Given a single round-robin chess tournament with $n$ players where the winner/loser gets $2/0$ points and on even both players get $1$ point, we sort the final amount of individual points ($p_1 \leq p_2 \leq \ldots \leq p_n$).
I am looking for a sharp lower bound $f(k)$ for $p_k$ with $1 \leq k \leq n$ and without any knowledge about the other points.
My approach: It is trivial that $f(1)=0$, because one player can lose against all others. Besides $f(2)=1$ because if a player has $0$ points he will be always unique with that property and on the last place, however it is possible that two players draw against each other and lose against all others. Besides it is certainly true that $f(k)\leq k-1$, because if $k>1$, $k$ players can draw against each other and lose against all others, making $p_k=k-1$. However I can not show that this bound is sharp because when $k$ is high, they might be other effects to consider i am unable to see yet.