|
Menu
Login: | Explaining level changesPremier A: Shepton Mallet A v Redland Anacondas (Wed 07 Mar 2018)Match played between Andy Marsh (home) and Tom Elgood (away).Match won by Tom Elgood. Result: 4-11,7-11,6-11. Starting level for Andy Marsh: 6,694, level confidence: 63%. Starting level for Tom Elgood: 7,005, level confidence: 81%. Set manually. Tom Elgood to win as he is currently playing 5% better than Andy Marsh. Tom Elgood won all of the games and 66% of the points. This games result would be expected if he was better by around 55% or more. This points result would be expected if he was better by around 94% (PAR scoring). These are weighted and combined to calculate that Tom Elgood played 94% better than Andy Marsh in this match. Assuming that any level changes are shared between both players, for this result it looks like Tom Elgood actually played at a level of 9,541 and Andy Marsh at a level of 4,915. Without any damping, both players would need to be adjusted by 36% to match this result. Factoring in the relative levels of confidence which allows players with low confidence in their levels to change more quickly, the adjustment for Tom Elgood changes to +27% and Andy Marsh changes to -35%. After applying standard match damping, the adjustment for Tom Elgood becomes +7.6% and for Andy Marsh becomes -9.5%. Given Tom Elgood's level and the type of match played, an additional damping of 7.9% has been applied to his level change. Given Andy Marsh's level and the type of match played, an additional damping of 6.7% has been applied to his level change. Looks like he wasn't taking the match too seriously... Apply match/event weighting of 75% for 'Mixed Spring 2017/2018' so the adjustment for Tom Elgood is +5.3% and for Andy Marsh is -6.5%. Apply limits to the amount of change for a single match which are based on player level, level confidence and time since last match so that Andy Marsh is limited to -5% level change. In general a player's level won't go up by more than 10% or drop more than 5% if they've played in the last 7 days but those limits are relaxed if their previous match was further back. Increase level confidence due to one more match played. Tom Elgood: 90%, Andy Marsh: 79%. Reduce level confidence based on how unexpected the result is. Tom Elgood: 66%, Andy Marsh: 58%. A final adjustment of +0% has been made to both players as part of the automatic calibration that is performed after each match. All players in this pool will have been adjusted equally in order to remain equivalent to other player pools. Final level for Andy Marsh: 6,370, level confidence: 58%. Final level for Tom Elgood: 7,388, level confidence: 66%. Notes
|