Abstract

Inspired by the increasing popularity of Swiss-system tournaments in sports, we study the problem of predetermining the number of rounds that can be guaranteed in a Swiss-system tournament. Matches of these tournaments are usually determined in a myopic round-based way dependent on the results of previous rounds. Together with the hard constraint that no two players meet more than once during the tournament, at some point it might become infeasible to schedule a next round. For tournaments with n players and match sizes of k≥2 players, we prove that we can always guarantee ⌊nk(k−1)⌋ rounds. We show that this bound is tight. This provides a simple polynomial time constant factor approximation algorithm for the social golfer problem.We extend the results to the Oberwolfach problem. We show that a simple greedy approach guarantees at least ⌊n+46⌋ rounds for the Oberwolfach problem. This yields a polynomial time 13+ε-approximation algorithm for any fixed ε>0 for the Oberwolfach problem. Assuming that El-Zahar’s conjecture is true, we improve the bound on the number of rounds to be essentially tight.

Highlights

  • Swiss-system tournaments received a highly increasing consideration in the last years and are implemented in various professional and amateur tournaments in, e.g., badminton, bridge, chess, e-sports and card games

  • We extend the results to the Oberwolfach problem

  • The actual planning of a round usually depends on the results of the previous rounds to generate as attractive matches as possible and highly depends on the considered sport

Read more

Summary

A Greedy Algorithm for the Social Golfer and the Oberwolfach Problem

Daniel Schmanda, Marc Schroderb, Laura Vargas Kochc aCenter for Industrial Mathematics, University of Bremen, Bremen, Germany bSchool of Business and Economics, Maastricht University, Maastricht, Netherlands cSchool of Business and Economics, RWTH Aachen University, Aachen, Germany arXiv:2007.10704v3 [cs.DM] 10 Jun 2021

Introduction
Preliminaries
Related Literature
Warmup
The Greedy Social Golfer Problem
The Greedy Oberwolfach Problem
Conclusion and Outlook
Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call