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- Joined: Fri Aug 24, 2012 4:53 pm
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I looked at the run differential and pythagorean for all of my ATG9 teams. With 14 teams played, I'm minus 21 in pythagorean wins vs actual wins. But I saw a very interesting pattern in this small data set. I have 8 teams with a positive 100 run differential and with these teams I'm -32 in actual wins. None of these 8 teams outperformed the pythagorean prediction. For the 6 teams with a <100 net run differential, I'm +11 in wins versus the pythagorean.
I've been playing a lot of the single seasons sets and I saw a very similar pattern with 1977 and 1964 teams. I had 12 teams with a run differential >100 with a net -45 actuals vs the prediction and 5 teams with a run differential of <100 with a net -3 vs predicted wins.
So my supposition based on limited data is the pythagorean doesn't work for high run differential teams. And really why should it? This a formula based on empirical data from actual baseball results. It goes without saying that our online game is not actual baseball. Until/unless someone runs the numbers and demonstrates a correlation for the online game, we shouldn't expect it to provide an across the board accurate relationship between run differential and wins.
On the conspiracy theory front, in reviewing my teams I noticed I won a ring with my first ATG9 team. Since then 13 teams, 10 playoffs, and no rings. What's up with that?