A "hit list" is TD slang for a list of players who need to contact the tournament staff, usually about a membership or payment issue. If you're running a small tournament, you'll probably just contact the players directly, so this is more of a large tournament issue, other perhaps, than the use of WinTD to identify players with problems to resolve.


Listing Potential Problems


WinTD can help you identify players with either of two problems: a missing or expired ID, or an incompletely paid account. The former is identified by examining the ID and Expiration fields in the player's record, and the second by the "Fee Paid" field. Note that, with regard to payments, WinTD can only help you keep track of whether a player owes money or not. The reason and precise amount will have to be recorded elsewhere.


To create a list of players who may have one of these problems, create a Player Window listing the players in the section(s) you wish to process. Do Edit-Change Layout or hit the Change Layout icon. In the Change Layout Dialog Box, go to the "Show" list box in the top right. To list the players with membership problems, choose "Non-Member." To show those with payment issues, choose "Not Paid." To list players with either of the two, choose "Problems." When you click OK, the player window will show only the players with the problems you requested.


Maintaining the List


Inevitably, some of the players will have already taken care of matters. To take players off the list, do the following:




Notifying the Players


What you do here is going to depend a great deal upon the size of the tournament, and the number of staff members available. For a small enough tournament, you would probably just talk to the players directly, so we're assuming that the tournament is big enough that that technique would be infeasible. Many organizers start out by posting a printed copy of the list that you've just made near either the pairing sheets or the wall charts. This, combined with an announcement to the players (and coaches for scholastic tournaments) to check the list will often result in many of the problem cases being dealt with early in the tournament. If that doesn't work, there are a number of other more aggressive techniques to get the players' attention: