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Scoring Formats


Stephen Anderson

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10 minutes ago, Chez said:

If I am being honest, I have read the whole read and I just see it overwhelming for percentage based. The main strong point for RSM is its easy to tabulate. I haven't see a strong argument for reverse strongman other than speed and ease of scoring.  

And I agree that most people seem to prefer percentage-based.

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4 minutes ago, Eric Roussin said:

I guess there’s a philosophical question involved. Who do you consider to be the best person in a contest: someone who wins the majority of events by a small margin, or one or two events, by a big margin? I think the person who is more balanced is more deserving.

The pitfall of reverse strongman scoring  - where someone doesn’t need to push themselves to the limit to win a va particular event - is valid for a single venue contest. But this doesn’t happen in multi-venue contests. For King Kong, everyone is in the dark and so they must put in maximal effort in all events.

ya, but you have used at a single location comp and do often. I guess i'm struggling. Cause we can easily sort the scores, find the highest lift and put a quick formula is calculate the percentage. Is it more, you think its the fairest way?

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26 minutes ago, Chez said:

ya, but you have used at a single location comp and do often. I guess i'm struggling. Cause we can easily sort the scores, find the highest lift and put a quick formula is calculate the percentage. Is it more, you think its the fairest way?

I admit that as a competitor I like the strategy involved in knowing when you can conserve energy. But I understand it can be disappointing for spectators. 
 

What are your thoughts on the philosophical question I asked in my previous post?

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38 minutes ago, Eric Roussin said:

I guess there’s a philosophical question involved. Who do you consider to be the best person in a contest: someone who wins the majority of events by a small margin, or one or two events, by a big margin? I think the person who is more balanced is more deserving.

The pitfall of reverse strongman scoring  - where someone doesn’t need to push themselves to the limit to win a va particular event - is valid for a single venue contest. But this doesn’t happen in multi-venue contests. For King Kong, everyone is in the dark and so they must put in maximal effort in all events.

I can see what you are saying, but I still think the strongest overall wins with percentage based. I think you have more flukes under reverse strongman because the cluster of competitor lifts is unpredictable. you can have like 20 people between lifts that are like 10 lbs apart for these lighter events and because we can't see everyone lift is like crazy random. I only see the chance to get royally screwed with reverse strongman. especially with a large number of competitors   

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20 minutes ago, Chez said:

I can see what you are saying, but I still think the strongest overall wins with percentage based. I think you have more flukes under reverse strongman because the cluster of competitor lifts is unpredictable. you can have like 20 people between lifts that are like 10 lbs apart for these lighter events and because we can't see everyone lift is like crazy random. I only see the chance to get royally screwed with reverse strongman. especially with a large number of competitors   

I understand this concern. But I’m not sure I agree with the statement that the strongest necessarily wins with percentage based, if he/she wins fewer individual events than someone else. Comes down to how you define who’s strongest (percentage vs number of different aspects).

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4 minutes ago, Eric Roussin said:

I understand this concern. But I’m not sure I agree with the statement that the strongest necessarily wins with percentage based, if he/she wins fewer individual events than someone else. Comes down to how you define who’s strongest (percentage vs number of different aspects).

just way too many flaws for me and not enough positives. If even one person gets screwed, its not worth it to me. I'll wait a couple more days for the results  

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Here are the 2019 overall King Kong results for everyone who scored 300 or more with percentage-based scoring (out of a maximum score of 400):

Competitor name  - Performance-Based Total - Performance-Based Rank - Reverse Strongman Total - Reverse Strongman Rank
Tanner Merkle - 373.53 - 1 - 14 - 1
Jesse Pynnönen - 362.03 - 2 - 24 - 2
Gilbert Goodman - 361.04 - 3 - 35 - 3
Jedd Johnson - 355.18 - 4 - 36 - 4
Ivan Krivykh - 345.16 - 5 - 53 - 7
Harri Tolonen - 344.37 - 6 - 43.5 - 5
Eric Roussin - 336.92 - 7 - 51.5 - 6
Ushenko Artem - 335.57 - 8 - 62.5 - 8
Lucas Raymond - 335.42 - 9 - 74.5 - 12
Sirko Petermann - 333.74 - 10 - 73 - 11
Christopher Tracy - 329.62 - 11 - 99.5 - 18
Pupchenko Ivan - 327.32 - 12 - 65.5 - 9
Thomas Larsen - 327.19 - 13 - 78.5 - 14
Steve Millard - 324.66 - 14 - 79.5 - 15
Kupinsky Igor - 324.47 - 15 - 144.5 - 28
Arto Joronen - 324.31 - 16 - 76 - 13
Joel Dircks - 324.11 - 17 - 72.5 - 10
Devinlee Brown - 321.95 - 18 - 92.5 - 16
Timo Lauttamus - 321.52 - 19 - 95.5 - 17
Jouni Mähönen - 319.49 - 20 - 106 - 21
Henri Sonninen - 318.25 - 21 - 101 - 19
Grant Thompson - 316.04 - 22 - 105.5 - 20
Mike Rinderle - 314.13 - 23 - 112.5 - 22
Fenne Muhonen - 310.65 - 24 - 148.5 - 32
Jay Smith - 308.94 - 25 - 132.5 - 27
Brad Provick - 305.01 - 26 - 126.5 - 24
Jason Dingey - 304.78 - 27 - 127 - 25
Justin Major - 304.11 - 28 - 119.5 - 23
Mikhail Rybkin - 302.31 - 29 - 203.5 - 44
Adam T Glass - 302.10 - 30 - 132 - 26
Stefan Falke - 300.33 - 31 - 147 - 31

 

Are the standings identical for both? Of course not, but they are pretty close - I suspect closer than many would have thought.

