facey wroteCOLONSuperMario wroteCOLON When i say a win is a win nick, in H2H if you win the goals category -> that is a win. i'm not talking about the whole week. We can split the wins in categories.
I think you lost me here.
SuperMario wroteCOLON
The system you are proposing suggests that a Win is not a Win by comparing the magnitudes by which each team won their respective categories. ---> that is not H2H.
I dunno what your saying here, cannot tell if its an understand difference or a disagreement. I'm proposing (well, Kareem did):
1) Normal h2h week 16 scoring categories, winning each category is worth 1 win.
2) If that results in a tie, the magnitude of of scores are compared, wherein winning 1 category by a fair margin is worth more then barely winning (and each category will be normalized, so the mean and standard deviations between categories same so that they can be fairly compared.
SuperMario wroteCOLON
And all of this avoids the fact that a team can lose the week 6-8-2 yet still be proclaimed the better team by standardizing. now obviously you want to use standardizing
for only tie breaks . BUT [You cannot have a way of breaking a tie break that would change the score of the game if applied to ALL match ups. I.e. Overtime and Shootouts do not change the score in regulation. Standardizing does.
I'm really not sure here... if your just using goals it would change the winner, if your just using home-ice advantage it would change the winner...
So ? (this is only for playoffs).... this method makes a comparison within the matchup, relevant to how each team played.I'm really not sure if you're grasping tie breakers or just arguing because its me.
I'll try to rephrase:
I'm proposing (well, Kareem did):
1) Normal h2h week 16 scoring categories, winning each category is worth 1 win.
2) If that results in a tie, the magnitude of of scores are compared, wherein winning 1 category by a fair margin is worth more then barely winning (and each category will be normalized, so the mean and standard deviations between categories same so that they can be fairly compared.
The best way I can do it is with an example:
Imagine an H2H League with 4 scoring categories: G, A, PTS, FOW:
1. Every category you beat the other person in, is a win and vice versa for a loss (we agree till here). Hence "winning a week" involves going 1-0-3 or 2-1-1/2-0-2 etc etc.
2. Now logically what you are saying makes sense. I.e. If there is a tie and Team A has: 25G, 25A, 50PTS, 50FOW and Team B has: 30G, 15A, 45PTS, 60FOW, then we standardize each category, see who won their respective categories by a bigger margin.
3. The issue is that this system fails to account for the following factors:
A. In H2H, beating the opposing team in a category is a win. Magnitude does not change a damn thing. If a team beats another me by one goal or 10, its the same thing just like in the NHL. A win is a win.
B. And this is the bigger issue: If let us say we implement your system and the stats are as follows:
Team A: 25G, 25A, 50PTS, 10 FOW
Team B: 24G, 25A, 49 PTS, 100 FOW
Then, Team A has a record of 2-1-1 according to H2H rules.
BUT IF YOU STANDARDIZE the stats, Team B will be the winner because Team B is FAR better in FOW than Team A is better in Goals and Points.
Now you can argue that that makes sense. Team B is indeed almost equal offensively and far better in FOW.
BUT according to H2H rules, Team A is the winner.
So my point is that if in times where one team wins (in this example Team A wins according to H2H), standardizing the scores gives the victory to the opposing team. so HOW can you use that to break a tie? That undermines the concept of H2H altogether.
In fact, I bet you if you take the weeks from this year where teams went 6-8-2 or scores similar to that, there will be MANY instances where the winning team would become the losing team if you standardize the scores.
The system is just as flawed as using Goals to decide the winner was my point. Both are flawed.