Seems like a moving target. You talk about SOS, then you give sime example and calculate it based on RPI. One of the hypothetical scenario was team A beats 1 and 299 and team B beats 149 and 151, now you are changing to 10ish and 340ish and 170ish? Instead of black and white it becoming shades of grey.
I think u need to back to grade school thinking and lay out the "givens" and no "ish", and have a "find" and lay out exactly what your are trying to calculate (ie average RPI, average SOS, etc).
Btw, in your previous example you calculated using RPI, u still have the same problem. RPI distribution is a 's-curve' so you will have to change our hypothesis to make it fit whatever your point is - which you tried to do.
I think u need to back to grade school thinking and lay out the "givens" and no "ish", and have a "find" and lay out exactly what your are trying to calculate (ie average RPI, average SOS, etc).
Btw, in your previous example you calculated using RPI, u still have the same problem. RPI distribution is a 's-curve' so you will have to change our hypothesis to make it fit whatever your point is - which you tried to do.
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