problem with appendix tables is that two-board sharing is potentially very slow. The club needs to complete the game in three hours.
#6
Posted 2016-January-13, 10:15
Vampyr, on 2016-January-12, 20:18, said:
The problem with appendix tables is that two-board sharing is potentially very slow. The club needs to complete the game in three hours.
Well it does seem rather obvious that if you have 1 set of 32 boards and want to play 2-board rounds without board sharing that you can only have 16 tables playing at any given time.
At that point you may as well run a 17-table Mitchell with a virtual board 33+34. The people at the table that would play 33+34 sit out instead.
However, I note that the OP did ask for a movement with board sharing.
-- Bertrand Russell
#7
Posted 2016-January-13, 10:39
An alternative for a TD not in possession of that movement is to split into 2 sections, a regular 9-table Mitchell and an 8-table Blackpool, sharing boards as appropriate between the two sections.
#8
Posted 2016-January-13, 10:59
chrism, on 2016-January-13, 10:39, said:
You could play two 9-table mitchells with one stationary pair missing in each section and the moving pairs from the second section play in place of the missing NS in the first section. Having both sections playing the same movement should make board sharing easier to manage.
If you want to out-weird your customers, play the second section so that NS move and EW are stationary - this movement is available in Jeff Smith's PairsScorer and EBUscore as "Combined Mitchells (sitouts at T<N>)".
"Robin Barker is a mathematician. ... All highly skilled in their respective fields and clearly accomplished bridge players."
#9
Posted 2016-January-15, 05:02
lamford, on 2016-January-12, 19:34, said:
Since this was presumably the British Winter Sims, you could have protected yourselves by dealing the rest of the boards in the first place (36 deals are supplied, not just 32). Perhaps next time.
NB: 24 boards played out of 34 in play just meets the EBU's 70% rule (70% of 34 is 23.8).
#10
Posted 2016-January-15, 16:14
RMB1, on 2016-January-13, 10:59, said:
This comes to effectively the same thing as the Sheffield BC movement. I forgot it is in Jeff Smith / EBU Score already.
(I didn't understand Vampyr's comment either!)
#11
Posted 2016-January-16, 05:33
Pig Trader, on 2016-January-15, 16:14, said:
(I didn't understand Vampyr's comment either!)
Posted in error by Vampyr.
#12
Posted 2016-January-16, 18:16
lamford, on 2016-January-16, 05:33, said:
That was posted by Vampyr under my name, but I do agree that it is not an ideal solution.
#13
Posted 2016-January-17, 03:24
lamford, on 2016-January-16, 05:33, said:
There are normally about 1000 other pairs in the competition, so why do you think playing 12 of them would be "duplicate" if playing 8 wouldn't?
Since it's a sims I would be inclined just to split into two sections and play two 12-round 3/4 Howells.