期刊论文详细信息
Journal of Sports Analytics
Randomness, uncertainty, and the optimal college football championship tournament size
article
Grace Muller1  Samuel Hood1  Joel Sokol1 
[1] H. Milton Stewart School of Industrial and Systems Engineering, Georgia Institute of Technology
关键词: Simulation;    sports prediction;    American college football tournament;    uncertainty assessment;   
DOI  :  10.3233/JSA-220613
来源: IOS Press
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【 摘 要 】

Every year, there is a popular debate over how many teams should take part in the NCAA’s FBS-level college football championship tournament, and especially whether it should be expanded from 4 teams to 8 or even 12. The inherent tradeoff is that the larger the tournament, the higher the probability that the true best team is included (“validity”), but the lower the probability that the true best team will avoid being upset and win the tournament (“effectiveness”). Using simulation based on empirically-derived estimates of the ability to measure true team quality and the amount of randomness inherent in each game, we show that the effect of expanding the tournament to 8 teams could be very small, an effectiveness decrease of only 2-3% while increasing validity by 1-4%, while a 7-team tournament provides slightly better tradeoffs. A 12-team tournament would decrease effectiveness by 5-6%.

【 授权许可】

Unknown   

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