
Lee
Moderators: Mitch Hawker, east hockey, karl(east)
I noticed that right away.east hockey wrote:Funny...I didn't realize until after I had adjusted for decades and the split to a two class system that my changes hurt Duluth East, since they won their first title in 1960 when point values were lower and won their other two titles after the two-class system was in place. Heh.
Lee
I picked Grand Rapids, but admit it was little more than an uneducated guess.east hockey wrote:#8 will be revealed this evening after the Bulldogs Frozen Four game.
Hmmm, unless this is a great head fake, I guess what you're saying here is that Duluth East will not finish on top of the list.east hockey wrote:Funny...I didn't realize until after I had adjusted for decades and the split to a two class system that my changes hurt Duluth East...
Found this link regarding Eastview's 2000-01 season:hockeyjunkie2 wrote:Actually had all post-season accolades stripped by the MSHSL the year they made their only state tournament appearance. Had some ineligible players that season.east hockey wrote:#74: Eastview
15.80 pts
--0 state titles
--1 state tournament
Eastview has just one Class AA state tournament appearance (2001), but captured the consolation title that year. A relatively new program (started in 1997), the Lightning have made their section finals three times but has failed to advance past the Section 3AA quarterfinals the past three years.
Just saying, as a fan of the real Apple Valley school.
Per the article Lee posted:hockeyjunkie2 wrote:Actually had all post-season accolades stripped by the MSHSL the year they made their only state tournament appearance. Had some ineligible players that season.east hockey wrote:#74: Eastview
15.80 pts
--0 state titles
--1 state tournament
Eastview has just one Class AA state tournament appearance (2001), but captured the consolation title that year. A relatively new program (started in 1997), the Lightning have made their section finals three times but has failed to advance past the Section 3AA quarterfinals the past three years.
Just saying, as a fan of the real Apple Valley school.
I have a bad feeling about the 0.36 number and am wondering how it is derived. My interpretation is the number means that if the top A and AA teams play each other that you expect the A team to win only 18% of the time. That feels low to me and doesn't match with the rankings on ushsho.com. Just sampling last year's rankings I came up with weightings from 0.76 to 0.85 depending on how I evaluate the data. Looking at all A and AA schools I get the lower number. Looking only at schools that advanced to state I got the higher number.east hockey wrote:Class A points were calculated at 36% of Class AA points.
Above is from the topic where I started discussion of this.Code: Select all
The 0.36 I came up with was the result of comparing the PageStat ratings of every Class A team to every Class AA team over the past eleven years. This was a huge sampling of over 83,000 comparisons and gave me a certain amount of confidence.
Lee
I didn't want to post anything negative on here, but I agree that the .36 is low. I could see it happening when you consider all teams in state as the bottom teams are generally A programs, but it is much different when you consider only those that make the tournament.luckyEPDad wrote:I have a bad feeling about the 0.36 number and am wondering how it is derived. My interpretation is the number means that if the top A and AA teams play each other that you expect the A team to win only 18% of the time. That feels low to me and doesn't match with the rankings on ushsho.com. Just sampling last year's rankings I came up with weightings from 0.76 to 0.85 depending on how I evaluate the data. Looking at all A and AA schools I get the lower number. Looking only at schools that advanced to state I got the higher number.east hockey wrote:Class A points were calculated at 36% of Class AA points.
Above is from the topic where I started discussion of this.Code: Select all
The 0.36 I came up with was the result of comparing the PageStat ratings of every Class A team to every Class AA team over the past eleven years. This was a huge sampling of over 83,000 comparisons and gave me a certain amount of confidence.
Lee
I'm not sure how to handle schools that opt up. Roseau is a class A school (by enrollment) that plays against class AA schools. As it fits the definition of a class A school I lean towards lumping it with the A schools when calculating an weight.
Regardless, this has been a fun thread to follow.
If you assume that class A teams win 21.25% of their games against AA opponents that would mean that the weighting should be .425 which is higher than .36. After all, on average AA teams win only 50% of their games against other AA teams, not 100%.karl(east) wrote:Even under this scenario--which I expect everyone will agree is over-optimistic about what a number of these teams could have achieved--Class A schools won 17/80 possible trips to state. That's 21.25%--a figure substantially lower than the .36 Lee used.
The 0.36 was derived from Class A teams winning 26.5% of the PageStat matchups. Thus, (.26.5/(1-.26.5))=.36 (actually .361 but I rounded down)luckyEPDad wrote:If you assume that class A teams win 21.25% of their games against AA opponents that would mean that the weighting should be .425 which is higher than .36. After all, on average AA teams win only 50% of their games against other AA teams, not 100%.karl(east) wrote:Even under this scenario--which I expect everyone will agree is over-optimistic about what a number of these teams could have achieved--Class A schools won 17/80 possible trips to state. That's 21.25%--a figure substantially lower than the .36 Lee used.
Comparing all the Class A teams to all the Class AA teams is different than just comparing the team that make it to state. Obviously any ranking of all teams will be top heavy with AA and bottom heavy with A, as it would be in any sport. But when you compare those who make state, I'm sure the numbers would be different.east hockey wrote:The 0.36 was derived from Class A teams winning 26.5% of the PageStat matchups. Thus, (.26.5/(1-.26.5))=.36 (actually .361 but I rounded down)luckyEPDad wrote:If you assume that class A teams win 21.25% of their games against AA opponents that would mean that the weighting should be .425 which is higher than .36. After all, on average AA teams win only 50% of their games against other AA teams, not 100%.karl(east) wrote:Even under this scenario--which I expect everyone will agree is over-optimistic about what a number of these teams could have achieved--Class A schools won 17/80 possible trips to state. That's 21.25%--a figure substantially lower than the .36 Lee used.
Lee
Compare the top teams from Class A vs the top teams from Class AA in the PageStat rankings. Even at the top, it's top-heavy with Class AA. You're putting a lot of words out there, with no real substance. No real evidence other than cherry picking a few stats here and there which fit what you want to believe.HShockeywatcher wrote:Comparing all the Class A teams to all the Class AA teams is different than just comparing the team that make it to state. Obviously any ranking of all teams will be top heavy with AA and bottom heavy with A, as it would be in any sport. But when you compare those who make state, I'm sure the numbers would be different.east hockey wrote:The 0.36 was derived from Class A teams winning 26.5% of the PageStat matchups. Thus, (.26.5/(1-.26.5))=.36 (actually .361 but I rounded down)luckyEPDad wrote: If you assume that class A teams win 21.25% of their games against AA opponents that would mean that the weighting should be .425 which is higher than .36. After all, on average AA teams win only 50% of their games against other AA teams, not 100%.
Lee
All that being said, unless there is some personal bias (and I'm not saying there is) against certain teams for playing A, why use any weight? The list is the "top programs", not the "best teams regardless of class." Without the specifics of discussing certain schools, why is a school 1/3 of the program of another for winning the tournament they were playing for?
At the start of any year, the goal for most programs is to win their classes title. Personally, I would say that Triton (for example) probably has one of the top all around football programs in the state in recent years. Would they compete for a 5A title? No, but they aren't a 5 team.