dwar0123, on 2012-February-06, 19:14, said:
You seem to be implying something wrong with that, could you elaborate? If the games are 50-50 with equal opponents, the rating shouldn't change.
No, I'm not saying there's anything wrong with the rating - although if there's, say, a nice little group of 47% Lehman players, all of whom are being coached, and all of whom get significantly better, but still play in that group, then the times they do play outside the group, they're going to be severely underhandicapped.
And if not, they're always playing with 47%ers, and they'll never get better. The better players don't want to play with the 47%ers, because they know they'll need a 60% game against them to keep their coveted 55 rating (even though they probably will, but what if tonight's not the night?)
Also, I couldn't play with my mentees, because if we played rated games, we distorted everyone's game; if we played unrated games, we couldn't get opponents. I ended up with a friend of hers and a friend of *hers*, and the mentor program became "Mycroft and his harem" - but at least we had a table!
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The ratings system is a rough yardstick to help create competitive games among peers, sure people can manipulate it, but they are few and far between and even then, if they manipulate it far out of their actual skill range they are not playing against people with similar ratings. Hence they can be an over rated 60% playing against 52% or they can be a correctly rated 52% playing against 52%. If they are an over rated 60% playing against 60%, they won't be 60% for very long, the problem is self correcting and the manipulation is mostly cosmetic as it doesn't actually change who you end up playing with.
Sure the problem is self-correcting. But so is the weight bracket system for boxing, wrestling, judo, et al. matches, and *everybody* manipulates it to get a "better" matchup. It's only when a) the athlete misses his target, b) it's entirely too blatant, or c) the yoyoing causes obvious (and not 20-years-on) physical harm that people complain.
If Lehmans, or any other bridge rating system for
hoi polloi (of which I am definitely one - I'm basically talking everybody but the top of the top) become important enough to game, it'll be gamed. The only real rating system that works is "what have *you* won? And who were your teammates?" And it's hard to determine the difference between "Calgary regional, Bracket 2 win" and "Penticton Regional, Bracket 2 win" from Kuala Lumpur, so even that doesn't help.
When I go to sea, don't fear for me, Fear For The Storm -- Birdie and the Swansong (tSCoSI)