Seed (sports)

A seed is a competitor or team in a sport or other tournament who is given a preliminary ranking for the purposes of the draw. Players/teams are "planted" into the bracket in a manner that is typically intended so that the best do not meet until later in the competition. The term was first used in tennis,[1] and is based on the idea of laying out a tournament ladder by arranging slips of paper with the names of players on them the way seeds or seedlings are arranged in a garden: smaller plants up front, larger ones behind.[2]

Sometimes the remaining competitors in a single-elimination tournament will be "re-seeded" so that the highest surviving seed is made to play the lowest surviving seed in the next round, the second-highest plays the second-lowest, etc. This may be done after each round, or only at selected intervals.

Tennis

Professional tennis tournaments seed players based on their rankings. The number of seeds varies from tournament to tournament. Generally the bigger the event the more seeds there tend to be relative to lesser events. The 4 major (Grand Slam) tournaments progressively expanded from 8-seed format to 16-seed, then to the current 32-seed format, which was adopted in the middle of the 2001 season, after French Open champion Gustavo Kuerten had complained that clay-court specialists were at a disadvantage with just 16 seeds.[3]

In a tennis event, one version of seeding is where brackets are set up so that the quarterfinal pairings (barring any upsets) would be the 1 seed vs. the 8 seed, 2 vs. 7, 3 vs. 6 and 4 vs. 5; however, this is not the procedure that is followed in most tennis tournaments, where the 1 and 2 seeds are placed in separate brackets, but then the 3 and 4 seeds are assigned to their brackets randomly, and so too are seeds 5 through 8, and so on. This may result in some brackets consisting of stronger players than other brackets, and since only the top 32 players are seeded in Tennis Grand Slam tournaments, it is conceivable that the 33rd best player in a 128-player field could end up playing the top seed in the first round. A good example of this occurring was when World No. 33 Florian Mayer was drawn against (and eventually defeated by) then-World No. 1 Novak Djokovic in the first round of the 2013 Wimbledon Championships,[4] in what was also a rematch of a quarter-final from the previous year.[5] Rankings of tennis players, based on a history of performance, tend to change positions gradually, and so a more "equitable" method of determining the pairings might result in many of the same head-to-head match-ups being repeated in successive tournaments. An example of a seeded 16-team bracket (note that in each round in this example, adding the "seed" numbers in each match results in the same number for each match):

First round Quarterfinals Semi-finals Finals
            
1  
16  
1  
8  
8  
9  
1  
4  
5  
12  
5  
4  
4  
13  
1  
2  
6  
11  
6  
3  
3  
14  
3  
2  
7  
10  
7  
2  
2  
15  

Other sports

In American team sports, the NFL playoffs and WNBA playoffs employ re-seeding, the NBA playoffs and the NCAA Men's Division I Basketball Tournament do not, the Stanley Cup Playoffs used re-seeding between 1994 and 2013, the MLS Cup Playoffs used reseeding until 2018, and the MLB postseason does not have enough teams where re-seeding would make a difference in the matchups.

In some situations, a seeding restriction will be implemented; from 1975 until 1989 in the NFL and from 1998 until 2011 in MLB there was a rule where in the first round should the top seed and wild card be from the same division, they would not play each other; in those cases, the top seed played the third seed and the second seed played the wild card team.

Association Football

Seeding in major tournaments is commonplace. The FIFA World Cup has employed seeding since it was first established in 1930.[6] The seedings for the World Cup are based on the World Football Elo Ratings produced by FIFA.[7]

The seeding for the UEFA European Championship (for nations) and the UEFA Champions League (for clubs) is based on the UEFA coefficient, a ranking system based on the performance of both national teams and individual clubs in European tournaments over a five year period.[8]

gollark: If you have access to quantum computers you can try Shor's algorithm too.
gollark: Yes.
gollark: Is the best OS.
gollark: I agree.
gollark: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/General_number_field_sieve

See also

References

  1. Shorter Oxford English Dictionary (2002), Fifth Edition, Oxford University Press, Oxford, Page 2737, ISBN 0-19-860457-2
  2. Beard, Robert. "seed". AlphaDictionary.com. Lexiteria. Retrieved 18 March 2012.
  3. "Grand Slams vote to keep 32 seeds - Tennis.life". Tennis.life. 2018-09-13. Retrieved 2018-10-07.
  4. Wimbledon: Novak vs Mayer in R1; Andy, Roger, Rafa all in bottom half, Novak Djokovic official website, 21 June 2013
  5. Wimbledon 2013: Men's matches to watch out for, The Roar, 22 June 2013
  6. "FIFA World Cup Seeding System: 1930 - 2014" (PDF). FIFA.com. Retrieved 2019-11-13.
  7. "Revision of the FIFA / Coca-Cola World Ranking" (PDF). FIFA.com. Retrieved 2019-11-13.
  8. "Champions League seeds confirmed for 2019-20". ESPN.com. 2019-06-01. Retrieved 2019-11-13.
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.