The World Sudoku Championship (WSC) 2017 is happening in India Bangalore. Let's look at one of the recent World Sudoku Championships in 2015 in Sofia.
Thanks to Rajesh for providing me a platform to share my WSC and WPC experience from Sofia, held in October 2015. I am looking back at my experience as well as India's performance from my point of view.
Indian Team Selection
The Indian Sudoku Championship and Times Sudoku Championships were
completed by August 2015 and, after due discussions, twelve of us confirmed the
travel to Bulgaria for the World Sudoku Championships. To my knowledge, this would
have been the largest-ever Indian representation at any World Sudoku and Puzzle
Championships. In the end, eleven of us traveled and it was still the largest
contingent for India at that time.
Travel
Rishi, Prasanna, and Amit reached a day earlier as Rishi and
Prasanna had qualified for the Sudoku GP playoffs. They all reached Bulgaria as
per the plan but Rishi’s baggage decided to wait in Paris a little longer. So
Rishi had to manage with the set of clothes he had and other practical difficulties for a
couple of days. He found the company in a few other participants who had lost
luggage too. Later, it was to be found that Jaipal and Rajesh did not want to be left behind. They also followed Rishi as their luggage
also started from India but waited in some part of the world before reaching Sofia.
Onward Journey
I went to Mumbai from Chennai. Rohan and I had the same flight schedule from Mumbai. We had
a stopover in Dubai. We reached
Sofia around 3.15 in the afternoon on the 11th, as planned. We found Jaipal at Sofia
airport and also found that his luggage had not arrived! We went together to the Ramada Hotel and completed the registrations. Most of the other participants had already arrived. We had a Team Meeting and we went through the Sudoku Instruction Booklet since the Q&A session was in the evening.
Rajesh – lost between Asia and Europe
with Rajesh at Ramada Hotel |
Rajesh was supposed to come on the same flight as Jaipal.
But, unfortunately, Rajesh missed the connecting flight. Then we tried
to contact him and finally came to know that he would be landing on the 12th
morning. That did not happen. After a lot of confusion and waiting, we finally saw Rajesh on the 12th
evening. He missed part of the competition but we were much relieved to see him in person. He had missed one full day of the WSC. He did participate in the
remaining events of day 2 but his name was not included in the rankings.
Sofia
View from the room |
The weather in Sofia was expected to be wet and cold (compared to Chennai). However, there was no rain and it was pleasant. The location of the Hotel was close to the City Center and near the Rail Station.
Sudoku Grand Prix Finals (11th
October)
Proctor at the GP |
This was my first WSC since the GPs started (in 2013). The GP finals
were scheduled on the 11th itself. Some of the participants would be
tired as they would have reached the same day. Others came in early. I
liked the overall format of the finals. There was a lot of visible tension and
the visual display of the live standings for the audience added to the
nervousness of the participants. I volunteered as a proctor, and I was
given the responsibility of being the proctor for Timothy Doyle.
The ten finalists were as shown below. They had to finish eight sudokus – four classics and four variants. There was a staggered start for the different finalists based on their scores in the GP rounds. Kota Morinishi, who started fourth, and was fifth after the first classic, ran through the arrow Sudoku very fast, completing in a time of 2:44. He was the fastest in the next two sudokus also, ultimately maintaining his lead and clinching the title easily. Timothy started sixth, but gained a lot of ground and finally finished a comfortable second. Bastien was the second participant to move to the final puzzle but was not able to finish the last puzzle early enough. Tiit, the GP champion from 2014, was the fourth participant to start the last puzzle and pipped Bastien for the third position. Seung-Jae Kwak lost a lot of time in the XV, taking more than 9 minutes. Jakub and Vincent took a lot of time in the third classic (close to 7 minutes). Rishi, Prasanna, and Fred took over 6 minutes each in the Arrow and never had a chance after that. In the end, it was very close between the 2nd, 3rd, and 4th, and could have gone either way on a different day. I was happy that the finalist, for whom I was the proctor, did well and finished second. I had some difficulties in understanding the writing of some of the numbers, especially ‘1’, but got used to it gradually.
The Sudoku GP 2015 Finals: Results |
Personally, I think the staggered start gives a lot of advantages to the top few in this kind of format. Do we need to have the same kind of format for both the GP finals as well as WSC finals? Like in other sports, once you have a final, your previous performances are not a factor. So, I would have liked to see a more even competition in the GP finals where all ten participants start together. They have all done a lot of hard work to qualify for the finals. The finish would definitely have been more exciting for the participants as also the audience.
WSC (12th-13th
October)
Before the start of the WSC, my target was to finish within the
Top 40 as I had finished 37th (official rank) in Kraljevica in 2012, my
only previous WSC appearance.
