#118 British Columbia -B (7-6)

avg: 1186.01  •  sd: 65.59  •  top 16/20: 0%

Click on a column to sort  • 
# Opponent Result Game Rating Status Date Event
316 Stanford-B** Win 13-2 887.12 Ignored Feb 8th Stanford Open Mens
248 Santa Clara-B Win 12-4 1218.74 Feb 8th Stanford Open Mens
233 Portland Win 12-4 1265.63 Feb 8th Stanford Open Mens
215 Nevada-Reno Win 13-3 1344.04 Feb 9th Stanford Open Mens
111 San Jose State Win 7-5 1534.85 Feb 9th Stanford Open Mens
91 Cal Poly-SLO-B Win 11-9 1539.43 Feb 9th Stanford Open Mens
6 Cal Poly-SLO** Loss 5-13 1527.62 Ignored Mar 8th Stanford Invite 2025 Mens
41 California-San Diego Loss 9-13 1202.9 Mar 8th Stanford Invite 2025 Mens
53 Whitman Loss 10-13 1220.14 Mar 8th Stanford Invite 2025 Mens
55 UCLA Loss 7-13 977.71 Mar 9th Stanford Invite 2025 Mens
123 Wisconsin-Milwaukee Loss 10-13 818.85 Mar 9th Stanford Invite 2025 Mens
233 Portland Win 15-3 1265.63 Mar 29th Northwest Challenge D3
121 Simon Fraser Loss 12-14 949.06 Mar 29th Northwest Challenge D3
**Blowout Eligible

FAQ

The uncertainty of the mean is equal to the standard deviation of the set of game ratings, divided by the square root of the number of games. We treated a team’s ranking as a normally distributed random variable, with the USAU ranking as the mean and the uncertainty of the ranking as the standard deviation
  1. Calculate uncertainy for USAU ranking averge
  2. Model ranking as a normal distribution around USAU averge with standard deviation equal to uncertainty
  3. Simulate seasons by drawing a rank for each team from their distribution. Note the teams in the top 16 (club) or top 20 (college)
  4. Sum the fractions for each region for how often each of it's teams appeared in the top 16 (club) or top 20 (college)
  5. Subtract one from each fraction for "autobids"
  6. Award remainings bids to the regions with the highest remaining fraction, subtracting one from the fraction each time a bid is awarded
There is an article on Ulitworld written by Scott Dunham and I that gives a little more context (though it probably was the thing that linked you here)