Dear David:
I have not looked on the Web, but the first two proofs are rather
obvious. The apparent horse racing scheme is basically a triple
elimination tournament but with five competing each round instead of
two. By triple elimination I mean being outrun, directly or indirectly,
by three different horses.
The third proof is slightly more complex. Here is a quick overview.
You can make this outline below into a lot of precise cases, if you
want, but it just turns the whole thing into a tedious proof.
In the apparent scheme in the first two proofs, five different horses
win the first five races, without any of them losing to any of the
others, and all 25 horses compete in the first five races. If you race
the five winners in the sixth race, as you do in the apparent scheme in
the first two proofs, you do not know who is second or third, so you
need the seventh race. If you don't race the five winners in the sixth
race, then you need the seventh race, just to find out who is first (and
you won't be able to determine who is second or third in all possible
permutations of the horses).
Suppose five different horses win the first five races without any of
them losing to any of the others, as mentioned, but suppose at least one
horse races at least twice in the first five races, so there is at least
one horse left over that did not race. Now you have at least six
potential winners, and the sixth race will not be enough to determine
the winner. You will have at least seven horses that you have to race
in the seventh race, so the scheme won't work in all permutations.
Suppose at most four different horses win the first four races, without
any of them losing to any of the others, in every possible permutation
of the horses. This means that at most twenty horses race in the first
five races, leaving at least five horses left over. Again, you have at
least six potential winners, and the sixth race will not be enough to
determine the winner. You will have at least nine horses that you have
to race in the seventh race, so the scheme won't work in all
permutations.
The upshot is that you have to race 25 horses the obvious way in the
first five races. This necessitates seven races for the triple
elimination tournament. The sixth race has to be the winners of the
first five. The seventh race has to be the horse that finished third in
the sixth race, the two horses that placed in the race that the horse
that finished second in the sixth race won, and the two horses that
showed, but did not win, in the race that the horse that won the sixth
race earlier won. There is no other way to make this all work out in no
more than seven races.
Sincerely,
Tom
On 2021-09-06 17:58, 'David Ash' via Competition Corner Participant
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