[quote name=\'Matt Ottinger\' post=\'210151\' date=\'Mar 11 2009, 08:24 PM\']
[quote name=\'TLEberle\' post=\'210147\' date=\'Mar 11 2009, 09:53 PM\']I have no idea how this would be feasible, but I really like the idea of a loser's round, where the high scoring non-winners would play for a single spot in the next round.[/quote]
I'm not sure what you're saying here, because the only way I can interpret it is more or less what we're talking about, and we're saying why it's NOT a good idea. In the tournament, the four "highest scoring non-winners" advance. The original question was whether Jeopardy had ever created a "losers round" featuring only wild-card players competing in one of the three semi-final games. While Jeopardy is free to do whatever they want, it doesn't make a lot of sense for them to do that, since it A) guarantees that someone who lost their first game would be playing for the championship and B) forces three of the five who won their games to all play against each other in the semifinals.
Neither of those are Worst-Idea-Ever disastrous decisions that would forever alter the purity and goodness which is the world's most popular quiz show. After all, you still have to win the rest of your matches no matter who you face. Ultimately, if TPTB decided that three wild card players would make an intriguing matchup, it's certainly within their right to set it up that way. It just doesn't "feel" right as a basic issue of fairness. I doubt they've ever done it, and I doubt they ever will.
To answer one of toetyper's original thoughts definitively, no, the semifinal matchups are definitely not random, nor are they pre-determined by outcome, the way a traditional bracket would be. After the nine semifinalists are determined, Jeopardy producers decide who will play whom in the semifinal games.
[/quote]
Matt, if I'm understanding Travis correctly, he's saying that by having 3 wildcards together, and having the 4th against seasoned winners, sure you're guaranteeing one WC will move on, but chances are ONLY one will move on. If you spread them out, there's a chance (albeit a slim one) of having an ALL-wildcard final.