lets take a look at the trickle down system
Lets see how precise your season long predictions have. Lets call a blowout 17 pts or more, because that seems to be what you claim to be able to predict. Earlier in this thread you predicted close to such an event in the upcoming game (Utah <14>31, which is 17 or more point difference). In your predictions in 13 games you predicted 11 blowout victories for Alabama. In those 11 games where your system predicted a blowout of 17 pts or more, you were only correct 6/11 times, not any better than chance at predicting a blowout. These predictions also include glaring evidence of the bias inherent in your system, a predicted 21 point victory over the Florida gators. A florida team that against a much more difficult schedule amassed a statistical lead in every category over alabama, yet the trickle down analysis system somehow gave Bama the nod by 21 points. In fact that prediction of bama31-utah14 is giving Utah more credit than you gave florida. Hmm. What could account for that difference? Florida playing a great game? Maybe or is it more likely your system of analysis is inherently flawed and biased. The data should show the bias. Lets take a look. You averaged over-predicting the outcome in all 13 games by an average of 8.3pts per game this season alone. In the 7 games that were not blow outs (<17pts, Tulane, Georgia, Kentucky, miss, ten, lsu, fla) your system over predicted by 17.1points. What was the score you predicted between Utah-bama? a 17pt difference? Couldn’t be? No way. You system over predicts anywhere from 8pts against bad teams, and 17pts against teams that were able to compete with alabama. If you take out the inherent bias in your system for your prediction of the sugar bowl, the result would be a close game (8-17pts of pure bias). Kind of like what the actual data show, two statistically similar teams that will place a very close game.
Lets see how precise your season long predictions have. Lets call a blowout 17 pts or more, because that seems to be what you claim to be able to predict. Earlier in this thread you predicted close to such an event in the upcoming game (Utah <14>31, which is 17 or more point difference). In your predictions in 13 games you predicted 11 blowout victories for Alabama. In those 11 games where your system predicted a blowout of 17 pts or more, you were only correct 6/11 times, not any better than chance at predicting a blowout. These predictions also include glaring evidence of the bias inherent in your system, a predicted 21 point victory over the Florida gators. A florida team that against a much more difficult schedule amassed a statistical lead in every category over alabama, yet the trickle down analysis system somehow gave Bama the nod by 21 points. In fact that prediction of bama31-utah14 is giving Utah more credit than you gave florida. Hmm. What could account for that difference? Florida playing a great game? Maybe or is it more likely your system of analysis is inherently flawed and biased. The data should show the bias. Lets take a look. You averaged over-predicting the outcome in all 13 games by an average of 8.3pts per game this season alone. In the 7 games that were not blow outs (<17pts, Tulane, Georgia, Kentucky, miss, ten, lsu, fla) your system over predicted by 17.1points. What was the score you predicted between Utah-bama? a 17pt difference? Couldn’t be? No way. You system over predicts anywhere from 8pts against bad teams, and 17pts against teams that were able to compete with alabama. If you take out the inherent bias in your system for your prediction of the sugar bowl, the result would be a close game (8-17pts of pure bias). Kind of like what the actual data show, two statistically similar teams that will place a very close game.