Hi all, my apologies if this has been raised before, I had a search back through but couldn't find anything.
I've heard some mumblings about the way the rankings system works. I'm not in a position to change it, but I AM looking at consolidating a heap of information and I'm interested in knowing how we all feel it should work. Stand back while the can of worms wiggle out.
In its simplest form, earning one point for each opponent beaten over a fixed number of events is quite effective BUT only provides a true indication if all bowlers bowl the same events, eg one person beating a field of 100 twice earns 200 points, and should be higher ranked than one person beating 20 people 10 times right? Well I think so.
So possibly some statistical normalisation; coming 10/100 is an equivalent feat to 1/10 or 2/20? Am I right? Actually the 10/100 is probably even more impressive than the 1/10?
How do we reward the bowler who comes fifth at the only four majors he plays without rewarding the guy who plays them all and comes consistently 20th? Do we in fact even agree that the guy with four solid fifth places is better than the repeated 20th over more events?
So there's the question, how do you determine the better bowler when given a few lists of finishing orders?
I've heard some mumblings about the way the rankings system works. I'm not in a position to change it, but I AM looking at consolidating a heap of information and I'm interested in knowing how we all feel it should work. Stand back while the can of worms wiggle out.
In its simplest form, earning one point for each opponent beaten over a fixed number of events is quite effective BUT only provides a true indication if all bowlers bowl the same events, eg one person beating a field of 100 twice earns 200 points, and should be higher ranked than one person beating 20 people 10 times right? Well I think so.
So possibly some statistical normalisation; coming 10/100 is an equivalent feat to 1/10 or 2/20? Am I right? Actually the 10/100 is probably even more impressive than the 1/10?
How do we reward the bowler who comes fifth at the only four majors he plays without rewarding the guy who plays them all and comes consistently 20th? Do we in fact even agree that the guy with four solid fifth places is better than the repeated 20th over more events?
So there's the question, how do you determine the better bowler when given a few lists of finishing orders?