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				- 110
 
- 21
 
- TL;DR
 - Trying to find the characteristics of the winning team in terms of stan. devi. of their team's abilities.
 
Namaste & G'day
Postulate: A strongly-knit team wins on average over a less knit one
Fundamentals:
- Two teams face off with 4 players each
- A polo team consists of players that each have assigned to them a measure of their ability (called a "Handicap" - 10 is highest, -2 lowest)
I attempted to measure close-knitness of a team in terms of standard deviation (SD) of handicaps of the players.
Failure: It turns out that, more often than, a team with a higher SD wins. In my language, that means a less knit team. So, it turns out that a team with handicaps -2,0,2,4 (one really good player, one very poor player; (SD = 2.2) wins more often than a team with average handicaps, say, 2,2,3,3 (SD = 0.5)
I need your help.
How would you go about determining success factors?
What other combination of SD and/or handicaps would you recommend?
Some other combinations me, a statistics novice, tried without success:
- SD*(max of team's handicaps - min of team's handicaps)
- SD/(max of team's handicaps - min of team's handicaps)
- SD*(max of team's handicaps)
- SD/(max of team's handicaps)
Regards
wirefree
				
			Postulate: A strongly-knit team wins on average over a less knit one
Fundamentals:
- Two teams face off with 4 players each
- A polo team consists of players that each have assigned to them a measure of their ability (called a "Handicap" - 10 is highest, -2 lowest)
I attempted to measure close-knitness of a team in terms of standard deviation (SD) of handicaps of the players.
Failure: It turns out that, more often than, a team with a higher SD wins. In my language, that means a less knit team. So, it turns out that a team with handicaps -2,0,2,4 (one really good player, one very poor player; (SD = 2.2) wins more often than a team with average handicaps, say, 2,2,3,3 (SD = 0.5)
I need your help.
How would you go about determining success factors?
What other combination of SD and/or handicaps would you recommend?
Some other combinations me, a statistics novice, tried without success:
- SD*(max of team's handicaps - min of team's handicaps)
- SD/(max of team's handicaps - min of team's handicaps)
- SD*(max of team's handicaps)
- SD/(max of team's handicaps)
Regards
wirefree