There are three draws to go in the Round Robin of the 2018 Olympic
Curling competition, and I once again will try to get out a quick analysis of
what might happen. I’m using odds from
Bet365 but always remember, past performance is not always indicative of future
results.
Mens
Let’s tackle the men’s situation first as it’s (relatively?) simple.
USA vs Great Britain is the game of the day. Note that Bet365 has USA as +162 underdogs or
30% chance to win. That might be worth a
few shekels.
A win by the USA will ensure them a tie-breaker and stretch
the hope of an American Olympic curling champion to help further grow the sport
south of the 49th parallel. A
loss, combined with a loss by Japan, means no tie-breakers. Based on Bet365, odds are that occurs is 18%,
so odds of tiebreakers is still over 82% chance. For the rules on tie-breakers, here’s the
official web page which seems to indicate only
one round of tie-breakers will be played https://www.olympic.org/pyeongchang-2018/results/en/curling/media-information-report-n1305-.htm
But then here’s more details from World Curling Federation…
This appears to be longer than necessary
as a win or loss by Sweden vs Norway shouldn’t really make a difference, so
there’s really only 8 scenarios to examine:
USA wins against GBR, Japan wins and Canada wins (20%)
4-way tie but USA and GBR are 2-1
against the other teams. Expect that USA
will be ranked 1 (having beaten GBR) and play either Japan or Swiss (whoever
has worst cumulative draws to button or DCR or perhaps head or more likely head-to-head) and Great Britain will play the
other team. After the dust settles, the
two winning teams will be ranked based on who beat who and the higher ranked
team is placed in third (to play Canada) and the other in fourth (to play
Sweden). Make sense?
USA wins, Japan loses and Canada wins (7%)
USA gets third and Swiss and GBR
(both beaten by USA) play a tiebreaker for fourth.
USA wins, Japan wins and Canada loses (2%)
5-way tie of teams at 5-4 with USA
getting ranked second, having the best record against the other teams (3-1,
only loss to Japan). The other four
teams (JPN, CAN, GBR and SUI) are ranked as above (Swiss would be ranked 1,
Canada 2) and they play Japan and Great Britain, and then the two winning teams
are ranked 3rd and 4th.
I think I’m getting the hang of this.
USA wins, Japan loses and Canada loses (less than 1%)
This brings in DCR scenario where,
according to above it appears SUI is in the lead and would get third and Canada
would play Great Britain for fourth, but perhaps subject to change after the
last draw.
GBR wins, Japan wins and Canada wins (48%)
Canada gets second, Great Britain 3rd
and Japan and Swiss play a tie-breaker for fourth.
GBR wins, Japan loses and Canada wins (17%)
No tie breakers, CAN 2nd,
GBR 3rd and SUI 4th.
GBR wins, Japan wins and Canada loses (4%)
GBR gets 2nd, SUI third
and Canada plays Japan in a tie-breaker.
GBR wins, Japan loses and Canada loses (1.5%)
No tie-breaker, Canada lands fourth
with GBR and SUI as above.
So CAN, SUI and GBR are in the mix no matter the
outcome and USA could go from 2nd to out of the competition.
Womens
With two draws remaining, still some things to iron out in
the women’s side of the event. The WCF didn’t
release a helpful guide, so I’ll have to do my best to sort this out.
If Canada wins out, it will include a win against GBR, so
that brings tie-breakers into play.
Bet365 still has Canada to win Gold at +400, with odds to beat GBR as
-227 or about 70%. I expect they’ll be
even higher favourites against OAR (say -1000), so the combined chance of them
going 5-4 is 63%. Considering they’ll likely
be a favorite in the semi-final and at worst even in the finals, that makes a
combined bet to win 4 in a row about 20% (which is +400). Funny how math works sometimes.
If Canada beats GBR and China beats Sweden (+200 or 33.33%
on Bet365) then it gets very interesting for the final draw, with a big final
game between USA and Sweden that could put 5 teams at 5-4 (or 6 if Japan loses
to the Swiss). Guessing here, but with 6
teams tied for 3 spots, maybe they play three tiebreakers and the winning teams
are then re-ranked 2nd, 3rd and 4th? Fair?
Perhaps not. Dramatic? You bet.
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