Leandro Shara, el matemático chileno que revolucionará el mundo del fútbol / Foto: Facebook |
A Chilean mathematician
says he has devised a tournament format in which every match will count and
which solves the problem of how to organize a 24, 36 or even 50-team
competition. The
search for an ideal format is one which has perennially troubled organizers.
The
easiest are those tournaments which have eight, 16 or 32 teams and are
traditionally divided into groups of four with the top two in each qualifying
for a knockout stage.
Reuters report continues:
Yet
where there is an awkward number of teams, such as next year's 24-team Euro
2016, complex formats are used, such as the best four third-placed teams
qualifying.
Even
where the format is simple, teams can often qualify, or be eliminated, with a
group game to spare, resulting in a flurry of meaningless games halfway through
the competition.
Worse
still, some groups end with a game where both teams can qualify with a given
result.
One
of the most infamous was West Germany's 1-0 win over Austria at the 1982 World
Cup which sent both sides into the knockout stages at the expense of Algeria.
Another
was the women's badminton tournament at the 2012 Olympics, when four women's
doubles pairs deliberately played to lose their matches in farcical scenes at
Wembley Arena.
So
what's the answer?
Leandro
Shara says it involves doing away with groups and having a single league table
for all teams involved -- but without every team having to play each other.
Shara,
who two years ago set up a company called MatchVision to promote the system,
uses a 36-team competition as an example.
The
teams would be divided into three seeding pots according to rankings and would
play one team from each pot, including their own, for a total of three matches
apiece.
The
top eight in the league table would then qualify for a knockout phase.
The
system, he said, could be adapted according to how many teams are involved and
how many matches the organizers want each side to play. The software can even
be programmed to produce an extra round of derby matches.
With
so many possible combinations of results, it would be impossible for teams to
know which result they needed in their final game to qualify, he said, and
qualifying with a match to spare would be "almost impossible".
"The
probability of a situation where teams have a chance to manipulate games is
very, very low," he said.
Another
advantage is that there will be matches between lower-ranked teams and games
between top teams in the qualifying phase.
"Small
teams will have a chance to play other small teams, which doesn't happen
today," he told Reuters at the Play the Game conference.
The
system was used in this year's Copa Peru, a huge nationwide tournament in the
Andean country in which the winners qualify for the following season's top
flight.
In
the so-called "national stage", 50 teams were put together in the
same group and then played six matches each, with the top 16 qualifying for a
knockout stage.
"Nobody
was qualified after the fifth match day and only three teams were
eliminated," said Shara. "The teams played more matches with less
travelling."
Other
competitions which could benefit would be the Copa America, with 12 teams, and
the rugby World Cup, with 20.
Shara
admitted that teams would be competing against other teams they would not meet
on the field, but he said that also happened in tournaments where the best
third-placed side criteria applied.
Shara
was due to meet representatives of the badminton and hockey federations this
week, he said.
"We have thought of
everything, we have more than 30 solutions for sport," he said. "We
think this is the future of international competition."
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