Edited by Eric Roussin
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11 minutes ago, Eric Roussin said:

Here are the 2019 overall King Kong results for everyone who scored 300 or more with percentage-based scoring (out of a maximum score of 400):

Competitor name  - Performance-Based Total - Performance-Based Rank - Reverse Strongman Total - Reverse Strongman Rank
Tanner Merkle - 373.53 - 1 - 14 - 1
Jesse Pynnönen - 362.03 - 2 - 24 - 2
Gilbert Goodman - 361.04 - 3 - 35 - 3
Jedd Johnson - 355.18 - 4 - 36 - 4
Ivan Krivykh - 345.16 - 5 - 53 - 7
Harri Tolonen - 344.37 - 6 - 43.5 - 5
Eric Roussin - 336.92 - 7 - 51.5 - 6
Ushenko Artem - 335.57 - 8 - 62.5 - 8
Lucas Raymond - 335.42 - 9 - 74.5 - 12
Sirko Petermann - 333.74 - 10 - 73 - 11
Christopher Tracy - 329.62 - 11 - 99.5 - 18
Pupchenko Ivan - 327.32 - 12 - 65.5 - 9
Thomas Larsen - 327.19 - 13 - 78.5 - 14
Steve Millard - 324.66 - 14 - 79.5 - 15
Kupinsky Igor - 324.47 - 15 - 144.5 - 28
Arto Joronen - 324.31 - 16 - 76 - 13
Joel Dircks - 324.11 - 17 - 72.5 - 10
Devinlee Brown - 321.95 - 18 - 92.5 - 16
Timo Lauttamus - 321.52 - 19 - 95.5 - 17
Jouni Mähönen - 319.49 - 20 - 106 - 21
Henri Sonninen - 318.25 - 21 - 101 - 19
Grant Thompson - 316.04 - 22 - 105.5 - 20
Mike Rinderle - 314.13 - 23 - 112.5 - 22
Fenne Muhonen - 310.65 - 24 - 148.5 - 30
Jay Smith - 308.94 - 25 - 132.5 - 27
Brad Provick - 305.01 - 26 - 126.5 - 24
Jason Dingey - 304.78 - 27 - 127 - 25
Justin Major - 304.11 - 28 - 119.5 - 23
Mikhail Rybkin - 302.31 - 29 - 203.5 - 31
Adam T Glass - 302.10 - 30 - 132 - 26
Stefan Falke - 300.33 - 31 - 147 - 29

 

Are the standings identical for both? Of course not, but they are pretty close - I suspect closer than many would have thought.

Also only the top guys and I forgot who already said it this thread that just prove much. 

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2 minutes ago, Chez said:

Also only the top guys and I forgot who already said it this thread that just prove much. 

I'm not sure I understand what you wrote...

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I need time to analyze. the data. I'll do it myself this weekend. Work has slowed for me. Luke just jumped 3 spots. and I see others moved around and I will do everyone. 

Edited by Chez
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If first place changes between the two scoring systems, the winner shall be determined by paper scissors rock (2 out of 3, of course.)

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Igor jumped 13 spots upward.....I'll wait till I do everyone though and pick out outliers

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In that group, igor was the biggest jump. 13 spots. 

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Sure, people moved around. But even I was surprised by how few spots especially considering there were almost 250 competitors. And does it mean someone was incorrectly ranked because of reverse strongman scoring? I would argue that it comes back to my question about what should count for more: doing well in multiple events, or very well in just a couple.

My point has never been that reverse strongman is better than percentage based -- just that the end results are often more similar than most people assume, and both do a decent job of showing who the top competitors are.

In the above example, 27 competitors are among the top 30 competitors in both lists.

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2 minutes ago, Eric Roussin said:

Sure, people moved around. But even I was surprised by how few spots especially considering there were almost 250 competitors. And does it mean someone was incorrectly ranked because of reverse strongman scoring? I would argue that it comes back to my question about what should count for more: doing well in multiple events, or very well in just a couple.

My point has never been that reverse strongman is better than percentage based -- just that the end results are often more similar than most people assume, and both do a decent job of showing who the top competitors are.

In the above example, 27 competitors are among the top 30 competitors in both lists.

and in the same way it depends on how you analyze the data. you got one guy moving up 13 spots. to me that is a significant change. 

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3 minutes ago, Chez said:

In that group, igor was the biggest jump. 13 spots. 

