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Article Dans Une Revue The European Physical Journal B: Condensed Matter and Complex Systems Année : 2009

Understanding baseball team standings and streaks

Résumé

Can one understand the statistics of wins and losses of baseball teams? Are their consecutive-game winning and losing streaks self-reinforcing or can they be described statistically? We apply the Bradley-Terry model, which incorporates the heterogeneity of team strengths in a minimalist way, to answer these questions. Excellent agreement is found between the predictions of the Bradley-Terry model and the rank dependence of the average number team wins and losses in major-league baseball over the past century when the distribution of team strengths is taken to be uniformly distributed over a finite range. Using this uniform strength distribution, we also find very good agreement between model predictions and the observed distribution of consecutive-game team winning and losing streaks over the last half-century; however, the agreement is less good for the previous half-century. The behavior of the last half-century supports the hypothesis that long streaks are primarily statistical in origin with little self-reinforcing component. The data further show that the past half-century of baseball has been more competitive than the preceding half-century.

Dates et versions

hal-00318712 , version 1 (04-09-2008)

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Clément Sire, Sidney Redner. Understanding baseball team standings and streaks. The European Physical Journal B: Condensed Matter and Complex Systems, 2009, 67, pp.473. ⟨10.1140/epjb/e2008-00405-5⟩. ⟨hal-00318712⟩
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