Ian Royal Snowball An Example of Sampling
You can take this year's results in order and "sample" them.
The population (34 games) is tiny and a sample of say half of them, randomly selected
should not be expected to be too-representative of the whole 34
But just for fun I put the games in alphabetical order and took a look at the first 17 v the second 17
The first half gave W10 D2 L5= 32 POINTS 30-19 which doubles up to be 64 points 60-38
The second half gave W8 D6 L3 30 POINTS 29-10 which doubles up to 60 points 58-20
W20 D04 L10 60-38 64 Points GD 22 Silly Prediction from A-N
W18 D08 L08 60-30 62 Points GD 30 ACTUAL
W16 D12 L06 58-20 60 Points GD 38 Silly Prediction from N-W
Considering it's a truly horrible randomisation, that's a neat sample and the prediction is close.
But there is no cause and effect so there is absolutely no relevance or use to it. Or is that what you are trying to say? I don't really see the point of that.
It's an example of sampling PART of a population to predict the whole population
just like we do with opinion polls. This has nothing to do with cause and effect
just as Shane Long's stats are not about cause and effect, they are accurate renditions
of reality that are BETTER than mere spectator perception
And that's because people approach the actual sights on the pitch with prejudice.
We saw Forest "cheating". I didn't see any READING cheating or time-wasting at Sheffield
yet the Wednesday fans were chanting that we were cheats...
Bias, like love is blind, distorts the reality of what we see.
A silly little story. Newport County had a player called Peter Passey ex Birmingham. He had tunnel vision and did everything in a straight line
One day, we were winning comfortably, he burst out of defence and did 3-4 one-twos, found himself in front of the keeper and lashed it home. He was a clogging defender
and at first glance he had turned into Pele.
I used to hang with a few of the team and they told me the truth (according to them)
PP NEVER carried the ball (because, they said, he was too scared to) and "the lads" (for a laugh)
kept giving it back to him as he ran. What we saw as brilliance was him panicking. The rest
of the team were p!ssing themselves with laughter. He scored one other goal in six years at the club