The hybrid format — round robin then playoffs — is how World Cups, conference tournaments, and many club cups decide a champion. Group play establishes seeds; knockout rounds create drama. The handoff only works if seeding rules are published before the first group game.
Typical flow
- Run round robin in one group or multiple pools
- Freeze standings after the last group match
- Apply tie-breakers to rank teams 1 through n
- Seed bracket: 1 vs 8, 4 vs 5, 2 vs 7, 3 vs 6 (standard 8-team bracket)
- Play elimination rounds to a final
Bracket size and byes
Knockout brackets need power-of-two slots (4, 8, 16). Six advancing teams often mean two byes for top seeds in an 8-team bracket.
Document who gets byes — usually 1st and 2nd overall seeds — and whether byes are rewarded for group winners only.
| Advancing teams | Bracket size | Byes needed |
|---|---|---|
| 4 | 4 | 0 |
| 6 | 8 | 2 |
| 8 | 8 | 0 |
| 12 | 16 | 4 |
Cross-pool seeding
With two pools, avoid same-pool rematches in round one if possible: A1 vs B2, B1 vs A2.
For three pools, rank all second-place teams by points or set ratio before assigning wild-card seeds.
What players need to know early
- How many teams advance from each group
- Tie-breakers that affect seeding
- Whether third place gets a playoff spot
- Extra time / penalties rules for knockout only
- When bracket fixtures publish (immediately after group end)
Tools for each phase
RobinDraw builds group-stage round robin fixtures and live standings. Use a knockout or bracket planner for the elimination phase — export team names from final standings so seeds match the table players saw.
FAQ
Can seeding change after group play?
Only via published tie-breakers applied to final results — never ad hoc.
Round robin rematch in the final?
Possible if bracket paths converge. Some tournaments reset bracket to avoid group rematches until the final — state that rule upfront.
Third-place playoff?
Schedule separately after semifinals if you promised it in the entry pack.