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bushindo
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Here's a question inspired by the NBA finals. While waiting for the Lakers game to start, I made up this problem for fun.

Assume that there are four teams in semi-finals, Lakers, Nuggets, Cavaliers, and Magic. Lakers would play with the Nuggets in a best of 7 series. Cavaliers would also play with Magic in a best of 7. The winner of those semi-final rounds would advance to the final and compete in a best of 7 for the championship.

Lets say that each game played is a binomial event, with the following probability distribution per game for each team match-up

P( Laker win over Nugget ) = .6

P( Laker win over Magic ) = .65

P( Laker win over Cavalier) = .55

P( Nugget win over Magic ) = .45

P( Nugget win over Cavalier ) = .4

P( Cavalier win over Magic ) = .4

1) Lets say that the semi-finals just started. What is the chance that Lakers will win the championship? ( Bonus: give the championship chance for all other teams as well)

2) Let's start from the current team score, where Lakers are up 3-2 versus Nuggets, and Magic up 3-2 versus Cavalier. What is the chance that Lakers will win the championship? Chance that Cavaliers will win the championship? (Bonus: give the championship chance for the other two teams too)

Edited by bushindo
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First I'll describe an approach that does not use a shortcut:

You can describe the odds of winning a series between teams A and B as a function of the probability of team a winning a game (P(A)). You would also have to account for the number of different ways that teams A & B could win a specified number of games (e.g. team A sweeps it in 4, team B wins it in 7). This would NOT simply be nC4 = n! / 4! (n-4)! as you might expect. For example, 6C4 would include the combination: A wins games 1-4 and B wins games 5-6, but clearly there would never be a game 5 or 6 if A had won games 1-4. You would have to eliminate possibilities where the losing team wins the last game, which (if n>4) would be equal to the number of ways that team B could win (n-5) games (the total number of games it would win excluding the last game) in the preceeding (n-1) games in the series. For n>4, there would be (n-1)C(n-5) = (n-1)! / 4! (n-5)!

Putting that all together: the probability that A wins it in 4 would be

4C4 x P(A)4 = 1 x P(A)4

The probability that A wins it in 5 would be

(5C4 - 4C0) x P(A)4 x P(B) = (5-1) x P(A)4 x (1-P(A)) = 4 x (P(A)4 - P(A)5)

The probability that A wins in 6 would be

(6C4 - 5C1) x P(A)4 x P(B)2 = (15-5) x P(A)4 x (1-P(A))2 = 10 x (P(A)4 - 2 P(A)5 + P(A)6)

And the probability that A wins in 7 would be

(7C4 - 6C2) x P(A)4 x P(B)3 = (35-15) x P(A)4 x (1-P(A))3 = 20 x (P(A)4 - 3 P(A)5 + 3 P(A)6 - P(A)7)

So adding all of those probabilities to get the sum probability of team A taking the series would be

35 P(A)4 - 84 P(A)5 + 70 P(A)6 - 20 P(A)7

Now about that shortcut I mentioned. Suppose we lived in a hypothetical world where the NBA held all 7 games of the series regardless of whether or not someone had already clinched it with 4 wins. Clearly that should not affect the overall outcome of the series, but it might make the math slightly easier. The probability that A takes the series would be the sum of the probabilities of A winning all 7, 6 of 7, 5 of 7, or 4 of 7.

Probability of winning all 7

7C7 x P(A)7 = 1 x P(A)7

Probability of winning 6 of 7

7C6 x P(A)6 x P(B) = 7 x P(A)6 x (1-P(A)) = 7 x (P(A)6 -P(A)7)

Of winning 5 of 7

7C5 x P(A)5 x P(B)2 = 21 x P(A)5 x (1-P(A))2 = 21 x (P(A)5 - 2 P(A)6 + P(A)7)

Of winning 4 of 7

7C4 x P(A)4 x P(B)3 = 35 x P(A)4 x (1-P(A))3 = 35 x (P(A)4 - 3 P(A)5 + 3 P(A)6 - P(A)7)

So the sum is

35 P(A)4 - 84 P(A)5 + 70 P(A)6 - 20 P(A)7

Reassuringly, the two approaches give the same result.

So the probability that the Lakers win the championship is

P(Lakers beat Nuggets) x P(Cavs beat Magic) x P(Lakers beat Cavs) + P(Lakers beat Nuggets) x P(Magic beat Cavs) x P(Lakers beat Magic) = 0.71 x 0.29 x 0.61 + 0.71 x 0.71 x 0.8 = 0.125599 + 0.40328 = 0.528879

The probabilities for the other 3 could be calculated similarly.

