So what you really mean is:
Based on *your* hypothetical points and weighting, the Olympic team makes sense ....
I was hoping I was clear that hypothetical insinuated that it was my hypothetical in my last post as well as this in my first post:
I emphasize that all the numbers besides placements are hypothetical and I did this of my own accord.
For the sake of discussion, I have used your weighting/points system to make calculations for Karen and Ashley.[/INDENT][/INDENT]
Your weighting/points system would give Ashley quite an edge in "body of work."
So we know that at least for the ladies, either the selection committee clearly did not use the same weighting/points system as yours -- and/or that the committee felt that one or more other factors should be taken into account beyond an arithmetical formula for body of work.
...
My point is that because we do not know the actual parameters used by the selection committee, mathematical methodology is not reliable (and cannot be reliable) in explaining the committee's decisions.
Your arbitrary/hypothetical system of weighting/points does nothing to make the selection of the U.S. ladies more black and white.
If anything, it does the opposite.
Agreed. But also I chose not to go into women's on a men's thread. (although yes, I used female skaters as examples). I also had said this prior:
Again, this is all hypothetical but the point I am trying to get across is there is a way to apply hard analysis to "body of work". Again, the one thing that this does not take into account are more qualitative things like momentum etc. but at least it would give hard data to the concept of "body of work".
It does make things a little more grey for womens. I do not want to get into it on this thread but *my math* was not used by the USFS. I was trying to show how if mathematics (mathematics is not mine, it belongs to us all) was used, it could allow for less confusion when it comes to selection
Your spreadsheet has a few errors:
2017 Worlds was a Tier 1 competition (not Tier 3) in the USFS criteria.
2017 Four Continents was a Tier 2 competition (not Tier 3).
Jason Brown's results are from 2017 Worlds. Not 2017 Junior Worlds, which is what your spreadsheet shows.
Your spreadsheet inexplicably omits Grant Hochstein's ninth place at 2017 Four Continents -- so the truth is that he competed in six events, not five.
His 2017 Four Continents ninth place is "worth" zero points, according to your points system. But your spreadsheet does show other instances of ninth place.
Thank you for pointing that out! I have corrected and although the averages and # of events change, the results remain the same.




