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Over the last several years I've found it quite annoying that I cannot
read the rules and understand the US scoring formula. The calculation of US scores has become encumbered with so many correction factors, devaluation factors and the like that mere mortals cannot relate soaring performance to score results. It did not use to be that way. Day 5 preliminary scores for the ongoing US Standard class nationals at Montague are showing that the current complex scoring formula generates ridiculous results. The winning performance was a 217 mile flight at 72.50 mph (congratulations David Greenhill). The second place speed of 61.30 mph received 85% of the winners score for a speed which was 15% slower. So far, OK. Then a bizarre compression comes into play for slower finishers. The seventh place pilot flew a mere 67 miles at 23.33 mph and received 76% of the winners score. That’s absurd. He flew only about one third of the speed and distance that the second place finisher flew yet scored a mere 70 fewer points. We need to completely scrap the present over-elaborated scoring equations and get back to a scheme for scoring that is both simple and understandable. The simple scoring protocol of yore may have produced minor inequities at times; but, there was never anything as crazy as the scoring we’re generating right now at the US nationals. |
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