Igor jumped 13 spots because his thick bar strength is by far is biggest strength. Does that mean he should have finished 15th instead of 28th? Maybe, maybe not. Depends on how you view things.

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Just now, Eric Roussin said:

Igor jumped 13 spots because his thick bar strength is by far is biggest strength. Does that mean he should have finished 15th instead of 28th? Maybe, maybe not. Depends on how you view things.

I think we need to pick universal scoring and stick with it for NAGs events. I am not the first person to bring this up. many of us aren't fans of it. 

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5 minutes ago, Chez said:

I think we need to pick universal scoring and stick with it for NAGs events. I am not the first person to bring this up. many of us aren't fans of it. 

Out of likes for the day, but agreed.

 

no one prolly cares to hear what I think on scoring, but I’ll say it anyways. Score each pound lifted as a point towards that individuals total. Most points total wins. Lesser BW breaks ties. Easy. 🤷🏼‍♂️

Percentage based and other methods actually seem more time consuming than what I describe, albeit seem to work okay.

regardless, pick a method and adhere.

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This is literally listed on Gripsport.org

 

North American Grip Sport Organization

 

 

 

Mission Statement

 

The purpose of the North American Grip Sport Organization is to deliver the necessary information about the sport to the athletes, promoters, and fans in order to increase the enjoyment of all involved.


 

General Rules

 

Chalk is the only Gripping aid that is permitted during competition. If a clean hand is preferred for an event, the athlete must wash his or her hands with water. Spitting on the hand is unacceptable.

Hook Grip is not permitted in Grip Sport events.

Lifting Straps are not permitted in Grip Sport events. In some cases, Wrist Wraps may be permitted, and will be listed in the specific rules of each event. Elbow Sleeves and Tendon Wraps are generally permitted as support devices for injuries and preventive measures against injuries. Referee's judgment will be used for support devices that seem questionable.

Extra Attempts for record-breaking lifts are not recognized within NAGS. Although fourth attempts are permitted in Powerlifting and Olympic Weightlifting, most Grip events already permit a fourth attempt and so the athlete should prepare his or her attempts accordingly. The promoter may, of course, allow extra attempts to take place if they are willing to allow this time to be taken before moving on, but should the lifts be completed to the legal requirements, they will not be recognized for Rankings or for Records.

Judging Cadence for attempts will begin by a call from the judge and will end with a call from the judge. If an athlete makes an attempt before the judge makes the call for the attempt, the athlete will have to take the attempt again.

Judge Selection: In order to avoid possible conflicts of interests judges should be neutral to the competitor lifting. For example, significant others and relatives should not judge one another if it can be avoided at all.


 

Scoring System

 

The scoring system used in US Grip sanctioned contests is percentage based scoring. The best performance in the event is awarded 100 points. All other lifters’ performances are divided by the best performance and then multiplied by 100 for their score.

For example if Lifter A lifts 350 lbs and this is the best lift in his/her division, he gets 100 points for his lift. If Lifter B lifts 320 lbs, his score is figured like so: 100 X 320/350 = 91.428.

Standings in each division are based upon the best performance in the division.

and KK is on the calender 

Upcoming NAGS Contests and Events

 

OCTOBER 2018

5th International King Kong of Grip

  • Date: Saturday, October 27th, 2018
  • Promoter: Various, see below with their respective locations
  • Locations:
    Detroit, MI - Andrew Pantke
    Ottawa, Ontario, Canada - Eric Roussin
    London, England - Rob Blair
    Mindoro, WI - Allen Heineck
    Wyalusing, PA – Jedd Johnson
    Finland – Jouni Mähönen
    Parkton, MD - Maizels Training Hall - Patrick Maizels
    Brentwood, TN – Gil Goodman
    Finland – Juha Harju
    Ukraine – Ivan Pupchenko
    Russia – Ivan Beritashvili
    Italy – Aldo Alberico
    San Francisco, CA – Evan Raftopoulos
  • Entry Form and Info

It should be updated if we are allowing anything the promoter wants. 

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5 minutes ago, Tommy J. said:

o one prolly cares to hear what I think on scoring, but I’ll say it anyways. Score each pound lifted as a point towards that individuals total. Most points total wins.

only issue there is the heavy events like thick bar get the most weight, light events like stub or penny etc wouldn't count for much

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12 minutes ago, Chez said:

only issue there is the heavy events like thick bar get the most weight, light events like stub or penny etc wouldn't count for much

Agreed, but it would still be fair play since everyone would have a higher axle total than a stub or penny.

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Just now, Tommy J. said:

Agreed, but it would still be fair play since everyone would have a higher axle total than a stub or penny.

Forces everyone to be well rounded as well. Guys that are only good at stub, hub, penny would need to work on other stuff more. And those only good on axle could still leave room to be beat if others do well at lighter events. Or like with the case in King Kong, if it’s all 1 hand events it would especially do well.

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3 minutes ago, Tommy J. said:

Agreed, but it would still be fair play since everyone would have a higher axle total than a stub or penny.

What would be the point in training a lift where the top lift won't even be 50 lbs if there are other events that might see lifts of 500? Answer: there would be none.

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