200 Points for best (correct) answer to this math problem
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wiffleSBR Wise Guy
- 07-07-10
- 610
#106Comment -
widebody2SBR Hustler
- 01-27-11
- 75
#108Two teams compete. The first team to score 3 times wins.
The odds of the first team winning the match is P. The odds of the second team winning the match is (1-P), which you can also label Q. P and Q are both real numbers between 0 and 1 exclusive (neither number is a 0 or 1).
What are the odds of the first team winning the first point?
Points are only awarded a correct answer. Serious attempts only please; if you post junk it will be moved and ridiculed. If no one wins within 24 hours of this post, no points will be awarded. If more than one answer is correct, the first one gets all the points, and later answers get none.
Since winning the first point and winning the match are completely separate you can not calculate the odds of scoring first based on the odds of winning the match. The first team may be a team that is a slow starter and regularly gets behind in score in the first half of games only to regularly come back and dominate the second halves and win 90% of their games. They may have a 90% chance of winning this game while only having a 5% chance of scoring the first point. Impossible to calculate from the given data.
I could come up with an equation to answer the question, if scoring the first point and actually winning the match had any type of relation but they don't. So the equation would be a waste of timeComment -
donjuanSBR MVP
- 08-29-07
- 3993
#109I could come up with an equation to answer the question, if scoring the first point and actually winning the match had any type of relation but they don't. So the equation would be a waste of timeComment -
WendysRoxSBR High Roller
- 07-22-10
- 184
#110so I read through most of 4 pages of this crap only to find out that justin7 didn't even have a solution? Forgive me, but I assumed this was a "trivia" type thing, not just a "hey guys, can anyone help me with this problem?"
Ahh well, maybe subconsciously I learned something.Comment -
widebody2SBR Hustler
- 01-27-11
- 75
#111We are talking about a math problem. When solving math problems you can only use given information, or things that you can deduce from the given information. Justin never linked scoring order to odds of winning in any way.
Just because you know in "real life" that the odds of scoring first are in someway linked to the odds of actually winning a match, does not mean that you can use that information when solving a math problem.
Using Justin's given information we only know the odds of which team scores last. We have absolutely zero information on anything besides that. I think I know what he was going for. He wanted odds of the first scored point, in a perfect math world where the odds of scoring each point are all equal. He never stated that, and honestly that is not really how the real world works anyway.Last edited by widebody2; 08-23-11, 08:05 AM.Comment -
wantitall4moiSBR MVP
- 04-17-10
- 3063
#112pretty sure he was looking for a formula to proof out odds on a series or a match.
And then used whatever weighted numbers or formulas he already has to plug in all the advantages he left out here.
In a real world application at least for a best of 5 series type application, you generally have overall odds as well as odds for the first 2 games. You just have to then determine the odds of one team winning in an order that may offer a different value versus the overall odds. So in a 'perfect' unweighted scenario the series would go 5 games and the final game price would be equal to the original series price. Which in the times that does happen isnt always (almost never)the case. So for practical purposes it is generally better to bet a favorite before the series starts and the dog in the final game. If one of them wins in less than 5 games, oh well. for one way action purposes it is always best to have the advantage of seeing two opening lines for the same event.Comment -
RickySteveRestricted User
- 01-31-06
- 3415
#113squiggley not wearing clothesComment -
EthanRestricted User
- 02-14-11
- 375
#115My math is always pathetic. and I am cursed to always be losing in betting.Comment -
frankthetankSBR Wise Guy
- 08-29-09
- 652
#116the answer is 1Comment
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