Boilermaker Rick wrote:
leashyourkids wrote:
How are you saying the same things "you guys" (whoever that is) do? You refuse to believe a statistical fact - that a team who has the best record over a 162-game sample is probably a better "complete" team than a team who wins the World Series. And even if you don't want to believe that, you can at least acknowledge the fact that the short series in baseball playoffs allow for a whole lot of luck to be important. You can literally look at the odds (whether it's from statisticians or Vegas) of teams to win the WS to see this. The Indians were the favorite, and they were given a 26% chance. That means that, despite being regarded as the best team in baseball, there is a 74% chance they don't win the World Series. You can come back and say "well, that's just one site's opinion," but there are dozens of others who give roughly the same odds.
Outside of basketball, that is pretty common in all sports.
leashyourkids wrote:
It doesn't get me "riled up"; it's just crazy how when something offends your sensibilities, you refuse to believe it. I believe that you just don't want to believe that the baseball playoffs have a lot of luck involved, and you are therefore never going to. I mean, I do think you've made a little progress. Three years ago, you wouldn't admit there was any luck involved.
That's either a gross mischaracterization or an outright lie. Luck exists in just about everything in sports to some degree. It is my belief that most of the time, one of the best teams is the World Series champ, if not the best team, and that difference between the best and the second or third best isn't that far that it is shocking that the slightly "better" team loses. Often, it is the best team and they prove it by winning the playoffs that every team sets out at the start of the year to do.
Take the Astros for example. They won less games than the Indians. If they beat the Indians is it "luck" or is it that they proved they were a better team? What about when the Cubs beat the Nationals? Should we still think the Nationals were better?
It's not true in all sports except basketball. In most sports, there is a very good likelihood that one of the best teams in the regular season will win the title. Football has such great parity that there usually isn't a single team who stands out, but there are really only 3 or 4 teams in the playoffs who genuinely have a shot. In baseball, they all have a shot. A team could sneak in a wild card and go on a run to win it all.
To your second paragraph, you are getting hung up on the word "best." I've said 1,000 times that the team who wins the World Series is the World Series champion and the champion of baseball for that year. Whether they were the "best" team or not could very easily be debated. There is no objective "correct" answer, but it could easily be argued.
I have a few questions I'd appreciate if you'd answer:
- If the 2017 White Sox played the 2005 White Sox 100 times, how many of those games do you think they'd win?
- Why do you think that the moneyline bets for individual games of baseball are always much less extreme than in other sports?
- Why has a Wild Card team won the World Series six times since 1994? Were they just not trying in the regular season?
- Do you believe that baseball has more "randomness" in its playoffs than other sports at all or are you arguing that they're all the same?
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