Well, as Easy-E noted, the redraw is the extra luck factor, for two reasons.What is the “one extra luck factor”?
Reason 1: The Bye
First, somebody will, by random draw, get a bye in any round that starts with an odd number of players, although a player can't get a second bye unless everyone left has already had a bye during the event.
The bye rule proved very important at the 2020 Derby City Classic, which was the last one contested. In the Bank Pool event, just three players remained prior to the last draw. Entering round thirteen, Dennis Orcullo was undefeated and Billy Thorpe and Evan Lunda each carried a loss. As it turned out, Evan Lunda drew the bye, and when Orcullo beat and eliminated Thorpe, Evan's bye turned out to be a bye into the final. Evan Lunda ultimately finished second, earning $8,000, while Billy Thorpe came third and cashed for $5,350, so Evan's bye proved to be worth quite a bit of money.
Reason 2: Undefeated players can draw players with a loss
In regular double elimination, once you beat a player, as long as you stay undefeated, you can't face them again until the finals. Similarly, if they beat you, you can't draw them again until they take a loss except in the finals. At Derby City, however, when the redraw is done, no distinction is made between the players carrying a loss and those that remain undefeated. This means that you can, and often do, draw a player you have already played. In fact, you can draw the same player twice in a row. Imagine drawing Shane, losing, and then drawing him again in the very next round. Similarly, you might beat him and then draw him again in the very next round. The Derby brings new meaning to the term "luck of the draw."
So, yes, the redraw is the extra luck factor.
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