For part 2, the probability that the team that's behind will win the series is P(B)2, so the probability that the team that's ahead will win is 1-P(B)2. Then

P(Lakers beat Nuggets) x P(Cavs beat Magic) x P(Lakers beat Cavs) + P(Lakers beat Nuggets) x P(Magic beat Cavs) x P(Lakers beat Magic) = 1-0.42 x 0.42 x 0.61 + 1-0.42 x 1-0.42 x 0.8 = 0.84 x 0.16 x 0.61 + 0.84 x 0.84 x 0.8 = 0.081984 + 0.56448 = 0.646464

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First I'll describe an approach that does not use a shortcut:

You can describe the odds of winning a series between teams A and B as a function of the probability of team a winning a game (P(A)). You would also have to account for the number of different ways that teams A & B could win a specified number of games (e.g. team A sweeps it in 4, team B wins it in 7). This would NOT simply be nC4 = n! / 4! (n-4)! as you might expect. For example, 6C4 would include the combination: A wins games 1-4 and B wins games 5-6, but clearly there would never be a game 5 or 6 if A had won games 1-4. You would have to eliminate possibilities where the losing team wins the last game, which (if n>4) would be equal to the number of ways that team B could win (n-5) games (the total number of games it would win excluding the last game) in the preceeding (n-1) games in the series. For n>4, there would be (n-1)C(n-5) = (n-1)! / 4! (n-5)!

Putting that all together: the probability that A wins it in 4 would be

4C4 x P(A)4 = 1 x P(A)4

The probability that A wins it in 5 would be

(5C4 - 4C0) x P(A)4 x P(B) = (5-1) x P(A)4 x (1-P(A)) = 4 x (P(A)4 - P(A)5)

The probability that A wins in 6 would be

(6C4 - 5C1) x P(A)4 x P(B)2 = (15-5) x P(A)4 x (1-P(A))2 = 10 x (P(A)4 - 2 P(A)5 + P(A)6)

And the probability that A wins in 7 would be

(7C4 - 6C2) x P(A)4 x P(B)3 = (35-15) x P(A)4 x (1-P(A))3 = 20 x (P(A)4 - 3 P(A)5 + 3 P(A)6 - P(A)7)

So adding all of those probabilities to get the sum probability of team A taking the series would be

35 P(A)4 - 84 P(A)5 + 70 P(A)6 - 20 P(A)7

Now about that shortcut I mentioned. Suppose we lived in a hypothetical world where the NBA held all 7 games of the series regardless of whether or not someone had already clinched it with 4 wins. Clearly that should not affect the overall outcome of the series, but it might make the math slightly easier. The probability that A takes the series would be the sum of the probabilities of A winning all 7, 6 of 7, 5 of 7, or 4 of 7.

Probability of winning all 7

7C7 x P(A)7 = 1 x P(A)7

Probability of winning 6 of 7

7C6 x P(A)6 x P(B) = 7 x P(A)6 x (1-P(A)) = 7 x (P(A)6 -P(A)7)

Of winning 5 of 7

7C5 x P(A)5 x P(B)2 = 21 x P(A)5 x (1-P(A))2 = 21 x (P(A)5 - 2 P(A)6 + P(A)7)

Of winning 4 of 7

7C4 x P(A)4 x P(B)3 = 35 x P(A)4 x (1-P(A))3 = 35 x (P(A)4 - 3 P(A)5 + 3 P(A)6 - P(A)7)

So the sum is

35 P(A)4 - 84 P(A)5 + 70 P(A)6 - 20 P(A)7

Reassuringly, the two approaches give the same result.

So the probability that the Lakers win the championship is

P(Lakers beat Nuggets) x P(Cavs beat Magic) x P(Lakers beat Cavs) + P(Lakers beat Nuggets) x P(Magic beat Cavs) x P(Lakers beat Magic) = 0.71 x 0.29 x 0.61 + 0.71 x 0.71 x 0.8 = 0.125599 + 0.40328 = 0.528879

The probabilities for the other 3 could be calculated similarly.

For part 2, the probability that the team that's behind will win the series is P(B)2, so the probability that the team that's ahead will win is 1-P(B)2. Then

P(Lakers beat Nuggets) x P(Cavs beat Magic) x P(Lakers beat Cavs) + P(Lakers beat Nuggets) x P(Magic beat Cavs) x P(Lakers beat Magic) = 1-0.42 x 0.42 x 0.61 + 1-0.42 x 1-0.42 x 0.8 = 0.84 x 0.16 x 0.61 + 0.84 x 0.84 x 0.8 = 0.081984 + 0.56448 = 0.646464

Well done, plasmid. Your logic is spot on. I like your shortcut, it is a novel way to think about probability, at least for me. Posts like yours are the reason why I come here.

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