(Apologies for any reader who doesn't share my interest in football. You don't have to read on.)
When I'm fed up marking, like so many other middle-aged men, I turn to the computer game Football Manager. And a disaster for my team last night made me aware of a curiosity regarding the tie-break rules in the Champions League.
This is the situation. It's the last minute of the last match of the group stage and my team, Arsenal, are losing 2-1 at home to Olympiakos (we haven;t had much luck and the red card early in the first half for our midfielder Victor Wamyama has cost us). But it's OK - Bayern Munich (who are losing in Lyon) will win the group and we will come second, qualifying for the knock-out stages, while Olympiakos will be out.
But what's this? Bayern have scored a last-minute equaliser against Lyon! They were going to win the group anyway, so presumably we still finish in that all-important second place.
But no - Olympiakos are now above us: we are down to third and we are out! A goal in the other game, which doesn't change the position of the teams in that game, has caused Arsenal and Olympiakos to swap positions, with disastrous results.
It's all to do with tie-break rules. Without Bayern's late goal, all four teams would have had eight points, The tie-break rule looks at the scores in matches involving all the teams which have tied on points. In this case Bayern (who scored six at home to Olympiakos) had the best goal difference, with Arsenal (who had played well until the last match, despite early red cards ion three matches) second best, and so they finish first and second. But Bayern's equaliser means they have nine points, and Arsenal and Olympiakos are tied for second place: and since the two teams drew in Greece and Olympiakos won in London, the Greeks are above Arsenal. That last-minute goal in the other match really has moved Olympiakos above Arsenal. (If you want to check for yourself, I give all the scores below.)
This consequence of the mathematics of the tie-break rules is something I was vaguely aware of, though I didn't realise the peril my team were in until about ten game-minutes before Bayern's goal. But it is slightly counter-intuitive that a goal in match B can cause the teams in match A to change positions. (In fact in my game, before the goal Lyon had been in third place above Olympiakos, so conceding the goal caused them to drop to fourth, but a slightly different set of results could have meant that a game in match B could leave the two teams in that match in the same position while inverting the order of the other two teams.)
Here, for anyone who cares, are the complete results:
Game 1 - Arsenal (2) 2 Bayern (0) 0; Lyon (0) 1 Olympiakos (0) 0
Game 2 - Bayern (0) 0 Lyon (0) 0; Olympiakos (0) 1 Arsenal (0) 1
Game 3 - Lyon (0) 1 Arsenal (1) 3; Olympiakos (0) 1 Bayern (0) 1
Game 4 - Arsenal (0) 0 Lyon (0) 0; Bayern (3) 6 Olympiakos (0) 0
Game 5 - Bayern (0) 1 Arsenal (0) 0; Olympiakos (0) 1 Lyon (0) 0
Game 6 - Arsenal (0) 1 Olympiakos (0) 2; Lyon (3) 3 Bayern (0) 3
Tuesday, 9 May 2017
Monday, 1 May 2017
Something I'd forgotten
One of my parents daily rituals was to change the date on a device on top of the bureau which displayed the day, date and month. My equivalent is to change the date on my Rubik's cube-style calendar , which also gives the day, ate and month: the month in three-letter form ("Jan", "Feb", "Mar" etc). It's nice that the names of the months in English make this possible (though www.puzl.co.uk, where I got my calendar cube, have also sold French and German versions).
But I was astonished to find in the cellar yesterday that I had made something similar myself, 35 years ago. I have absolutely no recollection of this at all (but the handwriting is mine), but I am quite impressed by my ingenuity.
In my final year as a student, I played backgammon regularly with my friend Karen. It appears that I constructed this device to keep track of the cumulative score. It's rather the worse for wear, and has lost one of the corner cubies. But I assume that it still records the final state of play when we had played our last game - which shows that, if you want to win at a gambling game, it is best not to play against a future professor of psychology.
But I was astonished to find in the cellar yesterday that I had made something similar myself, 35 years ago. I have absolutely no recollection of this at all (but the handwriting is mine), but I am quite impressed by my ingenuity.
In my final year as a student, I played backgammon regularly with my friend Karen. It appears that I constructed this device to keep track of the cumulative score. It's rather the worse for wear, and has lost one of the corner cubies. But I assume that it still records the final state of play when we had played our last game - which shows that, if you want to win at a gambling game, it is best not to play against a future professor of psychology.