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#16
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Re: OPR after Week Two Events
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At WPI, a few teams happened to have their non-functional matches paired with other good teams, and OPR doesn't really know how to separate that out. Additionally, defense is huge this year, making this game less separable than other games. So while our average contribution to a match might be close to our OPR, other teams were a ways off in one direction or the other due to scheduling oddities or hella technical fouls. |
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#17
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Re: OPR after Week Two Events
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As for how well OPR is doing, the metric I typically use is % qualifying matches predicted correctly. I have 2013 OPR nearly 1% ahead of 2012 this time last year (81.5% vs. 80.6%), though the result isn't statistically significant (fwiw, p=0.29). |
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#18
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Re: OPR after Week Two Events
BaselA,
So do you sum the 3 team alliance OPR scores and then use the highest value to predict the match winner? |
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#19
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Re: OPR after Week Two Events
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Also, just for fun, 2012 OPR (used teams' average of all event OPRs, but they're all pretty similar) is predicting 2013 matches at about 61% (counting any rookies as OPR = 0). Thanks to Ed for the OPRs and Ether for the Twitter Match Data. Not sure what I'd do without you two. Edit: I don't want to post too many times, but there's a couple different things here. One is OPR as a tool to predict what will happen. Ed's reply below is pretty much exactly what I do for predicting matches (except realtime OPR; that's something I'd like to do in the future). In this case, I'm talking about how well OPR evaluates teams this year vs. other years, for which I used post-event OPRs. You can't hit 80% predicting matches without realtime data. Last edited by Basel A : 12-03-2013 at 14:45. |
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#20
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Re: OPR after Week Two Events
I actually use a few ways to predict match results. When there are sufficient data like in Week 5-7 and World Championship, I use historical World OPR and highest OPR. I also use the OPR calculated in real time for that event. Using one of them, I predict the rest of the matches and predict the final ranking. It is useful to have some idea ahead of time.
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#21
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Re: OPR after Week Two Events
Great work as usual, very helpful data.
Does anyone have an update on when Northern Lights data may be available? Lots of teams from NL are coming to WI next week. |
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#22
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Re: OPR after Week Two Events
Here's an interesting result: 294 has an OPR of 18.4 at the Central Valley. Yet it had no shooter so no auto or teleop points, and it couldn't hang. It had very strong defense (which put it very high on our #3 draft list--we picked 295, a strong defender as well instead). So something weird is happening the OPR if a team with no apparent offense is doing this well. Looks like the OPR this year is capturing defensive efforts as well.
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#23
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Re: OPR after Week Two Events
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This is why you can't rely on OPR as your only source of data. |
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#24
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Re: OPR after Week Two Events
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#25
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Re: OPR after Week Two Events
When will Israel's rankings be updated?
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#26
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Re: OPR after Week Two Events
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I don't follow your logic. Teams that score points by drawing fouls are still teams that score points, and points = offense. |
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