Compare win and draw contributions, then project the tiebreak pace from one chess event snapshot.
| Measure | Inputs | Formula | Output |
|---|
| Result | Weight | Contribution | Note |
|---|---|---|---|
| Win | 1.0x | Full opponent score | Highest SB value |
| Draw | 0.5x | Half opponent score | Worth half credit |
| Loss | 0x | None | No SB credit |
| Bye | 0x | None | Ignored in SB |
| Band | Read | Event shape | Note |
|---|---|---|---|
| 0-9.99 | Light | Early or low-score run | Needs stronger wins |
| 10-19.99 | Solid | Club-level pace | Middle of the pack |
| 20-29.99 | Strong | Good Swiss result | Often tie-break ready |
| 30+ | Elite | Long event or strong field | Very hard to catch |
| Tiebreak | Uses opponent scores? | Best for | Tradeoff |
|---|---|---|---|
| Sonneborn-Berger | Yes | Rewarding wins and draws | Needs final standings |
| Buchholz | Yes | Overall schedule strength | Does not separate wins as cleanly |
| Wins count | No | Simple ranking views | Misses opponent strength |
| Direct score | No | Primary standings | Does not break ties alone |
The score depends on opponent final totals, so the cleanest result comes after the event settles.
A draw only counts half, but against a strong opponent it still moves the tiebreak in the right direction.
Jump to the rule table and use this Sonneborn-Berger score calculator to compare tiebreak strength, draw value, and projected finish from one event snapshot.
The Sonneborn-Berger score is an tiebreak system used in chess tournament to separate player with the same number of points. In tournament with many player with the same number of points, the organizers uses the Sonneborn-Berger score to determine the ranking of the players. The Sonneborn-Berger score does not only take into account the number of points that a player have earned throughout the tournament.
The quality of the opponents that a player has defeated also count towards a player’s Sonneborn-Berger score. The more points that a player defeat, the more higher there Sonneborn-Berger score will be. The Sonneborn-Berger score use specific mathematical rules to calculate the score of each player.
If a player win a game, they earn the number of points that their defeated opponent earn throughout the tournament. If a player draw a game with their opponent, they earn half of the points that their opponent earn throughout the tournament. If a player lose to their opponent, they earn zero point for their Sonneborn-Berger score.
The Sonneborn-Berger score for a player can change throughout a tournament as their opponents may win or lose their own game. Using a calculator, it is possible to project the Sonneborn-Berger score that a player will earn at the end of the tournament. The calculator will ask for the player’s current score and the scores of their opponent.
By entering these scores into the calculator, the calculator will display the Sonneborn-Berger score. If entering the middle of a tournament, the player’s score may not be accurate as some opponent may not have finished all of their game yet. Once the tournament is over and the players have final standings, the player can determine the actual Sonneborn-Berger score by adding up the number of points of the opponents that they has defeated and half of the points of the opponents that they have draw with.
The Sonneborn-Berger score is different than other tiebreaking system, such as the Buchholz system or the win-count system. The Buchholz system calculate the total points of each competitor’s opponent, regardless of whether they won or lost the games. However, the Sonneborn-Berger score only calculate the total points of each opponent for each player if they win or draw with their opponent.
The win-count system calculate the number of wins a competitor earn during a tournament. However, the win-count system does not calculate the strength of the opponent the competitor defeat. The Sonneborn-Berger score is a valuable system because it reward players for winning against strong opponent or drawing with strong opponent.
The length of the tournament and the type of tournament can also impact the Sonneborn-Berger score. In short tournament, the Sonneborn-Berger scores for each competitor will be lower. This is because there are fewer game between competitors.
Therefore, there is less opportunity to earn points from their opponent. In long tournament, the Sonneborn-Berger scores will be higher. This is because there are more game between competitors, and players earn more point from their opponent.
The projections for the tournament can show whether a competitor will earn a high Sonneborn-Berger score. Based off these projection, a competitor can adjust their playing strategy to win more game to increase they’re Sonneborn-Berger score. Each opponent a competitor face can have an impact on their Sonneborn-Berger score.
If the competitor defeat an opponent who earn alot of point in their tournament, the competitor will earn a lot of point as well. If the competitor draw with an opponent who earn alot of point, the competitor will earn some point. However, the competitor who defeat strong player will have a higher Sonneborn-Berger score than a competitor who defeat weak player, even if they win the same total number of game.