The Northwest Scholastic Rating System (NWSRS)
August 11, 2005
Since Ollie LaFreniere’s death in 2002, I have maintained the Washington Scholastic Rating System (WSRS) and most of you who will read this have accessed these ratings on this website in the past. The WSRS was a good system and served a valuable function for many years, but the time has come for change. The major limitation of the system is the size.
We are somewhat limited to an 8-digit ID code. It is true that newer versions of SwissSys will allow 10-digit IDs, but there are many TD’s out there running with older (in some cases, very old) versions of SwissSys. With that said it would disrupt things too much to switch to a longer ID code. We have always used the first three digits of the ID as a school code and the 4th digit as a grade code. These uses are essential for many of the tournaments where school and grade determine sections and trophies. Although a cross-reference could be set up for that purpose, it would again disrupt the way many of the tournaments are run. So, that leaves the last 4 digits of the ID as the unique part of the ID, and we have always used that as a number. Since we don’t use numbers below 1000 (no leading zeros) that effectively meant the practical limit on the number of students in the system was 9000. We run up against that limit every year and I must make difficult decisions on removing players from the system to reduce the numbers.
In addition, I was approached by organizers in
But the problem was space.
I ultimately decided that the least disruption of the system would be to
modify one of the four digits in the ID to be an alpha-numeric, rather than
just a pure alpha. That simple change
will expand the capacity of the system to 35,000 students and will easily
handle the four states/provinces. So,
the fifth digit of the ID, previously the first numeric digit, will now be
either a number (from 1 to 9) or a letter (from A to Z). A further benefit of this system will be that
this 5th digit will also tell you which state or province the person
is from. If the 5th digit is
a number, or if it has the letter A through K, it will be a
The existing WSRS registration program should work fine with this change. SwissSys will also work fine, since it does not care whether characters in the ID are alpha or numeric. For tournament directors, you will continue to enter unrated players using the same method: the three digit school code followed by the 1 digit grade code, and either blank or zero for the remaining four digits. HOWEVER, it is imperative that all TD’s give me school code information when creating a new school code. A player’s state is determined by the school code (there are a few exceptions for students who live in one state, but attend school in another, but these are handled on a case-by-case basis). So, whenever reporting a tournament to me, it is critical that any new school codes be documented with the following information:
I think this new system will allow us to move forward for
many years. The NWSRS should encourage
trans-boundary play, bringing
I know change is always difficult and even a small change like this can cause disruption for people. But I hope all will see the long-term benefits and stability of having a northwest system.
Kirk Winges