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That two players in the top 16 who are ranked beside each other (like 4 & 5, 7 & 8, 10 & 11 etc.) meet in a match?
“There is nothing like looking, if you want to find something. You certainly usually find something, if you look, but it is not always quite the something you were after.” - J.R.R. Tolkien
That two players in the top 16 who are ranked beside each other (like 4 & 5, 7 & 8, 10 & 11 etc.) meet in a match?
Doubt it. The players ranked 16 and 17 could meet in the last 32 and the above is not bound to happen in the final.
Not that I have any better ideas...
"If anybody can knock these three balls in, this man can." David Taylor, 11 January 1982, as Steve Davis prepared to pot the blue, in making the first 147 break on television.
Well, think why something may be impossible in the last 32 – and it has nothing to do with the players themselves, their rankings etc., just to do with the way the tournament is set up.
Once you've cracked this, and seen how it is guaranteed to happen in the final (albeit as I said earlier, that this would be disregarded as trivial by statisticians), you'll have the answer.
Is it related in any way to the number of sessions played?
"If anybody can knock these three balls in, this man can." David Taylor, 11 January 1982, as Steve Davis prepared to pot the blue, in making the first 147 break on television.
Would it still be bound to happen in the final if the final were changed to best-of-31 frames?
"If anybody can knock these three balls in, this man can." David Taylor, 11 January 1982, as Steve Davis prepared to pot the blue, in making the first 147 break on television.
This isn't a full answer but is it related somehow to the fact that there was a "run" of frames achieved by losers: 7, 8, 9, 10, 11, 12? (i.e. results of 13-7, 13-8,... , 13-12)
"If anybody can knock these three balls in, this man can." David Taylor, 11 January 1982, as Steve Davis prepared to pot the blue, in making the first 147 break on television.
Or something like the person who loses has won more frames in the tournament than he has lost?
I only say SOMETHING like that, because that is not bound to happen in the final!
"If anybody can knock these three balls in, this man can." David Taylor, 11 January 1982, as Steve Davis prepared to pot the blue, in making the first 147 break on television.
Something like every frame score (1, 2, ...., 13) had been achieved by the end of that stage in the tournament?
Again, can't be right, as not bound to happen in the final, but am I getting warmer or colder?
"If anybody can knock these three balls in, this man can." David Taylor, 11 January 1982, as Steve Davis prepared to pot the blue, in making the first 147 break on television.
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