NBA Playoffs Zigzag, The Definitive Answer
Joe Duffy (www.OffshoreInsiders.com)
My articles are syndicated on many sites. About this time last year, I watched as on
one of the fine sites there was a not-so-subtle back and forth of the validity
of the so-called zigzag NBA playoff system.
The method simply says go with the team off of a
loss. A critic came back after the first
week or so gleaming over the fact the technique zagged
and sagged more than it zigged. It lost money. Then as the playoffs went on,
the proponent got the last laugh while the cynic wrote articles on other topics
telling you he is smarter than everyone else.
Having been in the industry since the 1980s and having
been a supporter of computer systems since prominent statistician Dr. Mike Orkin wrote his Pointspread Analyzer software, where does
Center of the Handicapping Universe GodsTips.com
stand?
We agree with the theory, but less so the etched-in-stone
considerations. First of all, let us give a quick refresher of the
difference. A system can be measured
objectively because the parameters are concrete. The zigzag is an example. Going with a double digit favorite off a
single digit loss would be another hypothetical.
Of course there can be modest variances depending on when
and where a database gathers lines, but over any statistically significant
period it does not make a huge difference.
A theory is much like a system but does not have objective
parameters. Our theory is the better the team is that the zigzag system favors
and the bigger the margin the loss was, the more compelling it is to “go with
the team off a loss”.
True one could come up with a system to measure our
upgrading of the methodology. An example would be going with a team with a
winning percentage of .575 or higher off a loss of eight or more. The problem is we believe a mental sliding
scale combining and most importantly, weighing the two factors works best. It
allows for a mixing and matching of the two parameters.
For example, this year as in most years, it would not
apply or would only be weighed slightly if we are talking about the bottom
three seeds in each conference off a loss. There is a reason they are called
“mismatches”.
No. 4 versus five and the next three rounds of the
playoffs (barring huge first round upsets), it is weighed much heavier. Remember
we told you the mocker grew conspicuously quieter as the postseason went on. Now you know why.
It’s one of those theories that almost make too much sense.
During the regular season of every sport we remind you of the Golden Rule to
not merely go with the “team that needs it more” if said team is fighting just
to make the playoffs.
We call attention to the fact if a team were proficient at
winning “must win” games they would not be playing in must-win games late in
the year.
Conversely, a one through five seed, especially as the
playoffs go deeper, has shown the ability to rebound from adversity and respond
when their backs are to the wall.
To the handicapper there is a titanic difference between
desperate elite teams and equally desperate inferior teams playing in a crucial
contest. It’s like the difference between seeing Jennifer Lopez and Rosie
O’Donnell in a string bikini.
Okay, I don’t follow the analogy myself, but the
exemplification of the distinction is infallible. From a handicapping
standpoint one can’t measure the success of the zigzag if
Likewise, the margin of the loss is applicable for at
least two obvious reasons. As we have said
many times, nothing affects public perception more than the last game they have
seen. It’s not uncommon for a blowout in
the previous game to influence an opening line by 2-3 points and more times
than not, the closing line by more.
Plus, no matter how motivated and well-coached a squad is,
it defies human nature to approach a game with as much vengeance off a 22-point
win as it is for the team off the huge setback.
So to friends and foes alike of zigzag, a .700 or better
team off a loss is not even close to being the same as the below .520 teams
zigging. Nor is mindset the same for a team that lost a game that went down to
the wire the same as one that got humiliated on national television.
Others can debate the “system” but we will tell you the rationale behind it has a lot of validity if and only if the caveats are utilized and the impact applied appropriately.
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