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Grades This website displays 3 different grades for players, and for event results. The three grade types are: Berkshire Junior, ECF Standard Play, and ECF Rapidplay (ECF = English Chess Federation). On a player detail page, all three grades may be displayed if the player has gained a grade of each type. A results page will only display grades of one type.
ECF Grades ECF Standard Play grades are assigned to players if they have played matches where the time limit is not less than one hour for the initial 30 moves (and, of course, where the match result has been submitted to the ECF for grading purposes). A Standard Play grade can be gained by playing in certain county matches (e.g. under 18 matches), in the adult Berkshire League, or in some tournaments such as the Berks and Bucks Congress. At the start of the 2005-06 season, only 19 Berkshire Juniors had a standard play grade, and many of these would have been based on just a handful of matches.
ECF Rapidplay grades are more common for Juniors than Standard Play grades. Rapidplay is defined as less than one hour for the initial time period, but no faster than 15 minutes sudden death. Since many Berkshire events are in this class (if only just), we have in the past sent the results off to the ECF for grading. There are currently 91 Berkshire Juniors with a rapidplay grade.
Berkshire Junior Grades As of September, 2004, the ECF will no longer grade junior events for free. It has been estimated that to carry on submitting results at the same rate as the 2003-04 season would cost us £800! Instead of increasing tournament entry fees to cover ECF grading charges, we have decided to calculate our own grades, and call them "Berkshire Junior Grades". Further, we have decided to adopt the FIDE grade calcuation methods, which are different from the method used for ECF grades.
At the time of writing (Jan 19, 2006), there are 480 players with a Berks Grade, and it has become the standard measure used to pair players at the popular Saturday afternoon events. We have not published lists of players, ordered by Berkshire Grade (although team managers have easy access to this information), but may do so in the future.
Grade Calculation The nitty-gritty part. How are tournament results turned in to Berkshire Junior grades? First, all match results for a tournament are entered into the website database (this level of detail also allows the website to display a "crosstab" section on a results page). The method for calculating grades is different for players who start with an existing grade, and those without a grade. In outline, the following method is used for players with an existing grade:
This approach means that:
The actual formulae used to perform the "calculations" mentioned above are given below. (note: * is used for multiplication, and ** is the exponent (to the power of) symbol):
Example Calculations Suppose player A, who has a current Berkshire Junior grade of 1000 competes in a tournament and plays 6 matches against opponents with the following grades: 800, 1150, no-grade, 1280, 1190, and 1310. Further suppose that the player scored a total of 3.5 points against the graded opponents. The result against the ungraded player is irrelevant for the purposes of grading calculations.
First calculate AOG (average opponent grade), which gives 1146. Use the ES formula above to calculate expected score, which comes to 1.51 (to 2 decimal places). Next use GC formula to determine the grade change: GC = +79.6. Finally apply the grade change and tournament bonus (5) to the current grade to give 1085 (rounded). This is the player's new Berkshire Junior grade, and will be used as the initial value for BJG in any future tournament.
The following is a brief table of grade changes for a number of grade differences for a single game (player grade - opponent grade). The first entry shows that if you out-grade your opponent by 400 points, then if you win you gain only 4 points, if you draw then you lose 16 grading points, and a loss results in a grade reduction of 36.
| Grade diff | Win | Draw | Lose | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| +400 | +4 | -16 | -36 | |
| +200 | +10 | -10 | -30 | |
| +100 | +14 | -6 | -26 | |
| 0 | +20 | 0 | -20 | |
| -100 | +26 | +6 | -14 | |
| -200 | +30 | +10 | -10 | |
| -400 | +36 | +16 | -4 |
It is too early to tell if the competing effects of how the system operates will lead to grade inflation or deflation over time: