![]() |
| If this is your first visit, be sure to check out the FAQ by clicking the link above. You may have to register before you can post: click the register link above to proceed. To start viewing messages, select the forum that you want to visit from the selection below. |
|
|||||||
| Tags: elo, pwc, ratings |
|
|
Thread Tools | Display Modes |
|
#1
|
|||
|
|||
|
Anyone out there like cricket?
In cricket PriceWaterhouseCooper's Ratings are used http://www.cricket.pwcglobal.com/cricket/cricket.htm which give a cricketer a rating between 0 and 1000. The rating is worked as described here http://nrich.maths.org/public/viewer.php?obj_id=1385. I have a feeling that this system is more accurate at determining ability than the Elo system because it is weighted: You score more points for scoring runs against stronger bowlers, or for taking wickets in crucial matches. So in the Seville match of 1987 Kasparov's Elo rating would have gone down - because he drew a match with a lesser-rated player. But his PWC rating - if it existed - would have gone up because he win the 24th game to retain the title. Alan |
| Ads |
|
#2
|
|||
|
|||
|
Alan O'Brien wrote:
Anyone out there like cricket? Yup. In cricket PriceWaterhouseCooper's Ratings are used http://www.cricket.pwcglobal.com/cricket/cricket.htm which give a cricketer a rating between 0 and 1000. The rating is worked as described here http://nrich.maths.org/public/viewer.php?obj_id=1385. That doesn't describe how the PWC ratings work in very much detail -- it only goes as far as exponential decay. I can't quote the URL for PWC's details on it because their site is annoyingly designed to prevent that. However, if you go to http://www.pwcratings.com/cricket/cricket.htm Amd choose `About the ratings' to the left of the photos and then `Ratings Calculations', you get the details. It's basically an exponentially decaying average with various fiddle factors to take into account things like it being less impressive scoring highly against weak opposition or in a match where everyone else scores highly. There are minor bonuses for match-winning performances and for not-out batsmen. Clearly, the case of not-out batsmen has no analogy in chess. Match- winning performances aren't relevant to chess, either. In an individual match, the result is the sum of the individual games and it's not clear that it really makes much difference whether one wins a match +++==-- or --==+++. In a team competition, there's no scope for a player to make a match-winning contribution because he can't score more than a single point per round, just like anyone else on his team. There's no meaningful comparison between that and the case where a batsman makes 200 runs out of a team total of 350 or a bowler take seven of the ten wickets in an innings. I have a feeling that this system is more accurate at determining ability than the Elo system because it is weighted: Not necessarily. Although it uses more of the available data to come up with the rating, it also introduces more subjectivity. You score more points for scoring runs against stronger bowlers, or for taking wickets in crucial matches. That's not quite true -- you get bonuses for doing well against strong opposition and for performing well when your team wins (which is, I think, supposed to model match-winning performances but doesn't). So in the Seville match of 1987 Kasparov's Elo rating would have gone down - because he drew a match with a lesser-rated player. But his PWC rating - if it existed - would have gone up because he win the 24th game to retain the title. You're misunderstanding how the PWC ratings work -- there's no bonus for `performances in crucial games'; it's bonuses for `crucual performances in games', i.e., doing well when your team does well. As I've explained, that's not relevant to chess. I'm not sure that there's anything that should be added into chess ratings other than the result of the game and the strength of the players. For example, you could argue that the length of the game should be added because a quick win as Black is more impressive than a long win as White. That, however, introduces an entirely subjective value judgement into the rating scheme by biasing it towards Kasparovs who try to push you off the board right from the start and against Karpovs who attempt to accumulate small advantages over a period of time and then win the endgame. This also means that endgame skill contributes little to the rating, yet endgame skill is often stated as one of the most significant differences between a strong player and a weaker player. You might also want to say that a win precipitated by one's opponent's blunder is worth less than a win where one's opponent doesn't blunder but it would be very difficult to define blunder and unclear who is to be the judge of what is and is not a blunder. Dave. -- David Richerby Fluorescent Dangerous Chainsaw (TM): www.chiark.greenend.org.uk/~davidr/ it's like a lethal weapon but it could explode at any minute and it'll hurt your eyes! |
| Thread Tools | |
| Display Modes | |
|
|