[email protected] wrote: ↑26 Oct 2019, 18:59
I'm confused on a few points on the ratings explanation page:
1. "The rating of a boxer is reduced by 50% for every time period of inactivity of 18 months - and to even less in proportion to a longer time period of inactivity"
I can't get the math to work out in the example. The example says the boxer has been out for 23 months. 50% reduction for 18 months = 2.78% per month, times 23 = 63.9% reduction, or a rate of 46.1%
Or if the formula is 50% reduction over 18 months, then an additional 50% of the remainder (or 25% of the original) over 18 months ( 1.39 percent monthly), then 50% + 5*1.39% = 56.95% reduction, or a current rate of 43.05%. Yet example 2 gives a final resolution of 41%, which doesn't jibe with either of my calculations.
=> the example is for 23 months and the reduction is exponential. So a half = factor 0.5 after 18 months gives after a 23 months factor = 0.5 ** (23/18) = 0.5 ** 1.28 = 0.41
So you found an error anyway, I typed 22 months in the 2nd reference
2. "The pre-bout rating of a successfully debuting boxer is set to 25% of his opponents pre-bout rating."
Not sure how to interpret this. My best guess: a boxer who wins his first fight has his rating set at 25% of the rating of his opponent, but the opponent receives no penalty. Then, all adjustments are calculated and applied as with any other bout. Would that be correct?
=> The pre-bout rating is set to 25%. Then all other calculations are done as usual.
3. "The winner is always rated higher than the loser. "
Surely this is a misstatement? Otherwise, it says that if a low rated boxer manages to upset a high rated boxer, the low rated will then have the higher rating, regardless of how much distance was previously between them or how much experience they have. Thus, if the worst boxer on the planet pulls the enormous upset of defeating the best boxer on the planet, then suddenly the worst guy is now in the top 50%, and the champion is suddenly in the bottom 50%.
That would seem to be an extremely harsh penalty for only one bad fight, and not realistic. Or have I misinterpreted.
=> The winner is placed above the mean of both pre-bout ratings. So the loser in an upset will stay quite high, due to the exponential character of the rating. And the winner will be set just above him. The winner gets it all.
4. I tried to post this as a new topic, but I don't see where to do that. Is this session of the forum not allowed to do that?
=> just place your questions and remarks here
Thank you for your time.