Day 1 - pre-lunch
Round 1 (Classics - 30 minutes): Classic is a known weak area for me. I thought if I
get 50% marks in this round, I would be happy with my performance. And,
although I did complete 7 out of 12 grids, in terms of points, I got a little
less than 50%. The positive aspect of this round was that there were no
mistakes and I got whatever I attempted. The Sudoku Puzzles were not difficult as
this was like a sprint round with 12 grids in 30 minutes. I got 150/320. An OK round.
Surprisingly, only two contestants got a bonus – Kota
Morinishi and Vincent Bernard got 330/320. Three others –Jakub Ondroušek, Cheran
Sun, and Timothy Doyle - finished during the last minute and got 320/320. China
is supposed to be very good in classics and it was visible - the Top 17 had 5
contestants from China.
Indian Team Individual Rank after Round 1 |
Round 2 (Assorted -
50 minutes): This round had 10 well-known variants and a new one (1234 Sudoku) on offer. A total of 11 assorted grids and two classics as fillers. I
was hoping to get around 300 out of the 580 points on offer (50%). However, I
was very slow and could only finish five correctly, with broken attempts in
some others. I took a risk with the 95-pointer (1234 Sudoku) but ended up
wasting some time without getting the right breakthrough. The overall return for me
was 195/580. A disappointing round.
Even more surprisingly, no one got the bonus in this round. So
the round was indeed tough for most contestants. The top scorers were Kota
Morinishi and Tiit Vunk, with 485/580 each.
My Round 3 scoresheet |
Round 3 (Assorted –
60 minutes): This round had 11 arithmetic-based Sudoku Puzzles, with two classics
as fillers. And I wanted to score the maximum points in this round as I liked
the variations. My expectation was to score about 400 points. I maintained a
decent pace and was able to get 395/640, with a 45-pointer almost done too. I was
satisfied with my performance in this round, as I got three high pointers
correct – product arrow, outside sums, and inner frame – a rare occurrence. An overall happy round.
Kota Morinishi finished with 6 minutes remaining and got
700/640. The next best was Bastien Vial-Jaime (580/640) and Tantan Dai
(575/640).
Round 4 (Straight – 30
minutes): This was a single Sudoku puzzle round and we would have numbers from A to
K, as in a card's suit where A is considered as 1. I normally don’t do well in
such rounds. Surprisingly, there were lots of stars available in the 13 x 13 Sudoku.
About 12-13 minutes into the round I heard ‘Finished’. So someone had already
finished the grid. Then, every few seconds, people kept on finishing. I felt I
could complete it too. Then I got the required breakthrough where I found two regions with a tight fit and finally completed with 4.31 minutes left. It was
the first round where I got a bonus. Overall 65 people finished the round correctly
within the given time limit. I got 220/200, better than what I expected. A second good round and I was in the Top 40 momentarily.
The top three finishers were Kota Morinishi (285/200), Will
Blatt (280/200), and Tiit Vunk (275/200).
Round 5 (Assorted –
80 minutes): This round had 16
assorted Sudoku Puzzles, mostly familiar ones, and 2 classics as fillers. Again, after
two good rounds, I was hoping to put in a good performance in this one. I was
expecting to get 450-500 points. This was the round with the highest points.
But I started on the wrong footing. I got the easiest Odd-Even-Big-Small Sudoku
wrong. Since there were lots of Sudoku Puzzles and I was solving them with a pen, I did not
attempt to correct the botched ones. There was some lapse in concentration too as
I do not get this many wrongs normally. I attempted the 90-point Mathrax Sudoku
and got it right, but probably took around 20+ minutes on it. The time was
eighty minutes but it got over too fast, it seemed. In the end, I had not much to show as results - only 5 correct. Unbelievably, I got Kropki wrong and got
something wrong in 3 others too. So, almost 205
points were thrown away. 285/880. It cannot get worse.
No bonus for anyone, but it was not surprising this time.
For once, Kota was not the round topper. The top finishers were Tiit Vunk
(750/880), Seung-Jae Kwak (700/880), and Jakub Ondroušek (655/880)
Indian Team Individual Rank and Score after Round 5 |
Jakub Ondroušek(465/550), Klára Vytisková (445/550), Cheran
Sun (440/550) and TiitVunk (440/550) were the top finishers. No bonus for
anyone. The round was indeed tough to finish.
Day 2 - pre-lunch
One of the rounds with a decent score |
Four contestants finished all Sudoku Puzzles with bonus - Kota
Morinishi (625/545), Seung-Jae Kwak (625/545), Jakub Ondroušek (625/545) and
Tiit Vunk (585/545).
