tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-37675897.post5907520985413618480..comments2023-12-28T02:11:22.501+00:00Comments on The Streatham & Brixton Chess Blog: BORP? XITom Chivershttp://www.blogger.com/profile/09850710685193416732noreply@blogger.comBlogger12125tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-37675897.post-21139170962218870342011-09-01T21:34:33.910+01:002011-09-01T21:34:33.910+01:00"Enough" is a dangerous concept in this ..."Enough" is a dangerous concept in this context. With ECF grades, it's straightforward: the more games you play, the more your grade converges to your true strength. With Elo, the more games you play, the more your grade changes within a given rating period.<br /><br />In fact, if you play sufficiently much Elo-rated chess, your rating can <b>diverge</b> from your true strength. (It's unlikely to happen in practice - you'd need to be playing something on the order of 50 games/month with the FIDE rating system.)Jack Ruddhttps://www.blogger.com/profile/17433574267085964238noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-37675897.post-81164604307139038412011-09-01T15:09:55.912+01:002011-09-01T15:09:55.912+01:00You are right to identify that there is a differen...You are right to identify that there is a difference in "lag" between the systems (the same point was made earlier) - that is why I was careful to specify "enough" in what I said. Of course, if you have a steadily improving player, neither system gets it right but a player who is playing at a consistent level (or close to it) and who plays ENOUGH games, then the rating/ grade will converge, I suggest.Mike Ghttps://www.blogger.com/profile/13237794157491746812noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-37675897.post-31394003448476028822011-09-01T14:38:08.926+01:002011-09-01T14:38:08.926+01:00Blogger Mike G said...
If the ECF system and ...<i>Blogger Mike G said...<br /><br /> If the ECF system and the Elo system are fed the the same data (and enough of it) they will give you equivalent grades/ ratings. Both reflect past performance and can be used to predict future results.</i><br /><br />Wrong. Imagine two scenarios (in which all the players concerned play enough games to make sure no results from previous seasons come in), which are exactly the same except that in one scenario, each game gets played again with the same result.<br /><br />The two scenarios result in identical grades under ECF, but under Elo, the second scenario results in the ratings' having moved twice as far from their original values.Jack Ruddhttps://www.blogger.com/profile/17433574267085964238noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-37675897.post-60225354489412049192011-09-01T12:01:06.759+01:002011-09-01T12:01:06.759+01:00If the suggestion is to have a separate English el...<i>If the suggestion is to have a separate English elo-based system, it might be an idea to keep the three-digit numbers to avoid confusion with the Fide ratings.</i><br /><br />It's not really necessary. In Spain we use both, and everybody knows the difference.ejhhttps://www.blogger.com/profile/01582272075999298935noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-37675897.post-76483885089597768812011-09-01T10:41:05.496+01:002011-09-01T10:41:05.496+01:00If the ECF system and the Elo system are fed the t...If the ECF system and the Elo system are fed the the same data (and enough of it) they will give you equivalent grades/ ratings. Both reflect past performance and can be used to predict future results.<br /><br />As pointed out above, the main problem with Elo ratings for lower rated players in the UK is down to not enough results being fed into the system, thus the ECF grade is usually more accurate than Elo for many of us.Mike Ghttps://www.blogger.com/profile/13237794157491746812noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-37675897.post-60735590684318207462011-08-31T22:47:54.904+01:002011-08-31T22:47:54.904+01:00A view from abroad (France). In France there's...A view from abroad (France). In France there's a national ranking and obviously one can become Fide-rated. But it's one or the other. Generally one starts with a national ranking, which has roughly the same value as the Fide one apparently (1500 French = 1500 Fide). Once one becomes Fide, the national ranking disappears. In my case, I went from around 1700 National to around 1470 Fide (bad perfs in my Fide tournaments, naturally). This causes me, and others, several problems.<br />1. A lot of tournaments aren't Fide-rated, so I'm not that motivated playing in them. Bad loss? Who cares? This includes FFE (French Chess Federation) organised events such as the Coupe Loubatière (under 1700 team of four cup) and the Coupe 2000 (same only under 2000). <br />2. As the Fide rating only recently went as low as 1200 (or is it 1000?) this rating band is under-populated. In French club championships, one's place in the team is determined by one's rating with a 103 point tolerance e.g. an 1800 can play on board 1, a 1900 on board 2, but if the 1900 becomes 1905, s/he must play on board 1. My lowly ranking condemns me to board 5 or 6 depending on who's available to play, where I meet 1400-1500 players (if I'm lucky) who mostly haven't turned Fide. So my wins mostly count for nothing. Considering I haven't lost in two years, it's a bit disappointing. My rating doesn't progress and I'm stuck playing the same level of player. <br />There are also some "rapidly-improving juniors" in the same boat in my club. <br /><br />So if England adopted a Fide ranking only system, I think a lot of the motivation would disappear from league chess. I'm not saying that people play purely for points, but they can help players to fight harder in games where they otherwise mightn't be that bothered.