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Thursday Projections for the Big Sky

Posted: Wed Feb 09, 2005 1:48 pm
by ZifCat52
Here are the projected winners for Thursday's games and the projected year-end stnadings, based on the Sagarin ratings of Wednesday, Feb. 9.

Weber State over Sac State

NAU over Idaho State in Pocatello


Projected Standings

Montana State 11 / 3
Portland State 10 / 4
Montana 9/ 5
NAU 7 / 7
Eastern Washington 6 / 8
Weber State 6 / 8
Sacramento State 4 / 10
Idaho State 3 / 11

As stated in another post, the confernece championship may come down to the last weekend series that Portland State plays at MSU and UM, the current projections indicate that PSU will lose both and finish second.

At this time, both Portland State and the Bobcats have qualified for the conference tourney, the Griz's magic number is 2 for the tourney. Both Montana State and Portland State hold the conference championship in their own hands, if they win out, they will win the conference championship.

Posted: Fri Feb 11, 2005 9:21 am
by wbtfg
Just saw that ISU beat NAU, and Weber beat Sac.


Also...Helena Capital beat Bozeman!

Posted: Fri Feb 11, 2005 9:35 am
by Barnbat
:shock: :shock: NAU in particular and SAC are making Projections difficult. I do find the projections interesting. thank you. :shock: :shock:

Posted: Fri Feb 11, 2005 9:46 am
by iaafan
What a finish at WSU. Tie game, guy steals ball with 2.5 and lays it in at buzzer.

Posted: Fri Feb 11, 2005 10:17 am
by El Profesor
I thought some of you might be interested in the following information. I have thoroughly researched Sagarin's ability to predict winners of games in NCAA football. I am currently running another study about his ability to predict basketball winners -- early indications are that his winning percentages are similar to those for football. Harmon is another service that publishes power ratings, similar to Sagarin's. The most interesting finding from the following passage is that a wagerer in Las Vegas could have made money by betting AGAINST Sagarin's picks!!! (Remember, the following information pertains to football. Also, the study spans the years 1991-1998, so the results may be different in more recent years, though I doubt they are.)

"Harmon’s ability to predict the outright winners is measured by a 74.39% success rate overall, while Sagarin was 75.55% successful in the later-year games (though only 65.50% successful overall and a very surprising 54.56% for games in 1992-1994). Favored teams tended to win their games 76.71% of the time, suggesting that even Harmon’s success rate is nothing extraordinary, and is actually 2.32% worse than Las Vegas bookmakers’ rates of predicting winners of college football games."

"Against the spread, Harmon is only able to correctly predict which teams will cover the spread half of the time, evidence which is consistent with sports betting markets being efficient. Harmon’s 50.00% overall winning percentage is nearly identical to the 49.18% and 50.17% from the respective naive strategies of always picking the favorites and always picking the home teams. Sagarin’s overall and early-year winning percentages of 45.66% and 38.31%, respectively, are not only significantly different from 50.00%, but they also suggest that a strategy of betting against Sagarin’s picks over these two time-frames would have been statistically significantly profitable. Though this evidence suggests that both experts’ projections lack any informational content for predicting winners against spreads, the possibility still exists that the experts’ seemingly impressive ability to pick straight-up winners will motivate sentimental betting activity."