I’ve been thinking of how to compare just how well the winning scores have been compared to the other top shooters in that tournament. So for instance, which performance was better, the 229 at EBR 2022 or the 239 at RMAC 2023?
So I looked at post Covid “Majors” and played with some numbers. What I did was average the top 5 non winners in each event (2nd thru 6th),, and compare that to the Winners score.
So, here we go:
RMAC 2023, winner 239, next 5 avg 235, winning margin 1.7%.
RMAC 2022, winner 231, next 5 avg 222.8, winning margin 3.7%.
RMAC 2021, winner 228, next 5 avg 221.6, winning margin 2.9%.
EBR 2022, winner 229, next 5 avg 217.2, winning margin 5.4%.
EBR 2021, winner 222, next 5 avg 213.4, winning margin 4.0%.
So post Covid Major Pro 100Y BR, the most dominating performance was EBR 2022 with a 5.4% margin over the next 5 best scores, and surprisingly, the least dominating performance was RMAC 2023 with a 1.7% margin. Interesting… and it goes to show that score alone doesn’t indicate how well the winner did without a frame of reference.
So I looked at post Covid “Majors” and played with some numbers. What I did was average the top 5 non winners in each event (2nd thru 6th),, and compare that to the Winners score.
So, here we go:
RMAC 2023, winner 239, next 5 avg 235, winning margin 1.7%.
RMAC 2022, winner 231, next 5 avg 222.8, winning margin 3.7%.
RMAC 2021, winner 228, next 5 avg 221.6, winning margin 2.9%.
EBR 2022, winner 229, next 5 avg 217.2, winning margin 5.4%.
EBR 2021, winner 222, next 5 avg 213.4, winning margin 4.0%.
So post Covid Major Pro 100Y BR, the most dominating performance was EBR 2022 with a 5.4% margin over the next 5 best scores, and surprisingly, the least dominating performance was RMAC 2023 with a 1.7% margin. Interesting… and it goes to show that score alone doesn’t indicate how well the winner did without a frame of reference.
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