Probability of World Series Length?

  • Thread starter Thread starter blumfeld0
  • Start date Start date
  • Tags Tags
    Baseball Series
AI Thread Summary
The probability of a World Series lasting exactly four games is calculated as 1/8, since one team must win all four games in a row. For five games, there are four possible win-loss patterns, leading to a probability of 1/4. The calculation for six games involves 14 unique patterns, but confusion arises regarding the total probability exceeding one. The probabilities for all series lengths must sum to one, indicating an error in calculations for five and six games. Understanding these probabilities is analogous to the binomial probability problem of coin tosses.
blumfeld0
Messages
146
Reaction score
0
so in the world series youve got two teams and the series ends when one team wins its fourth game
the teams are say equally likely to win anyone game
what is the probability that the series will last exactly four games?
five games? six games? seven games?

if i know 4 i could figure out 5 6 and 7 of course

thanks
 
Physics news on Phys.org
For the series to last exactly 4 games, 1 of the teams must win all 4 games. This probability should be easy to calculate. I would think it is harder to calculate the probabilities for the series to last exactly 5, 6 or 7 games.
 
what are the total number of possible world series outcomes? Remember the whole is the sum of its parts. (i.e. the number of possible world series is the sum of the 4 game series + 5 game series + ...) Try to think of a clever way of finding the possible number of outcomes of each set. Think about the number of choices you have to give each game to the team that loses the series.

~Lyuokdea
 
Maybe I am just dumb but it isn't immediately obvious to me what the probability of winning exactly 4 games is because I don't immediately know how many possible outcomes of the series there are. Of course there is only one way for a team to win the series in four games: win the first four games. What about winning in 5, 6, or 7 games though? (These are the only possibilities for number of games played, so the sum of the number of ways of each of these events occurring would be the total unique ways there is to win). Let me construct the patterns of wins/losses a team would have to experience to win in 5 games:

(W is win, L is lose)
WWWLW
WWLWW
WLWWW
LWWWW so there are four ways. Note that this is 5!/(4!*1!) - 1

How about 6 games or 7 games? It would probably be easiest to write down all the possibilities unless you see a pattern going on.
 
It's easiest to work it out for exactly four games. It's exactly analogous to the basic binomial probability problem of tossing an unbiased coin and working out the prob. of four heads in a row OR four tails in a row. If you can see why the two situations are analogous, you can see immediately how to do the problem.

You can make similar analogies for 5,6,7.
 
EDIT: Bad method, it was much more confusing than it needed to be. I'll just remove it to prevent confusion. Follow Curious's advice. Sorry.

~Lyuokdea
 
Last edited:
ok so for 4 games i think it is just
(4,4) * .5^4 * .5 ^(4-4)= .5^4 = .0625
right?

now for five games there are four ways to win like vsage said
so is that just

4* .5^4 = .25?

then for six games there are 14 ways to win i think (because 6!/(2!*4!)-1=14) so
14*.5^4 = .875
opps wait probability can't be larger then one and it already I am so confused

anyone have a solution for 5 6 and 7?

seems so basic but so hard
 
blumfeld0 said:
ok so for 4 games i think it is just
(4,4) * .5^4 * .5 ^(4-4)= .5^4 = .0625
right?

I think you should multiply by two because EITHER Team A OR Team B could win 4 games in a row. Which is why when I made the analogy to the coin toss, I said 4 heads OR 4 tails.

The answer for 4 in a row = 1/8.
 
Just a side note: If you did the problem correctly then the probabilities of a 4, 5, 6 or 7 game series will add up to 1.
 
Back
Top