Saturday, January 8, 2022

The 2022 College Football Championship: Alabama vs. Georgia

Several years ago, we performed research on decades’ worth of championship results across the major sports, including the NFL, NBA, MLB, and NHL. Our goal is to quantify the impact of factors related to sports psychology. Early results are mentioned in our book, “Who Will Win the Big Game: A Psychological and Mathematical Method.


Since that time, our p
ublished “quant fact predictions” have been correct 65% of the time — sometimes picking underdogs to win championships. What do the numbers say about this year’s College Football Championship?

Defense

Perhaps a boring mantra, but our research shows that defense does indeed win championships. One exception was the NHL’s high-scoring Wayne Gretzky period, where offenses led the way for a short period. Earlier in the season, Georgia’s defense was being considered “historically great.”

Georgia went on to lose 41–24 to a motivated Alabama team on December 4th. Georgia yielded almost one-third of their season’s total points that day. Even so, Georgia has given up about half as many points as compared to Alabama this season (135 to 269).

It will be interesting to see if the first Alabama-Georgia game was a blip, or if Georgia does indeed have a “historically great defense” and bounces back in a revenge game. There are multiple interesting storylines! Edge: Georgia.

Read more here:

https://carltonjchin.medium.com/who-will-win-the-big-game-alabama-vs-georgia-on-1-10-22-b99e9aeae844


Carlton Chin, a graduate of MIT, is an investment officer and portfolio strategist. When not studying downside risk and portfolio construction, he enjoys applying numbers and probability to sports analytics. He has worked with various sports organizations, including the Sacramento Kings — and has been quoted by the New York Times, the Wall Street Journal, and ESPN.

Dr. Jay Granat is a psychotherapist and founder of StayInTheZone.com. He has worked with athletes of all levels, including high school athletes and Olympians. He was named one of Golf Digest’s Top Ten Mental Gurus and has been on Good Morning America, the New York Times, and ESPN.