<br /><br />If the suggestion is to have a separate English elo-based system, it might be an idea to keep the three-digit numbers to avoid confusion with the Fide ratings.Niallhttps://www.blogger.com/profile/02930494998720038967noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-37675897.post-22409836097599586762011-08-31T15:06:59.575+01:002011-08-31T15:06:59.575+01:00Players who are now several hundred points better ...<i>Players who are now several hundred points better than when they had their first rating can lag quite seriously. It's becoming something of a problem for some of the younger British players</i><br /><br />I played a young fellow at Twyford who has an ECF of 151 and an elo of 1300 or so. Mind you I also played a man in his 40s/50s who as 185ECF and 1920 elo and a guy who was 164ECF and only in the 1800s elo.<br /><br />I got rather shafted for those three! Mind you, my overall preference for ECF is more about the simplicity factor than for anything else. For club players rough and ready will do. I accept that for international players a more exact system is to be preferred.<br /><br />What about the rest of you though? Which pill to you want to take? Or, to answer Dfan's question, which goal are you (we) trying to achieve?Jonathan Bhttps://www.blogger.com/profile/00293162543015231439noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-37675897.post-61169394753148879282011-08-31T13:24:34.896+01:002011-08-31T13:24:34.896+01:00Ratings can have different purposes.
Elo is meant...Ratings can have different purposes.<br /><br />Elo is meant to be predictive: it attempts to solve the problem of "What is the probability of player A winning against player B today?"<br /><br />BCF seems like it is designed more to measure one's past performance than to predict one's future performance.<br /><br />Of course the two goals are correlated; strong players are going to show up near the top, and weak players near the bottom, of both lists.<br /><br />Anyway, deciding what goal you want a rating system to fulfill can go a long way towards helping you choose one.dfanhttps://www.blogger.com/profile/16523251716744122695noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-37675897.post-78803520823363358482011-08-31T11:14:45.136+01:002011-08-31T11:14:45.136+01:00Umm, a slight technical point: if a 200-strength p...Umm, a slight technical point: if a 200-strength player scores 50% against a 150-strength player (or a group of 150-strength players) then his/her performance will be 160 rather 150. This is due to the 40 point rule which limits the difference in grade to 40. (The ELO system has a similar proviso.)<br /><br />This doesn't, of course, detract from the gist of Jonathan's point.<br /><br />AngusAnonymousnoreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-37675897.post-70083300790965373962011-08-31T11:06:57.895+01:002011-08-31T11:06:57.895+01:00And rapidly improving players' playing more of...And rapidly improving players' playing more often doesn't solve the problem - it means their ratings tend to lag less, but their opponents' ratings come down just the same.Jack Ruddhttps://www.blogger.com/profile/17433574267085964238noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-37675897.post-52574579471470116342011-08-31T10:02:31.630+01:002011-08-31T10:02:31.630+01:00Any comments on the elo system from occasional blo...Any comments on the elo system from occasional blog writer Peter Lalic?<br />Think you are right Jonathan, most people only play a handful of FIDE rated games each year as opposed to maybe 30-50 ECF rated ones. As such it can take years to correct a wrong FIDE rating. ECF I assume would correct the problem more rapidly but it still needs 30 games to ignore past ratings (apart from the +50 stuff) I think. Probably best to play long tournaments during school time if you want to avoid playing seriously under-rated juniors every third game. That said I have become very aware of the "under-rated" opponent excuse to explain away my bad play. Funny, I never seem to play over-rated players when it appears I am doing well.<br />AndrewAnonymousnoreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-37675897.post-87600395283792580592011-08-31T08:30:59.951+01:002011-08-31T08:30:59.951+01:00The lighthouse keepers problem, players exchanging...The lighthouse keepers problem, players exchanging ratings is well known. You can even get the same effect in Elo style systems.<br /><br />It's better to use the alternative interpretation. If our 200 player plays against an average field of 150 and scores 50%, he's no better than them, therefore deserves to be reduced to their level. Equally if our 150 player can score 50% at a level of 200, then he's now at their level.<br /><br />Elo systems do the same, but have a longer memory. Players who are now several hundred points better than when they had their first rating can lag quite seriously. It's becoming something of a problem for some of the younger British players.Anonymousnoreply@blogger.com