If this is true then I find it tremendously difficult to see the consistent 7th-8th place finish in the probability of winning the championship of the team that has been consistently 1st or 2nd in stats being input.
Call me paranoid but the mathematician in me says he is adding in other data. I find it impossible to believe otherwise.
But Nick you've completely ignored my post, the higher your performance the more you have to regress. Nor are you a mathematician, like I've said I don't see these results with the C's a few percentage points as an indicator that he's cooking the books. I just don't see it. The power rankings and playoff odds loved the C's the last two years, why would he suddenly be forcing his model to make the C's look bad?
Anyways its impossible for me to defend a model when I don't have access to it in its entirety.
(Oh and Orlando is not an older team than the C's if you weight their best players for minutes played)
So now you are defending him by breaking age data down to the ridiculous to prove a point? Do you really believe in order to come up with these odds in a Monte carlo methodology he input data down to the final detail of average age per minute played?? And if you do, then you prove my point, he's inputting data he isn't admitting to.
As for the regression to mean, I understand the concept. I also understand such regressions and their equal and opposite aggressions away from the mean, would mean that on a day to day basis, other teams with similarly excellent data being input would have inconsistencies. The Lakers would not consistently always have the best chances of winning. Orlando wouldn't have the best chance of winning in the East every day.
Fluctuations would occur. They don't. You're a statistician. Explain away two teams with almost identical data being input, assuming that data is ONLY that that is used to determine Power Rankings, having such consistently different odds coming out at the end. Can I understand the Lakers always having a higher percentage chance? Sure. They've had better stats up until Saturday. But what I can't understand is how the other team consistently has what can be considered poor comparative output.
I just think he's inputting more data than he is admitting to. Team efficiencies, rebounding rates, turnover rates, eFG% and eFG% against, past winning percentage against every team, etc. If he is doing that, then the Celtics lower numbers make all the sense in the world. But he isn't saying that.
As for the crack about me being a mathematician, I have my BSME and took enough calculus, applied mathematics and statistics courses to call myself a mathematician, IMHO. I might not have an MS in Applied Mathematics or Advanced Algorithms but I still think I have enough mathematical knowledge to question what I am seeing in his output.
I would love, like you, to see the engine he is working with and the full extent of the data being input though.