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Thread: Baseball Rankings - 3/3

  1. #25

    Default Re: Baseball Rankings - 3/3

    Quote Originally Posted by Cajun_RH View Post
    Those two teams have played a combined 6 games. Which is why it is entirely too early to use RPI as a measuring stick.
    NM

  2. Default Re: Baseball Rankings - 3/3

    Quote Originally Posted by MiamiCajun32 View Post
    not useful to look at. Yale is #16.
    The really crazy part about this ...

    Yale has only played three games ... all versus LSU. Thus, now that the two have played, LSU takes a huge OWP hit (and our OOWP is affected somewhat). This is because Yale's record in non-LSU games is 0-0 or .000. Weight that .000 by three games and LSU takes a huge hit in OWP. LSU's OWP is .3564. Had they not have played Yale this weekend, their OWP would be .4901. Stunning difference ... especially since OWP is 50% of the formula.

    This is just one reason why RPI is silly early in the season.

    Brian

  3. #27

    Default Re: Baseball Rankings - 3/3

    Brian, do you calculate the OOWP the same way? That is to say, just take the calculated OWP value for a team and add them up? So take EIU's OWP*4 + NWST OWP*1 + ...

    Also, just double checking, the adjusted WP only factor into your WP, right? So just apply the 1.3 or 0.7 to your own games. OWP and OOWP are 1.0 weighted numbers


  4. #28

    Default Re: Baseball Rankings - 3/3

    Quote Originally Posted by angeleast View Post
    baseball will be baseball and all teams will drop one or two along the way ....
    To put some perspective on that.....UCLA won it all last year and lost 17 games. Eighteen of the teams that finished the regular season in Baseball America's top 25 finished with fifteen losses or more.

    Win 80% of your games in baseball and you are almost assured of being among some of the elite programs in the nation.

  5. Default Re: Baseball Rankings - 3/3

    Quote Originally Posted by wcd35 View Post
    Brian, do you calculate the OOWP the same way? That is to say, just take the calculated OWP value for a team and add them up? So take EIU's OWP*4 + NWST OWP*1 + ...
    That is correct.

    So while your own W/L record does not contribute to your OWP ... you can see that it does contribute to your OOWP. That is ... your own W/L record sans the W/L record against your opponents.

    Brian

  6. Default Re: Baseball Rankings - 3/3

    Quote Originally Posted by wcd35 View Post
    Also, just double checking, the adjusted WP only factor into your WP, right? So just apply the 1.3 or 0.7 to your own games. OWP and OOWP are 1.0 weighted numbers
    Correct ... per the "Note:" I provided in the above post.

    "Note: OWP calculations do not use the home/road weightings that WP calculations use."

    Brian

  7. #31

    Default Re: Baseball Rankings - 3/3

    Final poll updated.


  8. #32

    Default Re: Baseball Rankings - 3/3


  9. Default Re: Baseball Rankings - 3/3

    I was being sarcastic, but yes 3 + 3 tends to equal 6.


  10. Default Re: Baseball Rankings - 3/3

    Quote Originally Posted by GoneGolfin View Post
    I do not think anyone has these calculations down perfectly yet. Warren has one set of numbers, Boyd has another, and mine differ slightly from both of them. I did peek under the covers of Warren's data (not possible with Boyd) and I think he may be calculating SOS incorrectly ... in particular it may be OWP (but also possibly OOWP). I sent him a note to discuss ... will see if he responds.

    In any event, for those interested in the details as to how OWP is calculated for a given team ...

    - Take the Div. I W/L record for each of your opponents and remove the results of your games against that team.
    - Calculate the above winning percentage for each opponent to four decimals of precision.
    - Weight that winning percentage by the number of games played against each respective opponent.

    DO NOT sum the weighted W/L records of each of your opponents (non-Cajun games) and then calculate the percentage on that summed W/L record. This will yield a different result. This *seems* to be what Warren Nolan is doing.

    Example:
    Southern Mississippi is 6-6 overall. However, they are 6-3 in games not involving the Cajuns. Hence, for OWP purposes we use .6667 * 3 (weighted by three games played).

    - Then take all of the calculated weighted percentages and add them. Divide that sum by the total number of games played. You then have your OWP.

    Note: OWP calculations do not use the home/road weightings that WP calculations use.

    Example using Cajun opponents ...

    Eastern Illinois (2-10) ... 1-7 in non-Cajun games = .1250 * 4 (games) = .5000
    Northwestern State (6-4) ... 6-3 in non-Cajun games = .6667 * 1 (game) = .6667
    Southern Mississippi (6-6) ... 6-3 in non-Cajun games = .6667 * 3 (games) = 2.0000
    LSU (9-2) ... 9-1 in non-Cajun games = .9000 * 1 (game) = .9000
    Alabama (5-5) ... 4-3 in non-Cajun games = .5714 * 3 (games) = 1.7143
    --
    Total: 5.781/12 games = .4817 (note the above uses rounded figures to four decimal places)

    This is obviously different than the summed 49-50 record (.4949) ... and in some cases, the difference can be much more significant.

    Thus we have the following RPI calculation for UL ...

    WP = .7937
    OWP = .4817
    OOWP = .6137
    SOS = .5257
    --
    RPI = .5927

    On Warren's site, if you look at the SOS page, he calculates an opponents winning percentage of .4949 (49-50) by summing the weighted W/L record of each Cajun opponent and calculating the winning percentage. His SOS comes to .5249. His OOWP calculation is thus .5849.

    Brian
    The best RPI formula would be one that Brian Gone Golfin were to create, in my opinion :-)

  11. Default Re: Baseball Rankings - 3/3

    Quote Originally Posted by wcd35 View Post
    It's pretty simple. Basically, its worthless until enough teams play each other.

    RPI = (WP * 0.25) + (OWP * 0.50) + (OOWP * 0.25)

    Where WP is Winning Percentage, OWP is Opponents' Winning Percentage and OOWP is Opponents' Opponents' Winning Percentage.

    "RPI formula values each road victory as 1.3 instead of 1.0. Each home win will be valued at 0.7 instead of 1.0. Conversely, each home loss will count 1.3 against a team's RPI and each road loss will count 0.7 against a team's RPI. Neutral-site games will retain the same value of 1.0."
    Just as an addendum to this ...

    While the NCAA obviated the existing bonus/penalty structure with the advent of the 2013 RPI (weighting home/road), there is a penalty system that does exist ... that is not accounted for in either Boyd's or Warren's calcs. While results against non-D1 opponents are not included in the Base RPI calculations ... a loss to a non-D1 school will result in a penalty of .0022. Forty Eight (48) such penalties were levied in 2013 for non-D1 losses by D1 teams. A few were from some of the bigger names (Florida Gulf Coast, Texas Tech, Villanova, Northwestern, McNeese State). The SWAC had half of them (24).

    Brian

  12. #36

    Default Re: Baseball Rankings - 3/3

    I thought SWAC was D-1? Isn't that the conference Southern plays in? I can remember being in regionals with them in the past and I thought only D-1 teams were in the NCAA tournament?


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