Tournament Resources

The essence of go is competition, and tournament play takes that rivalry to its highest level. Running a tournament will strengthen your club--you will get to know new players from your area--and you may even build your club's treasury! Organizing a tournament is probably easier than you think, especially if you can put some of local club members to work. A "tournament" can be held with as few as two players, and there are several interesting formats for as few as four players. Tournament game results can be submitted for rating, which is a major attraction many tournament players.

Useful Information

Types of Tournaments

Computer Pairings

People have been running huge tournaments since long before the PC was invented, but most TDs now use PCs to pair their tournaments. There are several programs used by AGA tournament directors to run their events:

The AGA has defined a series of standards that define both how a Swiss McMahon tournament should be paired and a set of interface and data reporting standards. Programs that meet these requirements will be certified as "AGA compliant" in a vendor-neutral fashion. Standards documents and other reference information may be found on the AGA's Tournament Standards page.

There are also several programs used overseas for pairing Swiss McMahon tournaments. These programs are generally quite usable although they will not generate tournament reports for AGA ratings. Their implementation of the Swiss McMahon pairing system is also slightly different than the AGA standard system and so these programs are not suitable for AGA championship-level tournaments such as the US Open.

Warning: while the AGA often provides assistance to programmers tournament directing software, we do not currently certify programs as being "AGA compliant." Many programs released in the past have had quirks and bugs, some of which have only shown up in the middle of a tournament. Be sure to thoroughly test your program of choice before using it to run a tournament.

Before the Tournament

The AGA's Tournament Director's Guide is a terrific resource for any TD. The AGA can also help you in several other ways as you plan your event:

During the Tournament

Unrated Players

When players have AGA ratings or other statements of strength (e.g., a rated go server account) it is fairly easy to decide where they belong in the field. Rated players should play at their rated strength. Some players like to try to play above their actual strength, hoping to gain rating points if they "get lucky". This is a practice best discouraged. Not only do such players lose most of their games, they will drag down the tiebreak scores of their opponents.

Occasionally, a player will tell the TD that he has been studying since the last event and ask to play at a higher level. TDs have the discretion to honor such request, and for children that are rapidly improving it may be the only way for their rating to keep up with their actual strength. The standard is to increase a person's rank by at least two stones. Promotions of only one stone must be earned by play.

If an unknown player appears, the TD will often ask a top player to play through a few openings with him and offer an assessment of strength. The TD has complete discretion to move new players up or down in the field, depending on their results. The goal is to give each player the best possible games. If a new player is crushing his/her oppnents or being crushed, he/she is at the wrong rank.

Some players like to "sandbag" -- playing below their actual strength to assure victory. This is considered impolite and unethical. The Swiss-McMahon and Accelrat systems compensate for this to some degree, but the AGA encourages honest competition at all times.

Disputes

Problems occasionally arise during the course of a tournament. Players may complain about the conduct of an opponent, playing conditions or even the outcome of a game. Like a referee at a sporting event, the tournament director's word is final. Experienced TDs have seen most common problems and know how to respond. If you're new to directing, recruit an experienced TD to advise you--if you've got more than a dozen players, there's probably someone playing in your event that can help. At championship-level tournaments, TDs sometimes appoint an appeals committee at the start of the event to review difficult decisions.

After the Tournament

When your tournament or event is over send a tournament report to the AGA. This will include publicity, ratings and membership information.


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