Round 9 (Multisudoku –
20 minutes): This round was supposed
to have 150 points in 30 minutes, but, in the end, it was reduced to 100 points
in 20 minutes since the organizers felt it was too easy for 30 minutes. Again
this was a sort of round where you either get 100 or 0. After
round 4, I felt a bit more confident with this kind of round. This Sudoku also had
multiple starting points and was progressing well. Then we all hear ‘Finished’
before even six minutes have passed. A whopping 92 people finished the round
correctly. I also finished in 15+ minutes and got some bonus. Perhaps the
organizers wanted everyone to feel satisfied as this was the last individual
round. Of course, those who would have been on the borderline of the Top 10 would
not have been too happy. I expected 100 and got 120/100. A satisfying last round.
Overview of the team
rounds
Round 7 (Relay – 30
minutes): I was part of the India –B
team, along with Amit Sowani, Gaurav Jain, and Puneet Goenka. In terms of WSC
experience, this team was relatively low on experience. We practiced this round
on the 12th night. Each of us started with an Extra Region Sudoku to be
followed by Irregular Sudoku and Classic Sudoku. These were to be passed as a relay to the next team member. Despite practicing, we were found wanting
when it came to the actual round. We could finish only 4/12 sudokus correctly.
The classics were easy but in most cases, we did not even reach there. We got
800/2400 points. Overall, this was a very poor round for us.
Three teams completed all sudokus with a bonus - Slovakia-A
(2640), China-A (2520), and USA-A (2480).
Round 10 (X-Killer–
30 minutes): This round was
canceled at the last minute. A similar round was held at LMI in November 2015.
Most of the teams had prepared well for this round. Indian teams had also
practiced this round on the 12th night and were hoping to do well. Quite unfortunate.
Round 11 (Fractal– 30
minutes): This was a large grid and broadly
had four corners and a center part to solve. There was no best way to position
the grid from a solving convenience perspective. So we decided to keep the grid on one side of the table. Two people
would be comfortable solving in their natural way. I took a position where I
would write upside down and Puneet was also a little uncomfortable as he was solving from a side. But it was a team event and we had to adjust. The grid was very
easy, we made good progress, found an error while checking, corrected the error, and finally submitted it in less than 12 minutes. We got 18 minutes bonus. Overall score -
3120/2400. It is always satisfying when we do well in a team round.
Three teams completed with 22 minutes bonus each- Czech
Republic-A (3280), China-A (3280), and USA-A (3280). Overall 27 of the 47 teams
got the bonus.
Overall India Team B
performance: This takes into
consideration all individual rounds as well as team rounds. We finished 22nd,
still better than seven ‘A’ teams. Among ‘B’ teams, we finished sixth. If we
exclude the team rounds, we were 20th – this means we need to
improve a lot in the team rounds.
Overall India Team A
performance: India-A team was 6th
without the team rounds but finished 9th overall. The India-A team
did worse than India-B team in the team rounds. This year was a good chance to
enter the Top 5, considering the team composition. Next year, the team will
definitely improve from the 9th position.
My individual
performance: I was not consistent enough. Post-event, I thought I
should have finished at least ten places higher in the overall results.
However, despite not doing well, I was feeling better that I finished in
the Top 50. Also, I was happy that I got the bonus in the two single-Sudoku rounds.
Team India individual
performance: Rohan would have been disappointed at missing the Top 10
playoffs. Prasanna was always in the Top 10, after a relatively slow start. He improved consistently and made it to the playoff this year. And, in the
playoff, he finished 7th – a new high for individual ranking from
India.
Coincidentally, I have attended WSC two times and both times this record has been bettered (Rohan – 8th in 2012, and Prasanna – 7th in 2015). Kishore finished a decent 47th (officially) on debut.
In the end, Rishi, Amit, Kishore, and I
finished very closely. Jaipal had one Top-50 performance in round 3 and Gaurav
in round 9. Swaroop, Puneet, Jaipal, and Gaurav would definitely have
expected to perform better.
Individual playoffs: Playoffs
were held in three stages. The 7th-10th place finishers were
in the first playoff and Prasanna won this playoff comfortably. Prasanna moved
into the second playoff and started with a time disadvantage. Prasanna had also
reached the last puzzle but Bastien submitted correctly and won this playoff.
The final playoff was won by Kota, who became the World Sudoku Champion.
Again the format gives a lot of advantage to the top 3 - and well deserved too. For participants in the 5-10 places, it is very difficult to move to the final playoff.
Summary
Overall, it was a well-organized WSC. Two classics in each round was a good concept. The classics could have been used as a fallback option if we had less time left in a round, and a new grid to start. I never did get to that stage, though. The puzzle quality was good. Thanks to the puzzle creators and the organizers.
Overall, an enjoyable WSC.
Rakesh Rai
rakesh[Dot]k[Dot]rai[at]gmail.com
Rakesh Rai
rakesh[Dot]k[Dot]rai[at]gmail.com
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