So you admit that you are using a very limited set of data. Wouldn't you agree that this reduces the statistical significance of your results, and therefore the effect of the advantage should be reduced?-> Yes, I am sure the impacts are multiple and correlated . But designing a rating, you have to keep things operable. The home promoter factor was identified as an important and strongly significant one. An other option was boxer nationality/show country, and this factor is significant too. But the current choice appears more related to business practice.
Again, you don't really understand the factors and mechanisms that contribute to this, and yet you allow the rankings to be influenced in very significant ways by it.-> This was tested, and didn't change the results. Even KO/TKO results show a ratio of 2.3:1 for the home promoter boxer.
So you're not even using the same methodology as the paper that your entire premise is based on. This is madness!!-> home boxer >= 4 bouts with show promoter, opponent <2; study is by boxer nationality
And to add to all that, you are using a completely arbitrary percentage. Don't you think that you should try tweaking this percentage a little bit, considering that it's completely arbitrary anyway and it has produced several unrealistic and undesirable anomalies in your rankings?-> This is just an explanation model, might be more or less
Home promoter may be significant, but you are treating it as though it is as significant as everything else combined. Even your rules for determining home promoter are not particularly fair or effective. Who do you think a promoter is more likely to favor, a superstar they just signed, or a mid-level fighter they've had for 5 fights? What if the promoter gets options on the visiting fighter if he wins? Not to mention that different promoters/countries/states have HUGELY disparate effects on fights and you are completely ignoring this.-> Home promoter is no way little information. It is an important factor. The whole business is built around this factor. And the participants very well know, why.
I really do appreciate what you're trying to do here but there is absolutely no way to implement it in a computerized system, and your attempts to do so have created a huge mess.
