On skill and chance in sport

Author:

Scarf Phil1,Khare Akshay2,Alotaibi Naif3

Affiliation:

1. Cardiff Business School, Cardiff University, Cardiff, Wales, UK

2. Indian Institute of Technology Madras, India

3. Department of Mathematics and Statistics, Imam Mohammad Ibn Saud Islamic University, Riyadh, Kingdom of Saudi Arabia

Abstract

Abstract This work studies outcome uncertainty and competitive balance from a broad perspective. It considers four sports with varying scoring rates, from soccer with typically three goals per match to netball with one hundred goals per match. Within a general modelling framework for a two-competitor contest, we argue that outcome uncertainty, the extent to which the outcome of a contest is unpredictable, depends on scoring rate, on strength variation and on score dependence. Score dependence is essentially the tendency for scores to alternate because possession alternates and possession is advantageous. We regard competitive balance as lack of variation in strength or skill, so that when strength variation is large competitive balance is low and vice versa. Thus, we argue that the outcome of a contest depends on skill, scoring rate, score dependence and chance. This description of outcome is useful because it informs policy-making in sport about the design of scoring systems and the control of competitive imbalance. Broadly, we find that: soccer is relatively competitively unbalanced but outcomes are uncertain because the scoring rate is low; the Australian football league is competitively balanced and so outcomes are uncertain in spite of the high scoring rate in this sport; international rugby matches are relatively neither competitive nor uncertain so that little is left to chance; and netball matches have uncertain outcomes because scores are positively dependent.

Publisher

Oxford University Press (OUP)

Subject

Applied Mathematics,Management Science and Operations Research,Strategy and Management,General Economics, Econometrics and Finance,Modeling and Simulation,Management Information Systems

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