bmorepunk
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Have they stated the chances of a team winning the Super Bowl is even across all 32 teams?
bmorepunk":1w4r6n4k said:Have they stated the chances of a team winning the Super Bowl is even across all 32 teams?
bmorepunk":3pjexlb8 said:Cartire":3pjexlb8 said:bmorepunk":3pjexlb8 said:Cartire":3pjexlb8 said:Pretty sure the only correct answer is 1/32. Just saying.
No.
Please elaborate.
The NFL season is not a statistically randomized process. If it were, the probability would be 1/32. But it's not, it is indeterminate.
Ad Hawk":r8glwpb0 said:So we're really discussing the difference between chance and odds?
If what you say, Cartire, is absolutely true, then believing we have a "better chance" than other teams is simply horse-manure, in spite of our team's previous success, players, coaches, homefield advantage, etc., right? I'm just clarifying.
Sarlacc83":3gld0wwh said:bmorepunk":3gld0wwh said:Have they stated the chances of a team winning the Super Bowl is even across all 32 teams?
No. But what you said about not being able to reasonable predict the odds early played into my response. FOs model is reasonable, given that they gave Seattle a 20% or so chance to win the Super Bowl last year, which was quite high and as it turns out, pretty accurate.
Point being, there aren't an indefinite amount of variables. The key is finding the meaningful statistics in the noise.
Cartire":3qggtnfk said:Ad Hawk":3qggtnfk said:So we're really discussing the difference between chance and odds?
If what you say, Cartire, is absolutely true, then believing we have a "better chance" than other teams is simply horse-manure, in spite of our team's previous success, players, coaches, homefield advantage, etc., right? I'm just clarifying.
Correct. At this current junction. However, what you guys are trying to make a point of is basically our standard practice of odds. We use them for betting and making better informed decisions. Teams are given a better shot at winning due to popularity of opinion. We can take information from previous seasons, personnel, past results, and utilize that to make an informed popular opinion. This includes the use of saber metrics from previous seasons. But there is no definitive formula because its still a prediction of future results.
The only true odds right now are 1/32. If I have 32 cards with only 1 of them having an X on them. The chance that someone will pick that X is 1/32.
As records shift, odds will shift too.
chris98251":1f70jr7r said:If you find a way to crunch numbers for the Super Bowl winner can you do it for the lottery next?
bmorepunk":30b69k5m said:Cartire":30b69k5m said:Ad Hawk":30b69k5m said:So we're really discussing the difference between chance and odds?
If what you say, Cartire, is absolutely true, then believing we have a "better chance" than other teams is simply horse-manure, in spite of our team's previous success, players, coaches, homefield advantage, etc., right? I'm just clarifying.
Correct. At this current junction. However, what you guys are trying to make a point of is basically our standard practice of odds. We use them for betting and making better informed decisions. Teams are given a better shot at winning due to popularity of opinion. We can take information from previous seasons, personnel, past results, and utilize that to make an informed popular opinion. This includes the use of saber metrics from previous seasons. But there is no definitive formula because its still a prediction of future results.
The only true odds right now are 1/32. If I have 32 cards with only 1 of them having an X on them. The chance that someone will pick that X is 1/32.
As records shift, odds will shift too.
Sports gambling uses statistical models to determine how to best leverage the guesses of a reasonably large population to make money. Betting odds and probabilities of systems are not the same things. These two things related to NFL games and NFL seasons are related, but the idea that betting odds accurately represent the probability of events is absurd and unscientific.
Your poor understanding of probability is demonstrated by your treatment of the NFL season's winner as a stochastic process; it is not. We do have more information as the season goes along to make more informed guesses as to who will win the Super Bowl; the actual odds of any team winning the Super Bowl is 1/32. It is not a random process, and we don't understand the system nor know how to measure proper initial conditions. Not knowing these does not make the probabilities even.
Cartire":3n29uaqx said:Actually, at the start of the season. IT is 1/32. All teams are considered equal at this point, records are even across the board. No single schedule is technically harder yet. Analysis utilize past seasons for predicting strength of schedule, along with past personal stats and observations.
But currently, at the start of the 2014 season, all teams are even. Regardless if we assume the Raiders will suck again or what not.
As of right now, its 1/32.
bmorepunk":nwb8nn1q said:Ad Hawk":nwb8nn1q said:Seahawk Sailor":nwb8nn1q said:pocketprotector":nwb8nn1q said:In the last 10 years, the returning champion has a 10% chance of winning the superbowl.
Ad Hawk":nwb8nn1q said:In the last 10 years, how many have actually done it?
MizzouHawkGal":nwb8nn1q said:New England 2004-05.
One in the last ten years. Ten percent chance. I'm not very good with math. Can someone tell me if this sounds right?
10% have done it, but that doesn't equal chance, I don't think.
Yes, I agree that the OP has no idea what the difference between probability and simple division is.
bmorepunk":171p38c3 said:Logic doesn't work when you start with a false premise.
bmorepunk":3tedx82g said:I agree that the idea that gets thrown around of the predictability of the repeat is silly.
"Troll" is inappropriate. I'm not trying to get people riled up. I do think the language is very important when talking about mathematics and statistics. While a lot of these terms are loosely used in common writing we should work hard to make sure what we're saying is reasonably accurate.
I don't think Peter King has any idea what numbers are.